YOUR BUSINESS AUTHORITY
Springfield, MO
Legislation introduced by Senate President Pro-Tem Michael R. Gibbons, R-Kirkwood, prioritizes payments to those exonerated by DNA. The bill, introduced Feb. 7, gives financial relief to exonerated inmates who did not qualify for payment for lost time because of time constraints set forth by law.
According to a Senate news release, Missouri adopted a compensation plan in 2003 to pay $50 per day to incarcerated individuals who are exonerated because of DNA evidence. However, the law exempts anyone exonerated prior to Aug. 28, 2003.
Four exonerations
Gibbons said four innocent people have not been compensated for the lost years of their lives, and his bill would change that.
Steve Toney is one of those people, and his exoneration is one of the more high-profile cases in the state. Toney spent 13 years and 10 months behind bars after being convicted of a rape that DNA evidence later proved he did not commit. He was exonerated in 1993.
“It is indefensible that a man lost almost 14 years of his life serving a sentence for a crime he did not commit, and the state of Missouri has not repaid him in any way for that loss of his liberty,” Gibbons said in the release. “When a DNA test proves a mistake was made, then the innocent person should receive relief.”
Under the original compensation plan, the total amount owed to an incarcerated individual was to be paid in annual payments not to exceed $36,500.
In 2005, the legislature approved installment payments to exonerated individuals when a court ordered a payment of more than $300,000, emptying the money set aside for exonerations.
The state of Missouri owes an estimated $875,000 to the four inmates who were exonerated before Aug. 28, 2003.[[In-content Ad]]
A City Utilities employee since 2017 with a 25-year legal background, he now leads the municipal utility provider with an $895 million annual budget.
City employee dies in landfill accident
Spring 2025 Architects & Engineers Project Report
Kehoe appoints 3 locals to state boards, commission
Letter to the Editor: These candidates embody unity, collaboration, independence
Council postpones vote on tax payment requirement for occupational licenses