News 5 Cleveland: Cleveland Heights settles lawsuit with DNA exoneree for $4 million

Ohio Innocence Project assisted wrongfully convicted man who spent 17 years behind bars

Christopher Miller may finally get the justice he deserves.

Miller, 46, served nearly 17 years behind bars after being wrongfully convicted of a crime he did not commit. With the help of the Ohio Innocence Project at UC Law, Miller was exonerated by DNA in 2018.

And now the city of Cleveland Heights will pay $4 million to settle a federal civil rights lawsuit by Miller.

News 5 Cleveland reported the story in a recent broadcast.

Miller was wrongfully convicted of the 2001 sexual assault and robbery of a Cleveland Heights woman.  He always maintained his innocence and offered an alibi — Miller was asleep with his girlfriend miles away when the assault occurred. But police investigating the assault tracked the victim’s cell phone to Miller, who said he bought it from a local drug dealer.

A second suspect, Richard Stadmire, also was arrested and convicted. A third suspect in the case, Charles Boyd, testified that Miller was an accomplice in the crime. Miller maintained that Boyd was lying and that they had never met. Boyd later recanted his testimony.

OIP lawyer Brian Howe filed a motion in 2017 to retest DNA evidence in the case and the new test exonerated Miller.

"The DNA testing results showed definitely not only that Mr. Miller was excluded from the sexual assault kit, but DNA testing was able to identify both actual perpetrators in this case," Howe told News 5 Cleveland.

The DNA profiles matched Stadmire and Boyd.

"At some point, police decided that Mr. Miller was responsible for this crime," Howe told News 5 Cleveland. "At that point, the evidence was marshaled to support that conclusion."

Listen to the News 5 Cleveland report.

Learn more about Christopher Miller’s journey.

Featured top image: Christopher Miller hugs his daughters De'Nazha, left, and Chareale in 2018 after his release outside the Cuyahoga County Justice Center. Photo/provided.

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Cleveland.com: Men imprisoned since 2006 get new trial after Cleveland police officers contradict fellow officers’ testimony

March 22, 2021

An appeals court granted a new trial for two men who spent the last 14 years in prison for the shooting of two people and the attempted shooting of a Cleveland police officer. The unanimous decision issued by the 8th District Court of Appeals found that Cleveland police and Cuyahoga County prosecutors denied Kenny Phillips and Michael Sutton a fair trial by failing to tell the men’s defense attorneys that officers gave conflicting statements about the shootings, and not calling them testify at trial. The Ohio Innocence Project represents Sutton. Mark Godsey, director of the Cincinnati-based Ohio Innocence Project, said that attorneys for the men would ask the courts to release the men on bond immediately pending their new trial.