Timothy Cole |
Saturday, January 26, 2013
Paper publishes propitious profile of Texas exonerees
Labels:
Innocence,
Media,
michael morton,
Timothy Cole
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Welcome to Texas justice: You might beat the rap, but you won't beat the ride.
Timothy Cole |
- Blawg Wisdom
- Evan Smith, Editor-in-chief and publisher, The Texas Tribune
- The Austin Chronicle
- Emily Bazelon, Slate
- San Antonio Current
- Conor Friedersdorf, The Atlantic
- Erica Grieder, The Economist
- Pamela Colloff, Texas Monthly
- Doug Berman, Sentencing Law & Policy
- Marie Gottschalk, author of 'Caught'
- DallasBlog
- Scott Medlock, Texas Civil Rights Project
- Solomon Moore, NY Times criminal justice correspondent
- Donald Lee, Texas Conference of Urban Counties
-Attorney Bob Mabry, Conroe
- Corey Yung, Sex Crimes Blog
Tommy Adkisson,
Bexar County Commissioner
- Dirty Third Streets
- Texas Public Policy Foundation
David Jennings, aka "Big Jolly"
John Bradley,
Former Williamson County District Attorney, now former Attorney General of Palau
- To the People
Contact: gritsforbreakfast AT gmail.com
7 comments:
But how does Texas fare against other states? It's terrible that anyone who is innocent has to languish so long behind bars before thier innocence is accepted by the courts, but I do wonder if it is the same across most American states or whether Texas is particularly bad at sending innocents to prison.
The Exoneration Registry can answer those questions. Go to http://www.law.umich.edu/special/exoneration/Pages/about.aspx
SW/Petra, I'm not sure the exoneration registry can tell us that, at least yet. DNA exonerations are rare - only 10% of violent crimes have biological evidence at all, meaning false convictions in the other 90% typically couldn't be uncovered by that method.
Plus, where DNA evidence existed, in older cases it often wasn't saved. For example, the main reason Dallas has more DNA exonerations elsewhere is because their lab saved old evidence to re-test. The fact that San Antonio, Forth Worth, Austin, Houston, etc., didn't doesn't prove there weren't as many false convictions there, it just means they cannot be similarly rectified. And non-DNA exonerations are even rarer and more difficult to achieve under state habeas law.
My own sense is that Texas in the past has engaged more aggressively in some of the tactics that cause false convictions, but I don't think that exoneration registry is yet complete or robust enough to make those sort of comparative judgments based solely on that data.
Thanks for sharing my project, I really appreciate
it. You can also check out my blog where in the weeks to come I will be giving the story behind each portrait
http://blog.chron.com/depthoffield/2013/01/a-human-tragedy/
Our judicial system is in sure need of an overhaul and all of these people are just a symptom of how bad our system has become.4.3 million in jail or in prison in america is unacceptable as these exonerees.
Nice work Grits, as usual!.
Yea, police and prosicutors shouldn't frame innocent people because they want to move up in the system and they are inherently unbalnced people. Oh well, welcome to judicial corruption in America, you know - the land of the free.
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