Detroit man jailed 25 years for crime he didn’t commit ordered to return $1M to Michigan after court ruling

Desmond Ricks was jailed for 25 years for a murder he did not commit until his conviction was overturned and he was released.

After his acquittal, Ricks was awarded more than $1 million in damages under Michigan’s Wrongful Imprisonment Compensation Act. The law, which took effect in 2017, pays out approximately $50,000 per year to wrongfully incarcerated people. The purpose of compensation is to recognize the losses suffered by the exonerated person while in prison.

As of July 2024, Ricks is one of 77 acquitted persons who have received compensation under the law. The state of Michigan has been awarded a total of nearly $52 million in compensation through these claims(1). But his lawyer said no amount of money could make up for the losses.

“Desmond Ricks suffered the worst injuries and pain you can imagine,” his attorney, Wolf Muller, told WXYZ Detroit (2). “To be locked up in a cage for 25 years for a crime he did not commit. The $1 million and a quarter in restitution mandated by the state is no match for the harm he suffered.”

Now, the state of Michigan is asking Ricks to return the money. Here’s why.

The order requiring Ricks to repay the state stems from a Michigan Court of Appeals ruling following a separate civil settlement over his wrongful conviction.

The settlement comes from the city of Detroit, which agreed to pay Ricks $7.5 million to resolve a lawsuit alleging police misconduct. Ricks claims that police switched bullet evidence to frame him for the 1992 murder(3).

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The case was reopened in 2016 after new evidence was uncovered by the Innocence Clinic at the University of Michigan Law School. Tests showed the bullets recovered from the victim, Gerry Bennett, did not match the .38-caliber gun prosecutors identified as the murder weapon.

Under Michigan law, a releasee must repay damages obtained through the Wrongful Incarceration Compensation Act if he or she later obtains damages from a third party related to the same conviction. This process, called clawback, allows the state to recover funds that have been paid (4).

In addition to wrongful conviction cases, recovery is more commonly used in corporate and financial contexts, such as recovering executive bonuses following misconduct or recovering improperly paid government benefits.

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