miscarriage of justice essay

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    I knew that eyewitness testimony was faulty and not always as reliable as investigators would like it to be, but I was astounded to find out that 70% of innocent people who had been exonerated had been convicted because of eyewitness testimony. It is crazy to think about how many innocent people may be sitting in prison, wasting away, because of their wrongful conviction. I liked that they stated that a non-witness should not be able to identify a suspect from a photo lineup based solely on their

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    of a person have been violated during trial but the appellate court reverse their convictions regardless of their factual guilt. Most of wrongful convictions occur due to honest witness error while others are caused by negligence of the criminal justice system including the defense lawyers. May people who have been convicted wrongfully have in many instances been

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    Patricia Stallings Case

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    One in twenty-five people are wrongly convicted in the United States, approximately 20,000 out of 2 million people are in prison for a crime they did not commit (The Huffington Post, Ferner). It could happen to anyone. Many of these people have low income, they do not have the money to pay for a lawyer so they are appointed one. One who most likely will not fight for your freedom because you cannot pay them, whether you are innocent or not. One of these thousands of people wrongly convicted is Patricia

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    Adnan Syed Case

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    Annually hundreds of wrongfully convicted bystanders are let out of prison, some having served decades for crimes they didn’t commit. On January 13th, 1999, Hae Min Lee of Woodlawn high school was murdered and her body later found in linkin park. The person convicted? Adnan Syed, an ex-boyfriend. With, the majority of the evidence easily disproven by cell tower records, an alibi not ever addressed, and jurors who openly admit his culture was a factor, Adnan Syed deserves the right to a new and fair

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    Exoneration Cases

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    There were 29 exonerations in North America in 2010, according to The Innocence Project, one of the leaders in reviewing suspect convictions and fighting for reversals or outright exoneration. First, these men are not the only ones that have been wrongfully charged.Luis Diaz and Cornelius Dupree were being charged with a crime they did not commit, because police were hardly noticing evidence, they were wrongly charged, unjustifiably accused and unfairly sentence are their cases. This shows that there

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    Think of how many lies a person tells within their life time. Now imagine that one simple lie making someone spend 10 years behind bars. Many know how easy it is to lie about one little thing, but in the court room lying is a serious issue. False witness confessions show how easy it is to send someone innocent to prison, and must be prevented by recording a video of confessions and DNA testing. The cause of this problem is trying to be helped through video recording and DNA testing. However, innocent

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    Being wrongly accused of a crime and sent to prison for years is something people would not think of happening to them on any day. However, it does occur. Two men, Richard Alexander and Kirk Bloodsworth were accused of a crime and sent to prison. Both of these men were exonerated through genetic DNA testing years later. Richard Alexander was wrongly accused of three counts of rape in 1996. Alexander was told he would serve 70 years in prison for his crimes. However, was released after 5 years when

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    Different exonerates go for activism to help them make peace with what has transpired. Dennis Stockton, who was as of late executed yet asserted guiltlessness all through his whole detainment, wrote in a book that he managed his approaching wrongful execution by tutoring youthful detainees and turning into an otherworldly consultant to others on death line. Sabrina Porter was liberated from Mississippi's demise push in the wake of being wrongfully indicted killing her nine-month old girl. Presently

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    In today’s world, there are 69 organizations that have come together to create a group that is known as the Innocence Network. These agencies consist of 56 within the United States, and 13 stationed from around the world that all work together and apart to help and exonerate those that have been wrongfully convicted. The 13 international agencies include Argentine, Australia, Canada, Ireland, Israel, Italy, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Taiwan, and the United Kingdom.(Innocence Network) Some of

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    Ethical Issues In Criminal Justice

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    commission was implemented by the instruction and teaching committee of the North Carolina Criminal Justice Education and Training Standard Commission and was incorporated into State Basic Law Enforcement Training. These were eventually made into statutory law in 2008. The NCIAC takes thousands of claims and has taken multiple cases to court (Garrett 2013). Agencies like the NCIAC work to bring justice to those who were served injustice. The innocent who end up in prison can’t exonerate themselves on

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