Miami Twp. seeks Supreme Court review of record $45M wrongful-conviction award to Dean Gillispie

Fairborn resident and artist Dean Gillispie was awarded a $45 million wrongful conviction judgment Monday by a federal jury at the Water H. Rice Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse. JIM NOELKER/STAFF

Credit: JIM NOELKER

Credit: JIM NOELKER

Fairborn resident and artist Dean Gillispie was awarded a $45 million wrongful conviction judgment Monday by a federal jury at the Water H. Rice Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse. JIM NOELKER/STAFF

Miami Twp. is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse a $45 million verdict awarded to Dean Gillispie, who spent more than 20 years in prison for sexual assaults he didn’t commit and later sued over constitutional violations in the investigation that led to his wrongful conviction.

“Miami Twp. has filed a petition for certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court to address significant legal questions regarding township liability,” Terry Posey Jr. told Dayton Daily News. “This action is supported by amicus briefs from the Ohio Township Association, the Ohio Chamber of Commerce, and other key stakeholders who recognize the impact this decision will have at all levels of local government and statewide economic development.”

This news outlet reached out to Gillispie’s attorneys for comment.

Gillispie of Fairborn spent more than 20 years behind bars for sexual assaults he didn’t commit following an investigation by former Miami Twp. detective Matthew Moore. In 2008, Gillispie sought and received a new trial claiming evidence — including the identification of an alternative suspect and police reports possibly eliminating him as a suspect — were never turned over to his attorneys.

State and federal courts, along with the Ohio Supreme Court, released Gillispie, exonerated him and admitted he had been “wrongly imprisoned.”

Gillispie was freed from prison in 2011 after a federal judge ruled that the reports were never provided to his trial attorney.

In 2013, Gillispie filed a lawsuit, challenging his wrongful conviction.

The charges against Gillispie were formally dropped in 2017 and he was officially deemed wrongfully imprisoned.

A federal court in 2022 awarded Gillispie a $45 million wrongful conviction verdict, the largest in state history.

A federal appeals court ruled last May that Miami Twp. must pay the full $45 million awarded to Gillispie, who spent more than 20 years in prison for crimes he didn’t commit. The township’s attorneys said the amount was too high and that the ruling could leave Miami Twp. “financially ruined for generations.”

The court said there was ample evidence showing the harm Gillispie suffered, from being wrongly labeled a violent felon to losing years of freedom and normal life. Because of that, the judges refused to reduce the verdict.

Also filing a joint amicus brief with the Ohio Township Association were the Coalition of Large Urban Townships, the Ohio Municipal League and the County Commissioners Association.

In addition, the Ohio Chamber of Commerce and the Dayton Development Coalition filed a separate amicus brief in support.

The Supreme Court’s decision on whether to accept the case remains pending.

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