-
What’s next for Lamar Johnson’s attempt to overturn his 1995 murder conviction? Booker T. Shaw, Sarah Swatosh and Dave Roland discuss.
-
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.
-
Dwight Warren, who served in the St. Louis Circuit Attorneys Office when Johnson was convicted in 1995, defended how he handled the case
-
James Howard, who is serving a life sentence, testified Monday that he killed Marcus Boyd in 1994 — not Lamar Johnson.
-
A 2021 state law allows prosecutors to correct wrongful convictions, gives power to attorney general to intervene.
-
The Missouri Supreme Court ruled against Lamar Johnson on March 2. The St. Louis man has been helped by the Midwest Innocence Project and the St. Louis Circuit Attorney's Office in seeking his freedom after 26 years in prison for a murder he says he did not commit. Attorney Lindsay Runnels discussed his next steps on "St. Louis on the Air."
-
The Missouri Supreme Court is considering whether prosecutors have the power to try to fix what they believe are wrongful convictions in decades-old…
-
Updated Dec. 11 with oral argumentsThe ability of prosecutors in Missouri to undo wrongful convictions they discover is in the hands of a state appeals…
-
Lamar Johnson has been in prison for 24 years. A St. Louis jury found him guilty of murder in 1995 – and he’s been serving a life sentence without the…
-
A St. Louis judge has ruled that Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner does not have the authority to ask for a new trial in the case of a man Gardner says was…