Posts Tagged ‘Innocence’
North Carolina Innocence Panel
The North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission is the only special innocence panel in the country. It was established in 2006 to review claims of innocence by prisoners in the state after several wrongful convictions were brought to public attention. Over the last four years, the Commission has reviewed hundreds of cases, but has only passed on three to a three-judge panel hearing. Of those three, only the last case, ruled on February 17, 2010, was overturned. George Taylor, who was convicted and jailed for murdering a prostitute in 1991, was found innocent, and was finally freed from prison.
Read more here.
Bill Introduced to Prevent Innocent from Execution
The Effective Death Penalty Appeals Act was introduced by Congressman Hank Johnson (D-GA) and would allow death penalty inmates to present newly discovered evidence of innocence. Current law does not grant habeas corpus for death row inmates and allows the inmates no procedural options.
Read more here.
Questions for Cathy – Guilty or Innocent?
Do you believe some people at Angola are innocent? What does that
mean for you?
My job is clear. I am to provide care and custody for those sentenced by the courts – by a jury of their peers. I don’t decide guilt or innocence. I do provide access to legal serves for those who appeal. I do feel that people are capable and do know many that can release with skills and attitudes far better than what they arrived with.
What is the hardest decision you’ve faced?
How to write a press release fitting enough to honor a Captain (DCKnapps) who was killed in a hostage situation while saving countless others.
After 22 Years on Death Row, Paul House is Cleared
After two decades of struggling to reverse his wrongful conviction, Paul House has been cleared in Tennessee. Read more about how the Innocence Project worked to release him from death row.
To learn more about the Innocence Project visit their website.
Prosecuters Block Inmates’ Access to DNA Testing
Prisoners seeking to use a DNA test to prove their innocence may be blocked from accessing the test! A recent analysis at University of Virginia Law School found that prosecuters deny DNA testing in almost 1 of every 5 cases. Read the New York Times news story that sheds light on this issue.
Innocent People are in Prison
How many innocent men and women are sitting in American prisons today? Imagine sitting in a prison cell for 15 years for a crime you didn’t commit.
That’s what happened to Joseph Fears Jr.
In 1984 Joseph was convicted of a rape that he didn’t commit. In 2009 DNA testing proved that he was innocent. He was exonerated March 10, 2009.
Joseph might have been in jail for another 15 years if the Innocence Project had not taken on his case. The Innocence Project is a legal clinic committed to assisting prisoners who could be proven innocent through DNA testing. To this day 237 people have been exonerated through the Innocence Project.
Keep up to date with their work. Visit the Innocence Project website.