Extraordinarily powerful stories of ordinary people locked up for crimes they did not commit, and how they were freed against great odds.A nightmare from a thousand B-movies: a horrible crime is committed in your neighborhood, and the police knock at your door. A witness swears you are the perpetrator; you have no alibi, and no one believes your protestations of innocence. You\u27re convicted, sentenced to hard time in maximum security, or even death row, where you await the executioner\u27s needle.Tragically, this is no movie script but reality for hundreds of American citizens. Our criminal justice system is broken, and people from all walks of life have been destroyed by its failures. But science and a group of incredibly dedicated crusa...
In recent years, the Innocent Movement has begun to focus its attention on wrongful misdemeanor conv...
The inability of public defense systems to provide sufficiently zealous legal representation to indi...
The facts and data are in and the conclusion they compel is bleak: the American criminal justice sys...
Extraordinarily powerful stories of ordinary people locked up for crimes they did not commit, and ho...
Extraordinarily powerful stories of ordinary people locked up for crimes they did not commit, and ho...
There is nothing more compelling than a story about an innocent person wrongly convicted and ultimat...
Pursuing justice for the wrongfully convicted is a profoundly meaningful goal. Yet the innocence mov...
The movie 12 Angry Men is part of a larger American myth about the frequency of wrongful criminal co...
Scholars studying wrongful convictions have long examined their causes and the ways in which to prev...
Over the past decade and a half, a great deal of attention has rightfully been given to the issue of...
When justice disappears, Immanuel Kant wrote, it is no longer worth while for men to live on earth...
In the summer of 2015, experts gathered from around the country to sit together and discuss one of t...
Prosecutors, the most powerful actors in the criminal justice system, also have the most difficult j...
By monitoring and investigating errors in the criminal justice system, innocence commissions could h...
Innocence, it turns out, is a complex concept. Yet the Innocence Movement has drawn power from the s...
In recent years, the Innocent Movement has begun to focus its attention on wrongful misdemeanor conv...
The inability of public defense systems to provide sufficiently zealous legal representation to indi...
The facts and data are in and the conclusion they compel is bleak: the American criminal justice sys...
Extraordinarily powerful stories of ordinary people locked up for crimes they did not commit, and ho...
Extraordinarily powerful stories of ordinary people locked up for crimes they did not commit, and ho...
There is nothing more compelling than a story about an innocent person wrongly convicted and ultimat...
Pursuing justice for the wrongfully convicted is a profoundly meaningful goal. Yet the innocence mov...
The movie 12 Angry Men is part of a larger American myth about the frequency of wrongful criminal co...
Scholars studying wrongful convictions have long examined their causes and the ways in which to prev...
Over the past decade and a half, a great deal of attention has rightfully been given to the issue of...
When justice disappears, Immanuel Kant wrote, it is no longer worth while for men to live on earth...
In the summer of 2015, experts gathered from around the country to sit together and discuss one of t...
Prosecutors, the most powerful actors in the criminal justice system, also have the most difficult j...
By monitoring and investigating errors in the criminal justice system, innocence commissions could h...
Innocence, it turns out, is a complex concept. Yet the Innocence Movement has drawn power from the s...
In recent years, the Innocent Movement has begun to focus its attention on wrongful misdemeanor conv...
The inability of public defense systems to provide sufficiently zealous legal representation to indi...
The facts and data are in and the conclusion they compel is bleak: the American criminal justice sys...