Ohio man looks to DNA testing to exonerate him

In a review released this month by the Louisiana legislative auditor’s office, the Justice Reinvestment Initiative (JRI) — a bipartisan set of laws passed in 2017 — helped the state save $152.7 million. (Photo: Adobe Stock)

An Ohio man convicted of crimes he says he didn’t commit hopes DNA testing clears him. Samuel Herring was sentenced to up to 330 years in the 1984 kidnapping and rape of Phyllis Cottle. Herring asked for help from the Ohio Innocence Project, which in turn asked prosecutors for a DNA test. A reporter for The Marshall Project in Cleveland, Mark Puente, joins the show to provide a deeper insight into the case and why DNA testing was not used before.

Learn more about the Ohio Innocence Project from the clip above, and tune into theGrio with Marc Lamont Hill tonight at 7 pm ET on theGrio cable channel.

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