« Florida's Amendment 3 | Main | Continuum of disabilities »

Not necessarily all innocent

On your "Innocents Behind Bars" (Nov. 16), you might mention that a noticeable number of such cases (though quite apparently not the one you linked) are cases where a new trial is granted based on a technicality, but the original witnesses are dead or can't be found, etc, and so the charges are dropped. This is especially true of death row "innocents" -- several have sued the state for damages, but they have been thrown out. As one judge said (paraphrase) -- "Inability to re-prosecute you now doesn't mean you didn't do it." Or something like that.-- David Allen, Amarillo, Tex.

TrackBack

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Not necessarily all innocent:

» Innocents behind bars from Overlawyered
San Francisco magazine takes a long look at persons eventually exonerated and freed from prison after serving long stretches ("Innocence Lost", Nov. (PDF)). Among them is the case of "John Stoll this past spring. After... [Read More]

» Batch of reader letters from Overlawyered
We've posted four more reader letters from our alarmingly backed-up pipeline, at our letters page. Among topics this time: Manhattan attorney Ravi Batra invites us to take a closer look at his lawsuit against the... [Read More]