Innocent people have been - and continue to be convicted of crimes they did not commit. The tireless efforts of organisations like the Innocence Project in the United States of America (USA) have helped to free 325 wrongfully convicted individuals through post-conviction DNA testing. This number represents the tip of the 'miscarriages of justice' iceberg. Although the media spotlight is focused on the cases emerging from the USA, these issues are not theirs alone. Several other countries have overturned the convictions of innocent people (e.g., the Chamberlain case in Australia); however, none are on the same scale as the USA. In this paper, I highlight factors associated with these known wrongful convictions, and explain how criminal justi...
The retention of DNA and other forensic evidence following the completion of the trial process raise...
Scholars documenting the incidence and causes of wrongful convictions in the United States have focu...
Since 1989, the United States has witnessed 289 DNA exonerations, with exonerees serving an average ...
DNA has really changed the way that defense lawyers and prosecutors think about wrongful convictions...
Chapter 2 examines the critical role DNA analysis has played in exonerating the wrongfully convicted...
The advent of DNA testing technology almost two decades ago transformed how courts review claims of ...
This chapter describes the conceptual move away from factual innocence to legal exonerations based o...
Review of Wrongful Convictions and the DNA Revolution: Twenty-Five Years of Freeing the Innocent (Da...
Eight states in the nation do not have laws allowing post-conviction DNA exoneration: Alabama, Alask...
The DNA exonerations of the late twentieth century spawned a reform movement arguably as influential...
False convictions have received a lot of attention in recent years. Two-hundred and forty-one prison...
It is often said that truth “accurate sorting of the guilty from the innocent” is the primary object...
This article discusses the problems identified by recent DNA exonerations history. It addresses the ...
This new analysis of 194 DNA exonerations, representing 171 criminal events, examines the types of e...
The advent of post-conviction DNA testing in the past twenty years has spawned an Innocence Revoluti...
The retention of DNA and other forensic evidence following the completion of the trial process raise...
Scholars documenting the incidence and causes of wrongful convictions in the United States have focu...
Since 1989, the United States has witnessed 289 DNA exonerations, with exonerees serving an average ...
DNA has really changed the way that defense lawyers and prosecutors think about wrongful convictions...
Chapter 2 examines the critical role DNA analysis has played in exonerating the wrongfully convicted...
The advent of DNA testing technology almost two decades ago transformed how courts review claims of ...
This chapter describes the conceptual move away from factual innocence to legal exonerations based o...
Review of Wrongful Convictions and the DNA Revolution: Twenty-Five Years of Freeing the Innocent (Da...
Eight states in the nation do not have laws allowing post-conviction DNA exoneration: Alabama, Alask...
The DNA exonerations of the late twentieth century spawned a reform movement arguably as influential...
False convictions have received a lot of attention in recent years. Two-hundred and forty-one prison...
It is often said that truth “accurate sorting of the guilty from the innocent” is the primary object...
This article discusses the problems identified by recent DNA exonerations history. It addresses the ...
This new analysis of 194 DNA exonerations, representing 171 criminal events, examines the types of e...
The advent of post-conviction DNA testing in the past twenty years has spawned an Innocence Revoluti...
The retention of DNA and other forensic evidence following the completion of the trial process raise...
Scholars documenting the incidence and causes of wrongful convictions in the United States have focu...
Since 1989, the United States has witnessed 289 DNA exonerations, with exonerees serving an average ...