While reading this article, noticed there are a few linked to it that explain why wrongful convictions happen in the first place.
It seems appropriate to highlight them as well imo, even though the reasons lack the feel-good story of someone learning to cope after doing 9 years in prison for a crime they didn't commit.
Sanford was 14 in September 2007 when four people were killed on Detroit’s east side. He says he was tricked into confessing, and was coerced by an unscrupulous lawyer into pleading guilty to second-degree murder.
Two weeks after he went to prison, hit man Vincent Smothers confessed to 12 murders, including the four for which Sanford was convicted.
http://www.detroitnews.com/story/ne...vid-moran-helped-free-convicted-man/94049104/
DS still served 9 years even though 2 weeks after his incarceration another person confessed to the crimes. A crime in and of itself imo.
The Michigan House on Wednesday approved a plan to compensate wrongfully convicted individuals by paying them $50,000 for each year they spent in prison, ...
The plan is more than 12 years in the making ...
http://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/michigan/2016/12/07/wrong-conviction/95108412/
Wrongful convictions have been elevated from an anomaly to 'a thing'. I hope DS gets the $450K or so that this program seeks to give.
And this one explains how this happens and who can make it happen.
Yet another case is in the news of the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office clawing to suppress evidence that might exonerate a man convicted of murder and locked up since 1992.
“In many prosecutor’s offices, there’s a denialism that a mistake was made,” Moran says. “They are more worried about how the office might look than they are about justice.”
http://www.detroitnews.com/story/op...3/18/finley-wayne-prosecutor-worthy/99366062/
Imo, mistakes are not usually what occurs - it's intentional to tamper with evidence and withhold exculpatory evidence. Crimes that are rarely if ever prosecuted. The lack of prosecution leaves the door open for someone else to commit the same crime aka mistake.
Jmo.