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Neither Lamar Johnson nor Kevin Strickland have received compensation from the Missouri for the decades they spent wrongfully incarcerated. That’s because Missouri law only allows for payments to prisoners who prove their innocence through specific DNA testing — which was not the case for either man. A new Missouri Senate bill would change that.
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Attorney Lindsay Runnels of the Kansas City-based law firm Morgan Pilate has represented Lamar Johnson since 2015. Johnson was freed this week after serving 28 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit.
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Lamar Johnson isn’t eligible for state restitution because DNA evidence wasn’t used to overturn his murder conviction.
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Judge David Mason ruled that there was no longer "clear and convincing" evidence to keep Lamar Johnson in prison for a 1994 slaying in St. Louis.
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Judge David Mason says he’ll hold a hearing to announce his decision but has not yet set a date.
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A 2021 state law carved out a narrow role the attorney general’s office can play in innocence claims filed by local prosecutors.
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What’s next for Lamar Johnson’s attempt to overturn his 1995 murder conviction? Booker T. Shaw, Sarah Swatosh and Dave Roland discuss.
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St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner is trying to vacate Johnson’s 1995 murder conviction. But she’s facing pushback from the state attorney general’s office.
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Dwight Warren, who served in the St. Louis Circuit Attorneys Office when Johnson was convicted in 1995, defended how he handled the case
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James Howard, who is serving a life sentence, testified Monday that he killed Marcus Boyd in 1994 — not Lamar Johnson.