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Jamie, foreground, and Gladys Scott wave as they leave the Central Mississippi Correctional Facility on Friday in Pearl, Miss. The sisters' life sentences were suspended on the condition that one donate a kidney to the other.
Jamie, foreground, and Gladys Scott wave as they leave the Central Mississippi Correctional Facility on Friday in Pearl, Miss. The sisters’ life sentences were suspended on the condition that one donate a kidney to the other.
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PEARL, Miss. — Sisters Jamie and Gladys Scott left prison Friday for the first time in 16 years, yelling, “We’re free!” and “God bless y’all!” as they pulled away in a silver SUV. That freedom, though, comes with an unusual condition: Gladys has one year to donate a kidney to her ailing sister.

Now, with their life sentences for armed robbery suspended, their future is uncertain.

Their children have grown up. Their family moved to Florida. They are using technology like cellphones for the first time. And questions abound: Who will pay for their medical care? Would Gladys’ conditional release hold up in court? And perhaps the biggest mystery ahead: Are they a compatible match for the kidney transplant?

A news conference for the sisters in Jackson was attended by dozens of supporters. Many cheered. Some sang. A few cried.

The sisters — Jamie wearing pink, Gladys wearing purple — sat smiling at a table, their hands clasped before them as their attorney, Chokwe Lumumba, thanked a list of advocacy groups who worked for their release.

“We just totally blessed. We totally blessed,” Gladys Scott said. “It’s been a long, hard road, but we made it.”

Jamie said she looked forward to moving on with her life and doubted at times she would ever be free, but she leaned on her faith.

“My sister been saying all day, ‘You don’t look well,’ ” she said. “I haven’t woke up. It’s like a dream.”

Jamie said the reality of the situation will probably sink in when she sees her grown children, who were young kids when she went to prison.

The sisters are moving to Pensacola in the Florida Panhandle to live with their mother. They hope to qualify for government-funded Medicaid insurance to pay for the transplant and for 38-year-old Jamie Scott’s dialysis, which officials said had cost Mississippi about $200,000 a year. A few doctors have expressed interest in performing the transplant, but there are no firm plans yet.

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour agreed to release Jamie Scott because of her medical condition, but 36-year-old Gladys Scott must donate the kidney within one year as a condition of her release.

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