Las Vegas Review-Journal

County agrees to pay $1.5M

Part of $14.5M settlement for wrongful conviction

- By Shea Johnson

Clark County has agreed to pay $1.5 million as part of a broader $14.5 million settlement to resolve a federal lawsuit brought by Demarlo Berry, a man who was wrongfully convicted of murder and imprisoned for more than two decades.

The county commission on Tuesday agreed to the payout after Berry sued the county and the Las Vegas Metropolit­an Police Department in 2019, alleging his wrongful conviction in the 1994 killing of Charles Burkes was the result of misconduct by detectives and the prosecutio­n.

The settlement must still be approved by Metro and the court.

Berry’s conviction was overturned in 2017 after another man serving a life sentence in California for a different murder confessed

to the crime. Last year, Berry was awarded more than $2.2 million in damages from Nevada and became the first person to receive a certificat­e of innocence under a 2019 state law that affords compensati­on to people wrongfully convicted in Nevada.

The $1.5 million payout approved by the county represents its share of the lawsuit settlement. Metro and its insurance carrier would pay the remaining $13 million balance under the deal, according to a county staff report.

But a Metro spokesman said the department had not yet approved its share. The county, which initially said that Metro’s fiscal affairs committee had signed off, corrected itself later Tuesday. Both declined to comment on the settlement terms, and messages left for Berry’s lawyer were not immediatel­y returned.

In a separate case, a man who spent nearly 20 years in state prison for a murder he did not commit was awarded $1.4 million by a judge on Monday. Fred Steese was declared innocent in 2012, pardoned in 2017 and awarded $75,000 for every year he wrongfully spent in prison.

‘Larger pattern’ of misconduct

Berry, who was released from prison in June 2017, was only 19 years old when Burkes, a manager at a Carl’s Jr. restaurant in Las Vegas, was shot and killed during an armed robbery.

The lawsuit accuses detectives of botching the investigat­ion; feeding key details to a jailhouse informant whom they allegedly pushed to falsely claim Berry had confessed to the killing; and suggesting to a cashier that Berry was the suspect during a photograph­ic lineup.

Detectives focused on Berry despite no physical or other evidence linking him to the crime and ignored evidence implicatin­g the man who ultimately confessed to the killing, according to the federal complaint.

“The misconduct in Berry’s case was part of a larger pattern of police misconduct of which defendants were aware,” the lawsuit claimed.

The district attorney’s office relied on the investigat­ion to prosecute Berry, even though there were issues with witnesses who gave descriptio­ns that clearly did not match Berry, according to the lawsuit.

Berry was sentenced to life in prison plus a consecutiv­e 25 years in 1995. The conviction was vacated after Berry secured assistance years earlier from the Rocky Mountain Innocence Center and following a reopened investigat­ion by the district attorney’s newly formed conviction review unit.

 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal file ?? Demarlo Berry hugs attorney Samantha Wilcox after he was released from prison in June 2017 following his wrongful conviction for a 1994 murder.
Las Vegas Review-journal file Demarlo Berry hugs attorney Samantha Wilcox after he was released from prison in June 2017 following his wrongful conviction for a 1994 murder.
 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal file ?? Demarlo Berry, right, with attorney Lynn Davies in 2017, after Berry was exonerated after spending more than two decades in prison.
Las Vegas Review-journal file Demarlo Berry, right, with attorney Lynn Davies in 2017, after Berry was exonerated after spending more than two decades in prison.

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