Innocence, it turns out, is a complex concept. Yet the Innocence Movement has drawn power from the simplicity of the wrong-person story of innocence, as told most effectively by the DNA cases. The purity of that story continues to have power, but that story alone cannot sustain the Innocence Movement. It is too narrow. It fails to accommodate the vast majority of innocent people in our justice system. It fails to embrace innocence in its full complexity. . . . [I]n the end, for virtually all purposes, innocence must be understood under the objective rules that have long governed the criminal justice system....Without proof of guilt determined by a court, the presumption of innocence defines innocence
The DNA exonerations of the late twentieth century spawned a reform movement arguably as influential...
In recent years, the Innocent Movement has begun to focus its attention on wrongful misdemeanor conv...
DNA has really changed the way that defense lawyers and prosecutors think about wrongful convictions...
Innocence, it turns out, is a complex concept. Yet the Innocence Movement has drawn power from the s...
This chapter describes the conceptual move away from factual innocence to legal exonerations based o...
There is nothing more compelling than a story about an innocent person wrongly convicted and ultimat...
It is fundamentally important that the criminal justice system accurately separate the guilty from t...
The Supreme Court has never resolved whether innocence is a freestanding constitutional claim. Many...
It is often said that truth “accurate sorting of the guilty from the innocent” is the primary object...
The presumption of innocence has long been regarded as a hallmark of our justice system. Rhetoric ab...
The Supreme Court has never resolved whether innocence is a freestanding constitutional claim. Some ...
Prosecutors, the most powerful actors in the criminal justice system, also have the most difficult j...
The advent of DNA testing technology almost two decades ago transformed how courts review claims of ...
Most, if not all, criminal law systems and international and regional human rights agreements explic...
Few ideals reign more supreme than the jury as conscience of our community and moral arbiter of a cr...
The DNA exonerations of the late twentieth century spawned a reform movement arguably as influential...
In recent years, the Innocent Movement has begun to focus its attention on wrongful misdemeanor conv...
DNA has really changed the way that defense lawyers and prosecutors think about wrongful convictions...
Innocence, it turns out, is a complex concept. Yet the Innocence Movement has drawn power from the s...
This chapter describes the conceptual move away from factual innocence to legal exonerations based o...
There is nothing more compelling than a story about an innocent person wrongly convicted and ultimat...
It is fundamentally important that the criminal justice system accurately separate the guilty from t...
The Supreme Court has never resolved whether innocence is a freestanding constitutional claim. Many...
It is often said that truth “accurate sorting of the guilty from the innocent” is the primary object...
The presumption of innocence has long been regarded as a hallmark of our justice system. Rhetoric ab...
The Supreme Court has never resolved whether innocence is a freestanding constitutional claim. Some ...
Prosecutors, the most powerful actors in the criminal justice system, also have the most difficult j...
The advent of DNA testing technology almost two decades ago transformed how courts review claims of ...
Most, if not all, criminal law systems and international and regional human rights agreements explic...
Few ideals reign more supreme than the jury as conscience of our community and moral arbiter of a cr...
The DNA exonerations of the late twentieth century spawned a reform movement arguably as influential...
In recent years, the Innocent Movement has begun to focus its attention on wrongful misdemeanor conv...
DNA has really changed the way that defense lawyers and prosecutors think about wrongful convictions...