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How Many Innocent People Are Really Behind Bars?

Posted by The Innocence Project, The Innocence Blog at 7:23 AM on March 27, 2008.


The honest answer: Nobody knows.

A recent article in the New York Times asks a question often heard by the Innocence Project: How many people convicted in the United States are innocent?

Observers from across the criminal justice system have weighed in.

Samuel Gross, a law professor at the University of Michigan, has found the rate of wrongful conviction in death row cases to be somewhere between 2.3 and 5 percent.

A recent review of biological evidence in 31 randomly chosen Virginia cases led to DNA testing that could yield results in 22 cases, two of which resulted in exonerations –- a small sample size but an indicator that the rate could be as high as 9 percent.

A couple of years ago, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia cited questionable and discredited calculations from Oregon Prosecutor Joshua Marquis (who divided the number of DNA exonerations by the total number of felony convictions) to make his claim that the wrongful conviction rate is .027 percent. As Gross points in a recent law review article: "By this logic, we could estimate the proportion of baseball players who’ve used steroids by dividing the number of major league players who've been caught by the total of all baseball players at all levels: major league, minor league, semipro, college and Little League -- and maybe throwing in football and basketball players as well."

The Times article notes that while there is disagreement about which calculations might help suggest the magnitude of the problem, there is a consensus that nobody really knows how many innocent people are in prison –- and we may never know.

The Innocence Project has always said that DNA exonerations are just the tip of the iceberg, since only 5-10% of all criminal cases involve biological evidence that can be subjected to DNA testing (and even in those cases, the evidence is often lost, destroyed or too degraded to yield results in DNA testing). But the 215 wrongful convictions overturned to date by DNA testing illustrate the broader causes of wrongful conviction and show the need for reforms that can prevent injustice. As the Times article says:

"… A few general lessons can be drawn nonetheless. Black men are more likely to be falsely convicted of rape than are white men, particularly if the victim is white. Juveniles are more likely to confess falsely to murder. Exonerated defendants are less likely to have serious criminal records. People who maintain their innocence are more likely to be innocent. The longer it takes to solve a crime, the more likely the defendant is not guilty."

Read the full article here.

Digg!


DNA Proves Texas Man Innocent Nine Years After he Died in Prison
Timothy Cole was serving 25 years for a rape he didn't commit.
July 1, 2008.
Former NYC Prosecutor Threw Case to Help Innocent Prisoners
"I did the best I could … to lose," Daniel L. Bibb told the New York Times. "I worked for what I thought was the right thing."
June 24, 2008.
Innocent Man Released from Prison After 26 Years, Two Lawyers Kept His Innocence Secret
Attorneys waited for their client's death before admitting he was the real killer in the murder that sent Alton Logan to prison for half his life.
April 22, 2008.

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Could Happen To Anyone
Posted by: QQOblivion on Mar 27, 2008 8:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Many, if not most, Americans think, "Well, *I* have never done anything wrong. Why would this affect ME??"
Idiots.
Even YOU, even ANY innocent person, can be potentially convicted of a serious crime you did not commit.

And, it should be noted, in the case of those "war on terror" detainees held in secret prisons or at Guantanamo, the percentage who are innocent exceeds 90%, according to the military! (I can't remember the exact percentage, but it was, I am sure I heard, somewhere over 90%. And this is according to the military, not exactly an organization which gives the benefit of the doubt to those accused of being "America's enemies".) And the war-on-terr' detainees don't have any due-process or habeas corpus rights. Why not, says the Bush administration? Because they are "very dangerous people". This circular reasoning is the epitome of bigoted and idiotic and downright evil thinking which characterizes the Bush administration, as we know.

But even when defendants DO have due process rights, they can EASILY be wrongly convicted, especially, I would imagine, if the defendant is a minority.
And I would bet that in cases where there is no physical evidence, and all the prosecution has to go on is witness testimony, that the percentage of convicted defendants who are innocent is enormously great, given the unreliability of witness testimony.

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» RE: Could Happen To Anyone Posted by: rinthy
If there's just ONE...
Posted by: Quannah on Mar 27, 2008 10:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
there's too many. That we tolerate this kind of travesty is telling. What's wrong with the system that this can happen in 2%, 9%, or more of criminal cases that result in the wrongful imprisonment of innocent people?

If there is one innocent person wrongfully imprisoned, there is no "justice" in our "justice system."

Time for a serious overhaul of the criminal court system across this nation. It's an embarrassment to us all.

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» RE: If there's just ONE... Posted by: Lauren
» RE: If there's just ONE... Posted by: Quannah
Wrongful convictions are NOT always accidents
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN on Mar 27, 2008 10:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Till the nifongs of the LE world are made to pay, the deliberateness of the wrongful convictions will not cease.
It is proven time and again that from the cop on the beat all the way to appellate courts, there is deliberateness on the part of LE to abuse the law.

How many times do you see where someone is proven innocent beyond ALL doubt and the persecutor will sit there like a self serving damn fool and say he/she STILL thinks someone is guilty?

This is bullshit and, since one is too many, they must be stopped from rigging convictions for their "win" record.

Make them pay and, NOT with taxpayer money.

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too many in prison
Posted by: Grandma Crabby on Mar 27, 2008 10:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Add up all the wrongly convicted people with all the folks in their for minor drug possession and also the ones in prison who are mentally ill and you have LOTS of people in prison who should not be there. It's barbaric beyond belief, especially considering that society at large assumes all the BAD PEOPLE in jail deserve it! Many of them do. Many do not.

VideoProductionTips = Learn Internet Video

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Not to mention coerced "confessions"
Posted by: flipperfacefred on Mar 27, 2008 11:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not just those who manage to withstand the pressure to "confess" and go through a sham trial who are victimized. I was in a situation twenty years ago where I was coerced into pleading guilty to a crime I didn't commit. My brother in-law tried to impress me one day by swiping a car and taking it for a joy ride, leaving me behind in the parking lot. I did the "right" thing and waited for the cops. BIG MISTAKE!

Charged with GTA and burglary-even though I never touched the guys car and had no clue what my speed freak former brother-in-law was going to do-I went through three months of hell-villanized by my mother-in-law and written off by the pro-bono attorney before I finally was faced with "Your going to get three years at Quentin unless you take the deal". So, on my birthday, I choked back the indignation and pleaded guilty-a decision that cost me my family, my self-respect and years upon years of social stigma.

It took me twenty years to pull my life back together-I am happy to say that though I was set behind significantly, and faced untold years of prejudice, I was eventually able to graduate from college and start a new family. The daughters I lost have returned to me and the ex-brother in law went on to commit many more crimes while I, well I became an activist and have truly devoted my life to fighting injustice.

I have opted at this point not to pursue my Phd, but rather to put in the next few years of my life studying law. I may be older than the average Law Student but the desire to fight for the rights of the innocent burns brighter within me than in most. The point being that DA's, cops and the courts are bound by the machinery of the system to simply resolve cases as quickly as possible. Questions of innocence and guilt are secondary to the cost of the case in terms of time and money. Unless the American people can become eductaed on the grinding reality of our Justice system, and the cost in terms of lost lives and potential (I was a hairs-breadth from suicide myself a few times afetr this event) we will continue to waste our most valuable resource in a vain pursuit of expedient vengenance-the hearts and minds of our own people.

Wish me luck on the LSAT.

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