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  1. Feb 13, 2024 · At Harvard Law School, Daniel Medwed outlines the tangle of legal rules and procedures that keep wrongly convicted people behind bars. Tens of thousands of innocent people are languishing in prison across the United States, according to studies cited by the Innocence Project.

  2. Dec 12, 2011 · estimate is that 1 percent of the US prison population, approximately 20,000 people, are falsely convicted. In fact, since the late 1980s there have been as many as 850 exonerations nationwide, according to University of Michigan law professor Samuel Gross, a leading researcher in the field.

  3. Jun 15, 2021 · In these cases, innocent people were sentenced to prison—many to life-long terms, and 93 of them were sentenced to death. On average, these innocents spent 11 years in prison (13.9 years for those wrongly convicted of murder).

  4. When they interviewed Richard Palombo, he finally named his accomplice in the 1971 robbery that first sent Phillips to prison. No, it wasn’t Phillips. It was Fred Mitchell.

  5. Police, prosecutors, and judges are not held accountable for misconduct that leads to wrongful convictions, such as fabricating evidence, presenting false testimony, or refusing to consider proof of innocence. Immunity laws protect them from liability even in cases of gross misconduct.

  6. Jun 22, 2023 · The Supreme Court’s latest opinion means innocent people must remain in prison. Clarence Thomas’s majority opinion ensures that innocent people will spend years behind bars.

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  8. Jun 27, 2024 · We've helped free more than 240 innocent people from prison. Support our work to strengthen and advance the innocence movement. Explore a sample of the demographics of our exonerated clients, as well as the factors that contributed to their wrongful convictions.

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