miscarriage of justice essay

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    Roy Brown Case

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    In 1992, Roy Brown was convicted of the death of another individual. The victim was fond beaten, strangled, and stabbed at her farmhouse. She was a social worker and was found covered in bite marks and saliva was obtained as DNA evidence. Mr. Brown served 15 years in prison before he was able to prove himself innocent from his cell with the assistance of the Innocence Project. A similar case occurred in 1989, Steven Barnes was convicted of the murder and rape of a 16 year old girl. The victim was

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    During the year of 2015, a case that the Innocence Project was working on at the time was the Joseph Buffey Case. Joseph Buffey was convicted in 2001 in West Virginia of rape and robbery. Mr. Buffey pled guilty to the crimes based on the advise of his counsel and witness misidentification which was the heart of this investigation. On May 11, 2015, Mr. Buffey was excluded by DNA and the real perpetrator was later found. Mr. Buffey served a total of 15 years in prison for a crime that he did not commit

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    Maryland readers would like to believe the criminal justice system is always fair. However, studies show that eyewitness misidentification commonly leads to wrongful convictions. For example, on June 25, the California Innocence Project announced that DNA testing recently exonerated a San Diego resident who was wrongfully convicted of rape. The victim in the case misidentified him as her perpetrator. Studies show that this type of mistake is common in criminal cases. When witnesses are shown a

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    difficult to find statistics that are accurate in this regard due to lack of reported or documented information. Most of the time, the victims of wrongful and unlawful conviction are minorities or the indigent. It is the job of the United States justice system to protect the rights and equality of all citizens. Stephen Avery was convicted of a crime he did not commit. After serving 18 years, he was found innocent and released. The series “Making a Murderer” portrays Avery as a victim but as you will

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    The Innocence Project Criminal law is created to regulate the society and prevent people being harmed either in person or property. The punishment will be given to those who violates the laws. There are many criminal cases has been solved, but there is some innocence were wrongfully convicted in those solved cases. The innocence project was created in 1992 which helps those innocence that were wrongful convicted to prove their innocence. While there are six common causes of the wrongful convictions:

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    Introduction: Have you heard the phrase “innocent until proven guilty” or “the truth will set you free”? After extensive research I have found that these statements play a big part in the effects of making a false confession. However, once you make a false confession, it is extremely difficult to win a case against you or to appeal a conviction without concrete evidence, such as DNA. According to The Innocence Project, which helps overturn guilty convictions through the use of DNA there has been

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    Wrongful Convictions Cornelius Dupree Jr. and Anthony Massingill were convicted on November 23, 1979 for allegedly approaching a 26 year old white woman and one male friend. The two victims reported that Dupree and Massingill held them with a gun pointing at both as they walked back to their car. Mr. Dupree and Massingill had forced the male victim to drive his car with them inside and then robbed the couple. Moments later they ordered the male victim to get out of the car and once he did they both

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    Adnan Syed Case

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    “About 10,000 people in the United States are wrongfully convicted of serious crimes each year” (Tom Spring). Adnan Syed is another one of those cases. Millions of people have followed Adnan’s cases because of the podcast Serial by Sarah Koenig. Adnan Syed has been convicted of the incriminating evidence, but there is not enough key pieces to convict. Adnan Syed is not guilty because there is not enough evidence to prove it was him. There are many contradictions in Adnan’s trial, Jay’s testimony

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    Why Innocent People are Wrongly Convicted Introduction Attention grabber: “Wrongful convictions have been documented throughout history with incidents in 1611,1660,1792,1819,1820, and 1835 - not including the Salem Witch trials” (Krieger) Explanation: There are many different factors that contribute to false imprisonment such as: inaccuracy of eye-witnesses, perjured testimony, availability of DNA testing, accuracy of DNA testing, prosecutorial misconduct, and ineffective defense representation

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    False convictions happen very often and can ruin someone's life. Examples of these wrongful convictions are the cases of Steven Avery and Jimmy Ray Bromgard. Steven Avery was wrongfully convicted for the rape of a woman, was exonerated, and is in prison for a new murder case while Jimmy Ray Bromgard was convicted of the rape of a young girl and was exonerated. Both of these men spent time in prison for something they did not do. Steven Avery spent 18 years in prison for a false conviction for

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