Innocence Network Week in Review: March 29, 2013

03.29.13

A jailhouse informant recants, an exonerated death row inmate wins a judgment against his prosecutors and new evidence could lead to possible exoneration in a shaken baby syndrome case in Illinois. Those stories and more in this week’s Innocence Network Week in Review:

 

In another encouraging development for

North Carolina Center on Actual Innocence

client Joseph Sledge, one of two jailhouse informants who testified against him

has recanted

, saying that he lied to collect reward money and was fed details of the crime by investigators.  In December of last year, DNA testing showed that hairs from the crime scene that were used to convict Sledge of two 1976 murders

did not belong to him

.

 


Illinois Innocence Project

client Anthony Murray, who was freed from prison last year after taking an Alford plea,

spoke out for the first time about his wrongful imprisonment

.  Murray had been through two previous trials, both of which resulted in convictions that were later overturned, and

took the plea to avoid the ordeal of a third trial

.

 

The

Duke Chronicle


ran a feature story this week

about LaMonte Armstrong, a client of the

Duke Wrongful Convictions Clinic

who was exonerated after serving 17 years of a life sentence for a murder

he didn’t commit.


 



Innocence Project of Texas


client Ed Graf

has won a new trial

after the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals found that conclusions of forensic scientists who testified in his trial were based not on science, but “old wives’ tales.”   Graf was convicted of arson and murder in the fire death of his two stepsons.

 

Nearly nine years after being released from prison,

Center on Wrongful Convictions

client Gordon “Randy” Steidl has

won a second judgment

in a long-running wrongful conviction and malicious prosecution case against the State’s Attorney and police. Steidl was sentenced to death for a 1986 double murder and served 17 years before being exonerated in 2004.

 

The attorney for Jennifer Del Prete, a day care worker convicted of murdering a child in her care in a shaken baby syndrome case, has

filed a motion to overturn her conviction

based on evidence uncovered and published by the

Medill Justice Project

.

 


California Innocence Project

client Brian Banks, who was exonerated after the woman he was convicted of raping confessed she had made up her story,

was featured on

60 Minutes

this week

.  The story covered Banks’ struggle to get his life back and his ongoing efforts to play for the NFL.

Leave a Reply

Thank you for visiting us. You can learn more about how we consider cases here. Please avoid sharing any personal information in the comments below and join us in making this a hate-speech free and safe space for everyone.

This field is required.
This field is required.
This field is required.