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BOOKS
(EXONERATION
and WRONGFUL
CONVICTION,
GENERAL):
Bedau, Adam, C. Putnam, and Michael Radelet, In Spite
of Innocence (Boston: Northwestern University Press, 1994).
Brandon, Ruth and Christie Davies, Wrongful Imprisonment:
Mistaken Convictions and Their Consequences (London, George Allen and Unwin,
1973).
Christianson, Scott, Innocent: Inside Wrongful Conviction
Cases (2004).
Cohen, Stanley, The Wrong Men: America’s Epidemic
of Wrongful Death Row Convictions
(New York: Avalon Publishing
Group, Inc., 2003).
Connors, Edward, Convicted by Juries, Exonerated by
Science: Case Studies In the Use of DNA Evidence to Establish Innocence After
Trial (Diane Publishing Co, 1996).
Dwyer, Jim, Peter Neufeld, and Barry Scheck, Actual
Innocence: When Justice Goes Wrong and How to Make It Right (New York:
Penguin Putnam Inc., 2001).
Frisbee, Thomas and Randy Garrett, Victims of Justice
Revisited: Completely Updated and Revised (New York: Avon Books, 1998).
Gross,
Samuel R., Kristen Jacoby,
Daniel J. Matheson, Nicholas
Montgomery, Sujata Patil,
Exonerations in the
United States 1989 through
2003: An article from:
Journal of Criminal Law
and Criminology (Northwestern
University, School of Law,
2005). E-Book.
Huff, C. Ronald, Arye Rattner, Edward Sagarin, Convicted
but Innocent: Wrongful Conviction and Public Policy (California: Sage
Publications, 1996).
Humes, Edward, Mean Justice (New York: Simon
and Schuster, 1999).
Westervelt, Sandra D. and John A Humphrey ed., Wrongly
Convicted: Perspectives On Failed Justice (Rutgers University Press, 2001).
Yant, Martin, Presumed Guilty: How The Innocent Are
Convicted (Prometheus Books, 1991).
BOOKS
(CASES of WRONGFUL
CONVICTION):
Adams, Randall Dale, William Hoffer, and Marilyn Mona
Hoffer, Adams V. Texas (St. Martin’s Press 1991). Case depicted
in “The Thin Blue Line.”
Dwyer, Jim, Peter Neufeld, and Barry Scheck, Actual
Innocence: Five Days to Execution and Other Dispatches from the Wrongly Convicted
(New York: Random House Inc., 2000).
Earley, Pete, Circumstantial Evidence: Death, Life
and Justice In A Small Southern Town (Bantam, 1996). Fictional profile
of a man on death row who is exonerated after six years.
Edds, Margaret, An Expendable Man: The Near-Execution
of Earl Washington Jr. (New York and London: New York University Press,
2003).
Fisher, Jim, Fall Guys (Southern Illinois University
Press, 1996). Two Innocent Boys are falsely convicted of a crime.
Gallagher, Jim, and Anne Maguire, Miscarriage of Justice:
An Irish Family’s Story of Wrongful Conviction As IRA Terrorists
(Court Wayne Press, 1994).
Giavanni, Marcus, Nelson vs. the United States of America:
A System in Denial (G&B Publishing, LLC; 1 edition, 1998).
Haresign, Gordon, Innocence: The True Story of Steve
Linscott (Zondervan Pub, House, 1986).
Hirsch, James S., Hurricane: The Miraculous Journey
of Rubin Carter (Houghton Mifflin, 2000).
Johnson, Calvin C. and Greg Hampikian, Exit To Freedom
(University of Georgia Press, 2003).
Junkin, Tim, Bloodsworth: The True Story of the First
Death Row Inmate Exonerated By DNA (Shannon Ravenel Books, 2004).
Leveritt, Mara, Devil’s Knott: The True Story
of the Memphis Three (Atria Books, 2002).
Levy, Harlan, And the Blood Cried Out: A Prosecutor’s
Spellbinding Account of DNA’s Power to Free or Convict (Avon Books,
1997).
Protess, David and Rob Wardem, A Promise of Justice:
The Eighteen Year Fight to Save Four Innocent Men (Hyperion Books, 1998).
Rabin, Edward D. The Innocents (William Morrow,
1964). Eighty cases of wrongful conviction.
Shapiro, Fred C., Whitmore (Bobbs-Merrill, 1969).
Tucker, John C., May God Have Mercy: A True Story of
Crime and Punishment (New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group
Inc., 1997).
Webster, Richard, The Secret of Bryn Estyn: The Making
of a Modern Witch Hunt (2005).
False allegations of sex abuse.
BOOKS
(CAUSES of WRONGFUL
CONVICTION):
Benn, Melissa, Hystories: Hysterical Epidemics and
Modern Culture (New Statesman, Ltd., 1997). E-Book.
Cutler, Brian L., Mistaken Identification: The Eyewitness,
Psychology and the Law (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995).
Gudjonsson, Gisli H., The Psychology of Interrogations,
Confessions, and Testimony (John Wiley and Sons, 1992).
Leo, Richard A. and Richard J. Ofshe, The Consequences
of False Confessions: Deprivations of Liberty and Miscarriages of Justice in
an Age of Psychological Interrogation (Northwestern University School
of Law, 1998). HTML.
Loftus, Elizabeth, Eyewitness Testimony (Harvard
University Press, 1996).
Loftus, Elizabeth and Katherine Ketcham, The Myth of
Repressed Memory: False Memories and Allegations of Sexual Abuse, Ch. 6
(New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1994).
Loftus, Elizabeth and Katherine Ketcham, Witness for
the Defense: The Accused, the Eyewitness, and the Expert Who Puts Memory on
Trial (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1991).
Rabinowitz, Dorothy, No Crueler Tyrannies: Accusation, False Witness, and Other
Terrors of Our Times
(New York:
Free Press, 2003).
Simon, David, Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets
(New York and
Canada: Ballantine
Books, 1991).
BOOKS (DISPATCHES FROM PRISON):
Burton-Rose, Daniel, Dan Pens and Paul Wright, The
Celling of America: An Inside Look at the U.S. Prison Industry (Common
Courage Press, 1997).
Leder, Drew, The Soul Knows No Bars: Inmates Reflect
on Life, Death and Hope (Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2000).
Martin, Dannie M. and Peter Y. Sussman, Committing
Journalism: The Prison Writings of Red Hog (New York: W.W. Norton and
Company, Inc., 1995).
Masters, Jarvis Jay, Finding Freedom: Writings from
Death Row (California: Padma Publishing, 1997).
Shapiro-Bertolini, Ethel, Through the Wall: Prison
Correspondence
(Peace Press,
1st Edition,
1976).
BOOKS (PSYCHOLOGICAL ISSUES):
Lamb, Sharon, The Trouble With Blame: Victims, Perpetrators,
and Responsibility (Harvard University Press, 1996).
Boss, Pauline, Ambiguous Loss: Learning to Live With
Unresolved Grief (Harvard University Press, 2000).
Kupers, Terry, Prison Madness: The Mental Health Crisis
Behind Bars
and What We
Must Do About
It (California:
Jossey-Bass,
Inc., 1999).
BOOKS (ORAL HISTORY, TRAUMA, and SOCIETAL MEMORY):
Levi,
Primo, The Drowned
and the Saved
(New York: First
Vintage International
Edition, 1989).
Lewis,
Jon E., The
Mammoth Book
of Eyewitness
America: Over
350 Eyewitness
Accounts of
American History
in the Making,
1492-2002 (New
York: Carroll
and Graf Publishers,
2003).
Passerini,
Luisa, Memory
and Totalitarianism
(Memory and
Narrative)
(Transaction
Publishers,
2005).
Rubin,
Lillian, Worlds
of Pain: Life
in the Working
Class Family
(Macmillan Publishing
Co., 1974).
Terkel,
Studs, Working
(Pantheon, 1974).
Terkel,
Studs, My American
Century (New
Press, 1998).
Terkel,
Studs, American
Dreams: Lost
and Found (New
Press, 1999).
BOOKS
(PHOTOGRAPHY
AND CRIMINAL
JUSTICE):
Donovan,
Suzanne, Ken
Light, Texas
Death Row (University
of Mississippi
Press, 1997).
Haworth-Booth,
Mark, Sandra
S. Phillips,
Carol Squiers,
Police Pictures:
The Photograph
As Evidence
(Chronicle Books,
1997).
Sante,
Luc, Evidence
(Farrar Straus
Giroux, 1992).
Simon,
Taryn, Barry
Neufeld, Barry
Scheck, The
Innocents (Umbrage
Editions, 2003).
Sontag,
Susan, Regarding
the Pain of
Others (New
York: Farrar
Straus Giroux,
2003).
MOVIES:
Balaban,
Bob (to be released
in 2005) “The
Exonerated”
A film adaptation
of the play
by Jessica Blank
and Erik Jenson.
It is the true
story of six
people who were
accused of murder
and then exonerated
after spending
22 years on
death row.
Berlinger,
Joe, and Bruce Sinofsky
(1996) “Paradise
Lost: The Child Murders
at Robin Hood Hills” (TV)
Documentary
about the “Memphis
Three.”
Berlinger,
Joe, Bruce Sinofsky
(2000)
“Paradise
Lost: Revelations” (TV)
Documentary.
Chevigny,
Katy and Johnson,
Kirsten (2004)
“Deadline”
Documentary
about Illinois
Republican Governor
George Ryan
and his decision
to grant blanket
clemency to
167 prisoners
on death row
sixty days before
his retirement.
Website: http://www.deadlinethemovie.com/news/welcome.php
Darabont,
Frank (1994)
“The Shawshank
Redemption”
Hollywood Drama based on
the Stephen King short story.
Man wrongfully convicted
for the murder of his wife.
Best expresses what it feels
like to be falsely accused,
and suddenly incarcerated,
misunderstood, branded,
and robbed of freedom. A
good visual aid when thinking
about the narratives and
trying to understand what
the falsely accused victim
must be going through.
De
Lestrade, Jean
Xavier (2001)
“Murder
On A Sunday
Morning”
HBO documentary about a
fifteen-year-old African
American boy who is falsely
accused of killing a woman
in Florida. He spends six
months in jail while on
trial. The film chronicles
his trial and uncovers the
racist aspects of his arrest
and the subsequent hearings.
Website: http://www.hbo.com/docs/programs/murder_sunday/
Jackson,
Mick (1995).
“Indictment:
The McMartin
Trial”
Fact-Based Drama.
Jarecki,
Andrew (2003)
“Capturing
the Friedmans”
Documentary.
Deals with issues
of mass hysteria,
“witch
hunts,”
lack of consistent
evidence. Conviction was
based mainly on forced, contrived, or manipulated testimonies.
Jewison,
Norman (1999)
“The Hurricane”
Drama based on the true
story of boxer Rubin Carter.
He was wrongfully accused
of murder and imprisoned
for three consecutive life
sentences.
Le
Pena, Nonny (1999) “The
Jaundiced Eye”
Documentary
about a man and his father
perhaps falsely accused
of child molestation by
the man's five-ear-old
son. Child's testimony may
have been manipulated by
interviewers. Both men were
sentenced to thirty-five
years in prison and
freed after four.
Website:
http://thejaundicedeye.com/
Levin,
Marc (2002)
“Gladiator
Days: Anatomy
of a Prison
Murder”
Documentary. Deals with
the violence inside the
prisons, focusing on one
specific case.
Martin,
Darnell (2001)
“Prison
Song”
Fictional drama
that questions
the American
Justice System.
Morris,
Errol (1988) “The
Thin Blue Line”
Documentary. Focuses on
the
investigation of the murder
of a police officer in Texas
and the trial
judge's eagerness to inflict
the death penalty. An innocent
man was
convicted of the crime and
later exonerated because
of the movie.
Powell,
Tristram (2001)
“Anybody’s
Nightmare” (TV)
BBC drama. Based
on a true story.
Sheila Bowler is falsely accused of murder and spends
four years in prison.
Sanders,
Jessica, and
Marc H. Simon
(2005) “After
Innocence”
Documentary about several
people who are wrongfully
convicted, sentenced, and
then released based on DNA
evidence.
ORGANIZATIONS:
The
Innocence Project:
http://www.innocenceproject.org/
Founded by Barry C. Scheck
and Peter J. Neufeld in
1992, The Innocence Project
is a non-profit legal clinic
and criminal justice resource
center working to exonerate
the wrongfully convicted
through postconviction DNA
testing and develop and
implement reforms to prevent
wrongful convictions.
Life
After Exoneration
Program (LAEP):
http://www.exonerated.org/
Founded in 2003
by Peter Neufeld
and Barry Scheck
of the Innocence
Project and
Dr. Laurie Lola
Vollen of the
University of
California,
Berkeley, The
Life After Exoneration
Program provides
services to
exonerated persons.
The
Justice Project:
http://ccjr.policy.net/cjreform/
Campaign For
Criminal Justice
Reform.
Juan
Melendez Voices
United for Justice
Project:
http://www.voicesunited4justice.com/
This project
provides educational
services throughout
the country
directly addressing
the controversial
and divisive
issue of the
death penalty.
Center
on Wrongful
Convictions:
Northwestern
Law: http://www.law.northwestern.edu/wrongfulconvictions/
Dedicated to
identifying
and rectifying
wrongful convictions
and other serious
miscarriages
of justice.
Truth
In Justice:
http://www.truthinjustice.org/
Death
Penalty Focus:
http://www.deathpenalty.org/
LINKS
(and Articles):
Links:
Center on Wrongful
Conviction:
Northwestern
Law:
http://www.law.northwestern.edu/depts/clinic/wrongful/links.htm
“Perspectives
on the U.S.
Criminal Justice
System:”
http://www.360degrees.org/
Interesting
links from the
HBO POV site:
http://reentrymediaoutreach.org/wiw.htm
http://www.restorativejustice.org/rj3/Introduction-Definition/Reintegration.htm
http://www.soros.org/initiatives/justice/
http://www.urban.org/content/PolicyCenters/Justice/Projects/PrisonerReentry/
http://www.wbur.org/special/prison/index.shtml
Other
Information
and Research
Sites:
http://www.prisonwall.org
http://hrw.org/prisons/
http://faculty.ncwc.edu/toconnor/prison.htm
http://www.nicic.org/research/
Articles
on the History
of Wrongful
Conviction:
Borchard,
Edwin M. “A Long Legacy
of Error.” Excerpted
from Convicting The
Innocent: Errors in Criminal
Justice (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1932).
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/case/failure/borcha.html
Articles
on Life After
Prison:
Frontline:
“Burden
of Innocence”
(2003): http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/burden/
Reports/General
Sources:
California
Dept. of Corrections,
Stats on Death
Row:
http://www.corr.ca.gov/CommunicationsOffice/CapitalPunishment/default.asp
Capital
Jury Project,
Reports on Racial
Bias in Sentencing:
http://www.cjp.neu.edu/
Center
for Wrongful
Convictions,
Report on the
Snitch System:
http://www.law.northwestern.edu/wrongfulconvictions/
Constitution
Project Death
Penalty Initiative:
http://www.constitutionproject.org/dpi/
Human
Rights Watch,
List of State
Death Penalty
Studies:
http://hrw.org/campaigns/deathpenalty/statestudies.htm
Illinois
Governor’s
Commission:
http://www.idoc.state.il.us/ccp/ccp/reports/commission_report/index.html
Innocence
Project, Causes
and Remedies:
http://www.innocenceproject.org/causes/index.php
Pennsylvania
Supreme Court
Report on Racial
Bias:
http://www.courts.state.pa.us/Index/Supreme/BiasCmte/FinalReport.pdf
Prison
Law Offices,
Reports on CA
prison conditions:
http://www.prisonlaw.com/
SF
Magazine report
on wrongful
conviction in
CA:
http://www.sanfran.com/archives/view_story/200/
Contact
Info for Innocence
Projects Around
the World:
(Available
on the World
Wide Web: http://www.innocenceproject.org/about/other_projects.php)
ARIZONA
Arizona Justice Project
contact:
Larry Hammond
Osborne Maledon
2929 North Central Avenue, 21st Floor
Phoenix, AZ 85012-2794
Northern Arizona Justice Project
Robert Schehr, Chair
Department of Criminal Justice
Northern Arizona Justice Project
P.O. Box 15005
Flagstaff, AZ 86011-5005
Professor
Andy Silverman
University of Arizona School of Law
Tucson, AZ 85721
Professor
Robert Bartels
Arizona State University College of Law
Tempe, AZ 85287
Arizona
Attorneys for Criminal Justice
3737 North Seventh Street, Suite 105
Phoenix, AZ 85014
CALIFORNIA
California Western School of Law
contact:
Justin Brooks, Director
California Western School of Law
225 Cedar Street
San Diego, CA 92101
Northern California Innocence Project at Santa
Clara University
contacts:
Professor Kathleen Ridolfi, Executive Director
Linda Starr, Legal Director
500 El Camino Real
Santa Clara, CA 95053-0422
Northern California Innocence Project
Golden Gate University School of Law Satellite Branch
Professor Susan Rutberg
536 Mission Street
San Francisco CA 94105-2968
University of California - Irvine
(not an IP but a resource)
contact:
William Thompson
Department of Criminology, Law & Society
University of California
Irvine, CA 92697-7080
COLORADO
Colorado Innocence Project
contact:
Jim Scarboro
Arnold & Porter
1700 Lincoln Street, Suite 4000
Denver, CO 80203
CONNECTICUT
New England Innocence Project
contact:
Intake Coordinator
Goodwin Procter LLP
Exchange Place
53 State Street
Boston, MA 02109
DELAWARE
Office of the Public Defender
contact:
Lisa Schwind
Carvel State Building
820 French Street, 3rd Floor
Wilimington, DE 19801
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project
contact:
Shawn Armbrust, Project Director
Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project
4801 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20016
FLORIDA
Florida Innocence Initiative
Jenny Greenberg, Director
1720 South Gadsden Street
Suite 207
Tallahassee, FL 32301
GEORGIA
Georgia Innocence Project
contact:
Aimee Maxwell, Executive Director
Georgia Innocence Project
730 Peachtree Street, N.E.
Suite 705
Atlanta, GA 30308
IDAHO
Idaho Innocence Project
contact:
Diana Cavigliano
P.O. Box 442321
Moscow, ID 83844-2321
ILLINOIS
Center on Wrongful Convictions
contacts:
Rob Warden, Executive Director
Steve Drizin, Legal Director
Northwestern University School of Law
357 East Chicago Avenue
Chicago, IL 60611
INDIANA
Indiana University School of Law - Indianapolis
contact:
Fran Hardy, Professor of Law
Indiana University School of Law - Indianapolis
735 West New York Street
Indianapolis, IN 46202
IOWA
Iowa/Nebraska Innocence Project
contact:
Tom Lustgraaf
P.O. Box 24183
Omaha, NE 68124-0183
KENTUCKY
University of Kentucky Innocence Project Externship
contacts:
Roberta M. Harding, Professor of Law
University of Kentucky College of Law
209 Law Building
Lexington, KY 40506-0048
Gordon
Rahn
Project Coordinator
Kentucky Innocence Project
Department of Public Advocacy
P.O. Box 555
Eddyville, KY 42038
LOUISIANA
Innocence Project New Orleans
contacts:
Emily Maw, Legal Director
636 Baronne Street, 2nd Floor
New Orleans, LA 70113
MAINE
New England Innocence Project
contact:
Intake Coordinator
Goodwin Procter LLP
Exchange Place
53 State Street
Boston, MA 02109
MARYLAND
Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project
contact:
Shawn Armbrust, Project Director
Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project
4801 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20016
MASSACHUSETTS
New England Innocence Project
contact:
Intake Coordinator
Goodwin Procter LLP
Exchange Place
53 State Street
Boston, MA 02109
MICHIGAN
Thomas M. Cooley Innocence Project
Kathy Swedlow, Deputy Director
Thomas M. Cooley Innocence Project
300 S. Capitol Ave. P.O. Box 13038
Lansing, MI 48901
MINNESOTA
Innocence Project of Minnesota
contact:
Erika Applebaum
Hamline University School of Law
1536 Hewitt Avenue
St. Paul, MN 55104
MISSISSIPPI
Innocence Project New Orleans (now operating in
Mississippi)
contacts:
Emily Maw, Legal Director
636 Baronne Street, 2nd Floor
New Orleans, LA 70113
MISSOURI
Midwestern Innocence Project
contact:
Ellen Suni, Professor of Law
6320 Brookside Plaza #1500
Kansas City, MO 64113
NEBRASKA
Iowa/Nebraska Innocence Project
contact:
Tom Lustgraaf
P.O. Box 24183
Omaha, NE 68124-0183
NEVADA
Rocky Mountain Innocence Center
contact:
Jensie Anderson, President
Joshua Bowland, Staff Attorney
358 South 700 East, B235
Salt Lake City, UT 84102
NEW HAMPSHIRE
New England Innocence Project
contact:
Goodwin Procter LLP
Exchange Place
53 State Street
Boston, MA 02109
NEW JERSEY
Centurion Ministries
contact:
Rev. Jim McCloskey
Kate Germond
221 Witherspoon Street
Princeton, NJ 08542
NEW MEXICO
New Mexico Innocence and Justice Project
contact:
Professor April Land
Professor Barbara Bergman
University of New Mexico School of Law
1117 Stanford NE
Albuquerque, NM 87131
NEW YORK
Innocence Project at Benjamin N. Cardozo Law School
- Yeshiva University
contacts:
Barry Scheck
Peter Neufeld
Innocence Project
Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law
55 Fifth Avenue, 11th Floor
New York, NY 10003
New York State Defenders Association
contact:
New York State Defenders Association
194 Washington Street, Suite 500
Albany, NY 12210
Second Look Program
contacts:
Professor Will Hellerstein
Daniel Medwed
Brooklyn Law School
250 Joralemon Street
Brooklyn, NY 11201
NORTH CAROLINA
North Carolina Center on Actual Innocence
Duke/University of North Carolina Law Schools
contacts:
Professor Therea Newman
Professor Rich Rosen
Pete Weitzel, Executive Director
Chris Mumma, Legal Counsel
Duke University School of Law
Durham, NC 27708-0360
OHIO
The Ohio Innocence Project
University of Cincinnati
College of Law
P.O. Box 210040
Cincinnatti, OH 45221-0020
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma Indigent Defense System - DNA Forensic
Testing Program
contacts:
Julie Gardner
Jamie Pybas
Kathleen Smith
Kim Marks
Oklahoma Indigent Defense System
P.O. Box 926
Norman, OK 73070
OREGON
Oregon Innocence Project
contact:
Rita Radostitz, Director
Oregon Innocence Project
P.O. Box 3629
Eugene, OR 97405
PENNSYLVANIA
The Innocence Institute of Western Pennsylvania
contact:
Bill Moushey
c/o Point Park College Department of Journalism and Mass Communications
201 Wood Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15222-1984
RHODE ISLAND
New England Innocence Project
contact:
Intake Coordinator
Goodwin Procter LLP
Exchange Place
53 State Street
Boston, MA 02109
SOUTH CAROLINA
The Palmetto Innocence Project
contact: Joseph M. McCulloch
P.O. Box 11623
Columbia, SC 29211
TENNESSEE
Tennessee Innocence Project
contact:
Kenneth Irvine
c/o UT - Pro Bono
University of Tennessee Legal Clinic
1505 West Cumberland Avenue
Knoxville, TN 37996
TEXAS
University of Houston Law School
contact:
David Dow, Professor
University of Houston Law Center
100 Law Center
Houston, TX 77204-6060
Texas Center for Actual Innocence
University of Texas School of Law
727 East Dean Keeton Street
Austin, TX 78705
MASS, Inc. (Mothers for the Advancement of Social
Services)
contact:
Joyce Ann Brown
6301 Gaston Avenue, Suite 300
Dallas, TX 75214
UTAH
Rocky Mountain Innocence Center
contact:
Jensie Anderson, President
Joshua Bowland, Staff Attorney
358 South 700 East, B235
Salt Lake City, UT 84102
VERMONT
New England Innocence Project
contact:
Intake Coordinator
Goodwin Procter LLP
Exchange Place
53 State Street
Boston, MA 02109
VIRGINIA
Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project
contact:
Shawn Armbrust, Project Director
Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project
4801 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20016
WASHINGTON
Innocence Project NorthWest
contact:
Professor Jackie McMurtrie
University of Washington
410 N.E. Campus Drive
Seattle, WA 98105
WISCONSIN
Wisconsin Innocence Project
contacts:
Keith Findley, Associate Clinical Professor
John Pray, Associate Clinical Professor
University of Wisconsin Law School
Remington Center
Madison, WI 53706
WYOMING
Rocky Mountain Innocence Center
contact:
Jensie Anderson, President
Joshua Bowland, Staff Attorney
358 South 700 East, B235
Salt Lake City, UT 84102
AUSTRALIA
UTS Innocence Project
contact:
Kirsten Edwards
Faculty of Law
PO Box 123
Broadway NSW 2007
Sydney, Australia
Australian
Innocence Project
contact:
Lynne Weathered,
Director
Griffith University
Innocence Project
Griffith Law
School
GU PMB 50
GCMC 9726
Australia
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