The Indiana Innocence Project has joined an international network of groups that provide pro bono legal and investigative services to wrongfully convicted people, and support them once they’re free.
The Innocence Network is an affiliation of organizations dedicated to providing pro bono legal and investigative services to individuals seeking to prove innocence of crimes for which they have been ...
The Innocence Network at the University of Houston law school may be the last hope for wrongfully convicted defendants, but it’s not winning a lot of love from the district attorney. David Dow, the ...
Harry T. Edwards and Constantine Gatsonis, co-chairs of the committee that authored the National Academies' 2009 report Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: A Path Forward, have been ...
The University of Arizona College of Law’s Wrongful Conviction Clinic was recently accepted as member of the Innocence Network and has changed its name to the UA Innocence Project. The Daily Wildcat ...
Twenty-six people rang in the new year in freedom because of a handful of dogged lawyers, investigators and students who believe -- sometimes, it seems, all by themselves -- that the point of the ...
From left to right: Stephen Saloom, Policy Director Innocence Project (New York), film co-directors Joe Bailey, Jr. and Steve Mims, and Barry Scheck, Innocence Project co-director When is a film more ...
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2006 Mumbai train blasts: It started in a jail cell. Now, it fights to free those wrongfully jailed
Besides its work on the 11/7 case, the Innocence Network India is helping other terror accused with legal aid A narrow, rain-soaked lane in Mumbai’s Vikhroli leads ...
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