ideologyhunter
Contributor
We don't have the kind of justice system that can or will ever weed out the corrupting circumstances that lead to conviction of the innocent, among them:
> police and prosecutors pressured to convict somebody will seize on the "most convictable" guy they've got (read Adams Vs. Texas or see the documentary on it) and then use prison house snitches or accomplices to handcraft a case that has no other 'pure' or disinterested evidence
> unreliable witnesses, a rampant problem that has been studied fairly thoroughly
> ordinary prejudice, whether racial or otherwise
> the Plutocracy factor...look what OJ's money bought him. (The opposite of conviction of the innocent, but it leads to the supposition that an indigent client with an overworked public defender is really up against it.)
When a class of journalism students in Illinois can take on a class project of wrongful death penalty convictions and find case after case of provable incompetence and deceit... our death penalty history is hideous. The time to end it is overdue.
> police and prosecutors pressured to convict somebody will seize on the "most convictable" guy they've got (read Adams Vs. Texas or see the documentary on it) and then use prison house snitches or accomplices to handcraft a case that has no other 'pure' or disinterested evidence
> unreliable witnesses, a rampant problem that has been studied fairly thoroughly
> ordinary prejudice, whether racial or otherwise
> the Plutocracy factor...look what OJ's money bought him. (The opposite of conviction of the innocent, but it leads to the supposition that an indigent client with an overworked public defender is really up against it.)
When a class of journalism students in Illinois can take on a class project of wrongful death penalty convictions and find case after case of provable incompetence and deceit... our death penalty history is hideous. The time to end it is overdue.