Innocence Project
The Innocence Project refers to a number of non-profit legal clinics in the United States. The most well known is based at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law of Yeshiva University. It directly serves only defendants who can conclusively be proven innocent by genetic fingerprinting of evidence done after their convictions.
The clinic was founded in 1992 by Barry Scheck and Peter Neufeld. In addition to services to individual defendants, it performs research and advocacy related to the incidence and causes of wrongful convictions.
As of September 2005, it claims to have exonerated 162 defendants previously convicted of a serious crime in the United States. Almost all of these convictions involved some form of sexual assault and approximately 25% involved murder.
Wrongful Convictions
The Innocence Project was established in the wake of a landmark study by the United States Department of Justice and the United States Senate, in conjunction with Columbia Law School. [1] Among the study's estimates are a 5% failure rate in the U.S. justice system, which suggests as many as 100,000 falsely convicted prisoners. [2] Other reports place the estimate as high as 10%. [3]
See also
- Capital punishment in the United States
- Ken Wyniemko, one of the defendants exonerated by the Innocence Project
External links
- The Cardozo School of Law Innocence Project
- [4] California Western Innocence Project
- The Wisconsin Innocence Project
- Copy of the aforementioned study
- The study in text file format
- Truth in Justice