Carlos Manuel Delgado was released from Columbia Correctional Institution in Lake City on Wednesday afternoon — 13 years, 4 months and 24 days before the end of his sentence.

Or, from the perspective of Republican Gov. Rick Scott and members of the Florida Cabinet: Delgado spent 11 years, 2 months and 17 days in prison because of what they call a miscarriage of justice that branded Delgado a “sex offender” for an atypical crime.

In a rare action, Florida’s top elected officials voted Tuesday to commute Delgado’s sentence and allow him to go free. This is only the fourth sentence commuted in the last five years, according to state records.

They described his case as an unjust consequence of a “stupid decision” and “mistake” Delgado made in 2000 that didn’t align with the truly abhorrent crimes that Florida’s sex offender laws are intended to punish.

Absorbing his first taste of freedom in more than a decade, Delgado on Wednesday afternoon was still trying to take in his changed circumstances.

“From the point that the police came to get me, it was surreal,” he told the Herald/Times in a phone interview. “It’s been really crazy. It’s been super unbelievable.”

Sixteen years ago, Delgado and Katie Hansen became friends and had a mutual sexual relationship.

He was 20. She was 15, but she’d lied about her age, telling Delgado she was 17.

Hansen got pregnant — which revealed their affair and yielded criminal charges against Delgado for having sex with a minor.

Delgado was convicted on four counts of “lewd, lascivious or indecent act upon a child,” but a Brevard County judge granted leniency. He withheld adjudication and put Delgado on 10 years’ probation.

The punishment wasn’t absent the stigma of the crime.

“They tried to live together as a family after the baby was born, but he’d been labeled as a sex offender,” said his attorney Sharon Kegerreis of Miami. “There were posters in the neighborhood, and he had difficulties finding any job except at a fast-food restaurant.”

“I was too young and my head wasn’t in the right place,” said Delgado, now 37. “I got off track, I was out of control.”

In 2004, Delgado was busted for cocaine possession in Miami-Dade County, triggering a probation violation on his previous conviction.

A new Brevard County judge revisited his earlier case and wasn’t so merciful, even though Hansen — the victim — pleaded for the judge to go easy on Delgado.

The judge sentenced him to serve more than 27 years in prison — more than five times the sentence that would have been imposed if Delgado hadn’t had the sex offense on his record.

“I knew I was wrong, but I thought each individual judge would look at

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