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Timothy Brian Cole (July 1, 1960 – December 2, 1999) was an American military veteran and a Texas Tech University student wrongfully convicted of raping a fellow student in 1985. Cole attended two years of college followed by two years of service in the U.S. Army. After his Army service, he returned to college at Texas Tech in Lubbock. [1]
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After a religious conversion, Webb confessed to her pastor that she had wrongly accused Dotson and began efforts to get him released. The prosecution refused to take any action, so they went to the media. The resulting public sympathy led the authorities to review the case. Eventually Dotson was cleared via DNA testing and released. May 11, 1978
SPOILERS BELOW—do not scroll any further if you don't want the answer revealed. The New York Times. Today's Wordle Answer for #1250 on Wednesday, November 20, 2024.
(Reuters) -A Venezuelan migrant was convicted on Wednesday and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for murdering Laken Riley, a Georgia nursing student whose killing ...
Andrew Malkinson was wrongfully convicted of the rape of a 33-year-old woman in Salford, Greater Manchester, in 2003 and imprisoned. [14] He would have been eligible for release after 6½ years of imprisonment, but his refusal to wrongly confess meant that authorities refused to grant parole. [ 15 ]
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]