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The National Registry of Exonerations has recorded the 3,000th exoneration of a wrongly convicted defendant since 1989: the case of Reynaldo Munoz, framed for a Chicago murder. Three thousand ...
Launched at Northwestern Pritzker School of Law in October 2009, [1] the Center on Wrongful Convictions of Youth was a joint initiative between Northwestern Law's Center for Wrongful Convictions and its Children and Family Justice Center, with a defined purpose of representing and advocating for accused or convicted youth. [2]
People wrongfully convicted of murder (2 C, 61 P) R. ... Pages in category "People wrongfully convicted of a crime" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of ...
Timothy Brian Cole (1960–99) was an African American military veteran and a student wrongly convicted of raping a fellow student in 1985. Cole was convicted by a jury of rape, primarily based on the testimony of the victim, Michele Mallin. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison.
A former News & Observer reporter and a lawyer for the wrongly accused team up to provide housing to exonerees. When the wrongly convicted are freed, where do they go? This NC farm may have answer.
Testimony from three Black men — one mentally unstable and a convicted felon who later recanted — brought conviction. Most of the 10 sentences involved about 30 prison years.
At that time, students in a journalism course taught by Northwestern University professor David Protess investigated the Anthony Porter case as part of a class assignment for the Innocence Project of the Medill School of Journalism (it is now called the Medill Justice Project.) [3] The students assigned to the Porter case gathered evidence through their investigation that exposed serious flaws ...
The recent The post Can there be justice for the wrongly convicted? appeared first on TheGrio. Editor’s note: The following article is an op-ed, and the views expressed are the author’s own ...