This empirical study examines for the first time how the criminal justice system in the United States handled the cases of people who were subsequently found innocent through postconviction DNA testing. The data collected tell the story of this unique group of exonerees, starting with their criminal trials, moving through levels of direct appeals and habeas corpus review, and ending with their eventual exonerations. Beginning with the trials of these exonerees, this study examines the leading types of evidence supporting their wrongful convictions, which were erroneous eyewitness identifications, forensic evidence, informant testimony, and false confessions. Yet our system of criminal appeals and postconviction review poorly addressed factu...
The Innocence Project has exonerated only four women out of their first 250 cases. Even with the inc...
This Article examines the body of law emerging in cases brought by former criminal defendants once e...
No system is without its shortcomings, and the legal system is no different. In the instance of a wr...
Wrongful convictions have been gaining attention both in the public and academic arenas. The knowled...
The advent of DNA testing technology almost two decades ago transformed how courts review claims of ...
Since 1989, the United States has witnessed 289 DNA exonerations, with exonerees serving an average ...
An increasingly strong case can be made for the argument that mistaken-eyewitness identification is ...
It is often said that truth “accurate sorting of the guilty from the innocent” is the primary object...
Eight states in the nation do not have laws allowing post-conviction DNA exoneration: Alabama, Alask...
This is the first study to explore the forensic science testimony by prosecution experts in the tria...
The DNA exonerations of the late twentieth century spawned a reform movement arguably as influential...
Review of Wrongful Convictions and the DNA Revolution: Twenty-Five Years of Freeing the Innocent (Da...
The Innocence Project has exonerated only four women out of their first 250 cases. Even with the inc...
Scholars documenting the incidence and causes of wrongful convictions in the United States have focu...
The advent of post-conviction DNA testing in the past twenty years has spawned an Innocence Revoluti...
The Innocence Project has exonerated only four women out of their first 250 cases. Even with the inc...
This Article examines the body of law emerging in cases brought by former criminal defendants once e...
No system is without its shortcomings, and the legal system is no different. In the instance of a wr...
Wrongful convictions have been gaining attention both in the public and academic arenas. The knowled...
The advent of DNA testing technology almost two decades ago transformed how courts review claims of ...
Since 1989, the United States has witnessed 289 DNA exonerations, with exonerees serving an average ...
An increasingly strong case can be made for the argument that mistaken-eyewitness identification is ...
It is often said that truth “accurate sorting of the guilty from the innocent” is the primary object...
Eight states in the nation do not have laws allowing post-conviction DNA exoneration: Alabama, Alask...
This is the first study to explore the forensic science testimony by prosecution experts in the tria...
The DNA exonerations of the late twentieth century spawned a reform movement arguably as influential...
Review of Wrongful Convictions and the DNA Revolution: Twenty-Five Years of Freeing the Innocent (Da...
The Innocence Project has exonerated only four women out of their first 250 cases. Even with the inc...
Scholars documenting the incidence and causes of wrongful convictions in the United States have focu...
The advent of post-conviction DNA testing in the past twenty years has spawned an Innocence Revoluti...
The Innocence Project has exonerated only four women out of their first 250 cases. Even with the inc...
This Article examines the body of law emerging in cases brought by former criminal defendants once e...
No system is without its shortcomings, and the legal system is no different. In the instance of a wr...