miscarriage of justice essay

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    not commit. Whether racial prejudice plays any role in our criminal and justice system needs critical examine since the law should be fair and equal before all. A non-discriminative judicial system will enhance public trust and eliminate cases of wrongful conviction. Literature Review With the number of DNA exonerations growing in the recent years, wrongful convictions reveal disturbing trends and fissures in the justice system. It shows how broken the system is, and why it needs urgent fixing

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    Capital punishment aims to avoid injustice and crime rates, as it now verified to be legal and constitutional. This method can help save lives, especially because of serial killers on death row. Serial killers slaughter many people, as they would kill innocent people on the streets. A prime example is Ted Bundy. According to his lawyer, Bundy killed over a hundred people and most of them were women who he also sexually assaulted. He was also extremely intelligent, as he escaped from the jail cells

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    mistaken convictions. There is an overwhelming lack of satisfactory data demonstrating that due process safeguards reach a standard in which capital punishment can be upheld as a constitutional, ethical, and moral option for the overall carriage of justice. The opposite is true, the speculative character and lack of concrete research about false convictions are proof that capital punishment, in the face of executions of innocent human beings, is a negligent, illegitimate, and unjust punishment that

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    Wrongful Convictions: “Innocent Until Proven Guilty?” Have you ever been grounded or punished by your parent’s for something you honestly didn’t do? Maybe your sibling or friend stole something or hurt someone and the blame and the “horrible” consequences were put on you. No phone, no TV, no friends over, confined to your room. Straight tortures and a feeling of betrayal and dishonesty from everyone around you. Now, imagine being an adult wrongfully accused of a major crime such as an armed robbery

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    entertainment today have given people a sense of confidence in their understanding of criminal justice. They sit at home on their couch and watch an endless stream of crime dramas and believe they have a solid understanding of how the justice system is run. Television shows do not have to operate in reality, the audience has access to all the necessary information to solve the crime and the show ends with a feeling that justice has been served. In reality, investigations hit road blocks, complications and dead

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    are many sources from real wrongfully convicted victims that explain why or how the justice system failed them. Over the years, wrongful convictions has been a topic on the rise. Since the implementation of the innocence movement, there have been and continue to be more exonerations of wrongfully convicted individuals every year. Wrongful convictions are one of the most controversial topics in the criminal justice system. A wrongfully convicted victim is one who was falsely accused of a crime and

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    There are thirty-one states within the United States that has the death penalty (Jurisdictions with no recent executions, 2017). Although thirty-one states have a death penalty, executions are rare or non-existing in most states (Jurisdictions with no recent executions, 2015). In 2015, only six states carried out executions (Jurisdictions with no recent executions, 2015). The death penalty has been a topic people argued over since it was first established. Many arguments have been made stating the

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    testify in court from the national institute of justice. Source Evaluation: The National Institute of Justice (NIJ) is a research, development and evaluation agency of the U.S. Department of Justice. They dedicated to improving the understanding of criminal justice issues through science. NIJ provides objective an​d independent knowledge and tools to inform the people making the decisions of the criminal justice community to reduce crime and advance justice, particularly at the state and local levels

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    On May 5th 1993, three eight-year-old boys, Steven Branch, Michael Moore and Chris Byers, went missing after going on a bike ride together. The police and community began searching the woods and surrounding areas. A few days later, the three boy’s bodies were found in a river. The boys were bound, had multiple injuries and died from drowning. Investigators believed this to be the result of a sacrifice from a satanic cult, and immediately had a suspect. June 3rd, investigators arrested Damien Echols

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    can attest that not all 2.2 million people who are currently incarcerated are guilty (Innocence). In some percentage of these cases, the eyewitnesses testifying must have been wrong. Recently, I went to the Equal Justice Initiative annual dinner. Its founder, Bryan Stevenson, a social justice icon and lawyer, hosted the annual

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