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Exonerated Chicago man works to help free the innocent
Posted: May 22, 2008 4:40 pm
Dana Holland served 10 years in Illinois prison for a rape and an armed robbery he didn’t commit before DNA testing proved his innocence and led to his exoneration in 2003. Today, Holland works to raise awareness of problems in the criminal justice system in order to ensure that other people in Illinois don’t suffer the horror of a wrongful conviction. His attorney at the Center on Wrongful Convictions in Chicago, Karen Daniel, said she recommended that he speak to audiences about his case.
"Dana is a wonderful speaker and very personable,” Daniel says. “He has a very positive message, and I felt he had a lot to give."Holland has been free for five years, but he is still working with Daniel to expunge his criminal record.
For example, Daniel says, on the Easter after he was freed from prison, Holland went back there to spend time with, counsel and comfort the inmates still behind bars. “He’s really great in the role of a mentor,” Daniel says.
"After everything I’ve been through, it’s not always easy,” Holland says. “But it’s all been worth it. There’s no place like home."Daniel and her colleagues at the Center on Wrongful Convictions got more good news today when the Illinois Supreme Court reversed the conviction of their client, Alan Beaman, who has served 13 years in prison for a downstate Illinois murder he has always said he didn’t commit. Read more about Beaman’s case here.
Read the full story here. (Windy Citizen, 05/21/08)
Tags: Dana Holland
Friday Roundup: Seeking A Clean Slate
Posted: March 20, 2009 5:19 pm
It was another busy week in the innocence movement – with testimony on forensics before the Senate Judiciary Committee and Mississippi adopting DNA access and evidence preservation laws. Here are some more stories on wrongful convictions and forensic evidence from around the world in the last few days:
Sean Hodgson was freed this week in England after serving 27 years in prison for a rape and murder DNA now proves he didn’t commit. He petitioned for DNA testing more than a decade ago but was told – falsely – that evidence in his case had been destroyed. Testing on that evidence finally proved his innocence this year.
Two Illinois men who were pardoned in the 1990s after serving years in prison were dealt a setback in court this week. Stanley Howard and Dana Holland were seeking to expunge their records of wrongful convictions, but the Illinois Supreme Court ruled that gubernatorial pardons based on innocence do not automatically clear criminal records. Holland was exonerated by DNA testing in 2003 after serving more than 10 years. Howard was sentenced to death based on a confession he says was coerced through torture. He was cleared based on non-DNA evidence.
The Georgia House of Representatives approved a bill today that would compensate John Jerome White with more than $700,000 for the years he spent in prison for a crime he didn’t commit. The bill still needs to be approved by the Senate and signed by the Governor before White is compensated. Georgia is one of 25 states without a statewide compensation law; but the legislature has passed bills in recent years compensating individuals.
A story on National Public Radio’s Day to Day this week explored the fallibility of eyewitness identification evidence. In a guest post on the Innocence Blog yesterday from Erin Torneo explored the story behind the new book “Picking Cotton” and the ripples of injustice still felt 11 years after a wrongful conviction.
And the Los Angeles Times considers questions raised about fingerprint evidence by the recent National Academy of Sciences report on forensics.
Tags: Dana Holland, John Jerome White, Unvalidated/Improper Forensics


















