Missouri man exonerated in 1978 triple murder gets $1 million in donations

An online fundraiser for a Missouri man wrongly convicted in a 1978 triple slaying has reached $1.1 million — and continues to grow by the minute Friday.

The success of the financial effort — which was launched in June by the Midwest Innocence Project with a much more financially modest goal — has given Kevin Strickland a Thanksgiving to remember.

“Thank you for all your support!” the fundraiser read as the 62-year-old was released Tuesday from the Western Missouri Detention Center after a judge granted a prosecutor’s motion to free him. “All funds go directly to Mr. Strickland, who the state of Missouri won’t provide a dime to for the 43 years they stole from him.”

Prosecutors said in May that Strickland — who was acquitted in his first 1979 trial, but got convicted of capital murder and two counts of second-degree murder two months later — should be freed since two men who pleaded guilty in the April 1978 slayings said he wasn’t with them at the time.

Kevin Strickland talks with attorney Logan Rutherford Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2021, during an evidentiary hearing at the Jackson County Courthouse in Kansas City, Missouri.
Kevin Strickland and Logan Rutherford talk during an evidentiary hearing held at Jackson County Courthouse in Kansas City (Mo.) on Nov. 10, 2021.
Tammy Ljungblad/The Kansas City Star via AP

After a Kansas City Star report, authorities began to investigate the matter. The review led to prosecutors calling for Strickland’s immediate release since his conviction relied heavily on testimony of a now-deceased witness who tried to recant her mistaken identification prior to her 2015 death.

Strickland’s path to freedom was stymied by Missouri Gov. Mike Parson, who declined to grant his clemency request despite prosecutors insisting he was “factually innocent,” the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.

The Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt maintained that Strickland had been guilty of a crime and tried to get him imprisoned for it, according to the newspaper.

But despite being cleared of the triple slaying, Strickland is ineligible to receive compensation through Missouri’s compensation law for the wrongfully convicted since it requires DNA evidence, according to the Midwest Innocence Project.

Kevin Strickland is assisted into a Jackson County courtroom Monday, Nov. 8, 2021, in Kansas City, Mo.
Kevin Strickland was exonerated from the charges for which he was held in prison.
Tammy Ljungblad/The Kansas City Star via AP

“When Kevin Strickland first went to prison in 1979, gas was 86 cents a gallon, Jimmy Carter was still president, and the first Star Trek movie had just made its debut,” a website about his case reads. “What’s remained unchanged, though, is Kevin’s actual innocence.”

The fundraiser’s prior goal was a mere $7,500 — or $175 for each of the 43 years Strickland spent locked up. Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker praised a judge’s Tuesday ruling setting aside his conviction and dismissing all the criminal charges.

“To say we’re extremely pleased and grateful is an understatement,” Peters said in a statement. “This brings justice — finally — to a man who has tragically suffered so, so greatly as a result of this wrongful conviction.”

Kevin Strickland listens to testimony Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2021, in Kansas City, Missour
Kevin Strickland was in prison for 43 years.
Rich Sugg/The Kansas City Star by AP

Strickland was serving a 50-year sentence for life without parole. CNN reported that Strickland spoke out from his wheelchair in prison as he left it Tuesday.

“Still in disbelief,” Strickland said. “I didn’t think this day would come.”

Strickland, who learned of his impending release while watching a soap opera behind bars, went directly to his mother’s grave upon being freed.

“To know my mother was underneath that dirt and I hadn’t gotten a chance to visit her in the last years … I revisited those tears that I did when they told me I was guilty of a crime I didn’t commit,” Strickland told CNN Wednesday.

Some of Strickland’s supporters, meanwhile, said they were sorry that the justice system had been “rigged” against him.

Kevin Strickland, center, spoke to the media along with his attorneys Tricia Rojo Bushnell, left, and Robert Hoffman, after his release from prison, Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2021, in Cameron, Mo.
Kevin Strickland said he was “still in disbelief,” following the overturned conviction.
Rich Sugg/The Kansas City Star by AP

“I commend the DA to realize the mistake made and give you the freedom that should have never been taken away from you to start with,” one fundraiser donor wrote. “But I learned in life the biggest gift is the ability to forgive and I am sure you will find that happiness by trying to forgive.”

According to the National Registry on Exonerations (NRE), people who have been convicted are typically held in prison for just nine years. Strickland, who has served more than 43 years in prison, is among the nation’s longest-serving ex inmates, according to data.

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