This analytical essay looks at the myriad of ways innocent people are wrongfully convicted and how the criminal justice system fails to truly reach a fair and equitable result. The article looks at how at the initial stages of a criminal proceeding, a defendant can be prejudiced to the point of sufficient harm to his chances at being given a fair and impartial judicial proceeding. This article examines how fatal mistakes can be made and reveals that there can be flaws in the science of DNA testing, including fraud, criminologist bias, improper laboratory procedures, and human error. This article seeks to point out major factors that can contribute to an innocent individual being erroneously convicted of a crime and how that happens more tim...
Wrongful conviction is a serious dilemma for the criminal-justice system. A joint investigation by t...
AbstractWrongful conviction is a pressing legal and social justice issue that requires scholarly att...
This Article explores the viability of upstream criminal justice reforms within the context of an ad...
This Article examines the body of law emerging in cases brought by former criminal defendants once e...
There have been over 300 post-conviction DNA exonerations in the history of the United States. While...
Previous literature has indicated that wrongful conviction is estimated to occur in about 1 to 5 per...
This Article examines one case in which students and lawyers from Golden Gate University\u27s Innoce...
DNA evidence has exonerated over two hundred wrongfully convicted defendants in the last several yea...
In this article I argue that despite the very serious nature and surprisingly large number of these ...
The first section of this article reviews the evidence, both historical and contemporary, documentin...
Although the criminal justice system is one of the most important systems in our society, it has its...
This paper deals with the issue of reliability in the criminal justice process, and the rising num...
Review of Wrongful Convictions and the DNA Revolution: Twenty-Five Years of Freeing the Innocent (Da...
Many state innocence protection statutes give courts the power to impose appropriate sanctions when ...
(Excerpt) This Note argues that due process requires a new trial when scientific evidence necessary ...
Wrongful conviction is a serious dilemma for the criminal-justice system. A joint investigation by t...
AbstractWrongful conviction is a pressing legal and social justice issue that requires scholarly att...
This Article explores the viability of upstream criminal justice reforms within the context of an ad...
This Article examines the body of law emerging in cases brought by former criminal defendants once e...
There have been over 300 post-conviction DNA exonerations in the history of the United States. While...
Previous literature has indicated that wrongful conviction is estimated to occur in about 1 to 5 per...
This Article examines one case in which students and lawyers from Golden Gate University\u27s Innoce...
DNA evidence has exonerated over two hundred wrongfully convicted defendants in the last several yea...
In this article I argue that despite the very serious nature and surprisingly large number of these ...
The first section of this article reviews the evidence, both historical and contemporary, documentin...
Although the criminal justice system is one of the most important systems in our society, it has its...
This paper deals with the issue of reliability in the criminal justice process, and the rising num...
Review of Wrongful Convictions and the DNA Revolution: Twenty-Five Years of Freeing the Innocent (Da...
Many state innocence protection statutes give courts the power to impose appropriate sanctions when ...
(Excerpt) This Note argues that due process requires a new trial when scientific evidence necessary ...
Wrongful conviction is a serious dilemma for the criminal-justice system. A joint investigation by t...
AbstractWrongful conviction is a pressing legal and social justice issue that requires scholarly att...
This Article explores the viability of upstream criminal justice reforms within the context of an ad...