© 2024 University of Missouri - KBIA
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Family of George Allen gets $14 million in wrongful prosecution case

George Allen, in striped shirt, leaves the Cole County Courthouse in Jefferson City on Nov. 14, 2012 after a judge threw out his 1983 murder conviction. His family has settled a federal civil rights lawsuit for $14 million.
File photo | Marshall Griffin | St. Louis Public Radio
George Allen, in striped shirt, leaves the Cole County Courthouse in Jefferson City on Nov. 14, 2012 after a judge threw out his 1983 murder conviction. His family has settled a federal civil rights lawsuit for $14 million.

The city of St. Louis and the state of Missouri will pay nearly $14 million to the family of a man wrongfully convicted of the 1982 rape and murder of a St. Louis court reporter.

George Allen died in 2016. His sister Elfrieda and his mother, Lonzetta Taylor, settled the federal civil rights lawsuit last week. The first payment of $3 million is due March 22.

Neither the city nor the state admit to any of the allegations in the lawsuit, which included claims that detectives beat a confession out of Allen, and withheld evidence that would have shown he was innocent. But earlier state court rulings that granted Allen his freedom ruled police covered up the fact that blood found at the scene ruled out Allen as the murderer.

Allen was 26 in 1982 when he was arrested in connection with the death of Mary Bell, who was stabbed in her south St. Louis apartment. According to the lawsuit filed in 2012, officers confused Allen for a suspect in the case, Kirk Eaton, and arrested Allen even after he produced identification. St. Louis Metropolitan Police officers then interrogated Allen despite his mental illness until Allen confessed to the crime.

Allen was found guilty of rape, murder and burglary in July 1983 and sentenced to life in prison.

In 2011, the New York-based Innocence Project filed documents seeking to have Allen’s conviction thrown out based on new DNA evidence. A Cole County judge did so in November 2012, and set Allen free when then-circuit attorney Jennifer Joyce decided not to retry the case.  By then, Allen had served 30 years in prison. The state appeals court upheldthe judge’s ruling that December.

The state case was filed in Cole County becauseAllen was in prison in Jefferson City. 

Attorneys for Allen’s family would not comment on the settlement. A spokeswoman for Attorney General Josh Hawley did not immediately return a request for comment.

Follow Rachel on Twitter: @rlippmann

Copyright 2021 St. Louis Public Radio. To see more, visit St. Louis Public Radio.

Lippmann returned to her native St. Louis after spending two years covering state government in Lansing, Michigan. She earned her undergraduate degree from Northwestern University and followed (though not directly) in Maria Altman's footsteps in Springfield, also earning her graduate degree in public affairs reporting. She's also done reporting stints in Detroit, Michigan and Austin, Texas. Rachel likes to fill her free time with good books, good friends, good food, and good baseball.
Rachel Lippmann
Lippmann returned to her native St. Louis after spending two years covering state government in Lansing, Michigan. She earned her undergraduate degree from Northwestern University and followed (though not directly) in Maria Altman's footsteps in Springfield, also earning her graduate degree in public affairs reporting. She's also done reporting stints in Detroit, Michigan and Austin, Texas. Rachel likes to fill her free time with good books, good friends, good food, and good baseball.