Editorial: Firing the judge in Brock Turner sex assault case was a step toward mob rule

(Anda Chu / TNS) “That’s a chilling sort of mentality. It’s the kind of thinking that led the good people of California to create a criminal justice system that made eternal pariahs of former offenders and made irredeemable ‘predators’ of troubled juveniles. It’s the thinking that promoted judges and prosecutors who exercised their discretion not… Continue reading Editorial: Firing the judge in Brock Turner sex assault case was a step toward mob rule

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Should Galen Baughman Spend His Life in Prison?

(bigstock) “SVPA laws and practices refer to “mental abnormalities,” which sounds scientific. But the American Psychiatric Association has opposed such laws, citing their abuse of civil liberties and the use of unscientific ‘disorders’ as the basis for punishment. In practice, designation as a sexually violent predator (SVP) is not based on substantial scientific research, and… Continue reading Should Galen Baughman Spend His Life in Prison?

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How Confirmation Bias Sends Innocent People to Prison

(innocence project) “While cases like these often feature wrongdoing by individual prosecutors and police officers, a new study suggests the problem is deeper. After analyzing 50 wrongful convictions and other investigative failures, Texas State criminologists Kim Rossmo and Joycelyn Pollock found that confirmation bias, reinforced by groupthink and strong incentives to quickly identify the perpetrators… Continue reading How Confirmation Bias Sends Innocent People to Prison

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Digital Jail: How Electronic Monitoring Drives Defendants Into Debt

Photograph by Zora J Murff for The New York Times Yet like the system of wealth-based detention they are meant to help reform, ankle monitors often place poor people in special jeopardy. Across the country, defendants who have not been convicted of a crime are put on “offender funded” payment plans for monitors that sometimes… Continue reading Digital Jail: How Electronic Monitoring Drives Defendants Into Debt

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Punished Enough?

“Laws punishing sex offenses are still becoming harsher and more exacting, even though reported sex crimes are declining—and in fact were already declining well before these laws were passed. In consequence, the numbers keep climbing: people convicted of sex offenses are a rapidly growing segment of the prison population—up to 30% in some states—while beyond… Continue reading Punished Enough?

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Wrongfully Convicted Anna Vasquez Named to Houston Forensic Lab Board

“In 2006, advocates with the National Center for Reason and Justice got involved. The case was one of several they argued were involved with national hysteria around satanic ritual abuse.” The NCRJ is proud that we could play a part in correcting this injustice. Read the article by Paul Flahive from Texas Public Radio.

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Come Hear Super Lawyer John Swomley

Please join us for an evening of learning and discussion about one of the most controversial issues in America today! Sex Panic and the Law: Reflections of an attorney on the front lines with Attorney John Swomley, of Swomley & Tennen, LLP  Monday, April 22 @ 6:30 pm Cambridge Friends Center 5 Longfellow Park, Cambridge,… Continue reading Come Hear Super Lawyer John Swomley

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