Innocence Blog

Calls for reform continue to grow nationwide

Posted: April 30, 2007



Columns published in the last three days in Milwaukee, Baltimore, New York and across the country continued to raise the need for criminal justice reforms nationwide, highlighting the causes of Jerry Miller’s wrongful conviction 25 years ago. Miller was exonerated last week, becoming the 200th DNA exoneree nationwide.

  • In the Baltimore Sun, columnist Gregory Kane discusses cross-racial identification as a major cause of wrongful conviction. Read the full column (Payment required for full article).
  • In the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, Columnist Gregory Stanford writes about his junior year at Marquette University, when he became a rape suspect simply because he is black. He compares his experience to Miller’s and wonders where the police questioning could have led him. Read the full column.
  • In New York Newsday, Columnist Les Payne discusses cross-racial identification and the Innocence Project benefit event last week. Read the full column.
  • In a national column, Marie Cocco of the Washington Post compares Jerry Miller's case and the Duke lacrosse case. Read the full column (Payment required for full article).

Read more media coverage of our month-long “200 Exonerated, Too Many Wrongfully Convicted” campaign.

Get Involved! Click here for 10 things you can do to prevent wrongful convictions.




Tags: Eyewitness Misidentification