Innocence Project: Difference between revisions

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The '''Innocence Project''' is a legal clinic at [[Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law|Benjamin Cardozo Law School]].  It was founded in 1992, by lawyers [[Barry C. Scheck]] and Peter J. Neufeld, to represent prisoners who could be proved, by [[DNA]] testing, innocent of the crimes of which they were convicted and for which they were serving time.  Of the first 194 prisoners exonerated by the Project, 14 had been on death row, sentenced to be executed, and the average length of time the 194 had been wrongly incarcerated was 12 years.
The '''Innocence Project''' is a legal clinic at [[Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law|Benjamin Cardozo Law School]] in New York.  It was founded in 1992, by lawyers [[Barry C. Scheck]] and Peter J. Neufeld, to represent prisoners who could be proved, by [[DNA]] testing, innocent of the crimes of which they were convicted and for which they were serving time.  Of the first 194 prisoners exonerated by the Project, 14 had been on death row, sentenced to be executed, and the average length of time the 194 had been wrongly incarcerated was 12 years.
 
The U.S. news magazine ''Time'' reported in its issue dated April 23, 2007, that from its 1st reversal of a conviction in 1989 to its 199th in April 2007, the Innocence Project had freed prisoners in 33 states.  In 72 of the cases, the DNA evidence not only cleared the wrongly convicted person but also proved who the real perpetrator was.





Revision as of 23:32, 15 April 2007

The Innocence Project is a legal clinic at Benjamin Cardozo Law School in New York. It was founded in 1992, by lawyers Barry C. Scheck and Peter J. Neufeld, to represent prisoners who could be proved, by DNA testing, innocent of the crimes of which they were convicted and for which they were serving time. Of the first 194 prisoners exonerated by the Project, 14 had been on death row, sentenced to be executed, and the average length of time the 194 had been wrongly incarcerated was 12 years.

The U.S. news magazine Time reported in its issue dated April 23, 2007, that from its 1st reversal of a conviction in 1989 to its 199th in April 2007, the Innocence Project had freed prisoners in 33 states. In 72 of the cases, the DNA evidence not only cleared the wrongly convicted person but also proved who the real perpetrator was.


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