Dean Cage Profiled on Black Voices

October 29th, 2009 by Ryan Carlsen

The website Black Voices picked up the story on out client Dean Cage and recently ran a profile of him.  The article focuses on potential racism in wrongful convictions and how witness misidentification disproportionately happens to innocent African-American men.  At least 40% of witness misidentifications in post conviction DNA exoneration cases involved cross-racial identification.  70% of the 245 people who were wrongly convicted are people of color,  and 60% were African-American.  Read the article here.

Life After Innocence Interviews Dean Cage

October 27th, 2009 by eshah1

The Life After Innocence Project sat down earlier this year to talk to Dean about his experiences with his wrongful conviction and exoneration 14 years later.

watch it here

If read about us on CNN and would like to donate to help Dean or any of our other clients, please contact us at afterinnocenceproject@gmail.com

Dean Cage on CNN

October 26th, 2009 by mtomlin

Click here to see Life After Innocence Client, Dean Cage, and his wife, Jewel, on CNN.com

If you read about us on CNN and would like to donate to help Dean or any of our other clients, please contact us at afterinnocenceproject@gmail.com

Jerry Miller’s Prison Review Board Hearing

October 21st, 2009 by edeyoe

On October 8th, Jerry Miller went before the Prison Review Board and asked them to make a recommendation to the Governor to grant clemency in a weapons charge he received while wrongfully imprisoned.  Mark Hersh, an attorney with Reed Smith in Chicago, helped us file the clemency petition over the summer and he really has been an incredible resource and friend to the Life After Innocence Project.  Mark, Jerry and Terri (Jerry’s cousin) spoke before the three-person panel at the Thompson Center and explained why it is in the interest of justice to have Jerry’s record totally cleared.  The Will County State’s Attorney’s office (the prosecuting office) sent a letter supporting Jerry’s petition which was really wonderful.  The hearing went very well – and now all we can do is wait and see what the Governor will do!

Stateville

October 12th, 2009 by mtomlin

by Laura Caldwell

Last week I toured Stateville Correctional Center, a maximum security men’s penitentiary in Joliet, Iillinois. I went with my law students so we could better understand our Life After Innocence clients who have been wrongfully convicted, many of whom were imprisoned at Stateville for decades before proving their innocence. As a writer, there was an added bonus for me because the background of a minor character in my new book includes imprisonment and execution at Stateville.

The long debated question, “Should you write what you know?” has been by batted around authors forever. I have always been firm in my answer: certainly, it helps to write what you know, but when you can’t? Do the research. It’s a close second. I’ve written books about Russia based on talking to locals and studying maps and guidebooks. I’ve written about a member of a covert op in Vietnam after reading books and interviewing men in the same position.

Now that I’ve spent five hours in Stateville, many of those hours in the general population of prisoners, I could write what I know, I suppose. I can tell you what it looked like to stand in a room painted powderish green with 4 floors of cages (or “cells” if you want a nicer, cleaner word). I could tell you what it would look like to watch one man in his cell urinate while we stood a foot outside and our guard/guide spoke about prison procedure. I can tell you what it looked like to watch another man do sit ups, to hear another prisoner hurl insults at my law students (surely those weren’t meant for me). I can tell you what it looked like when one of my law students waved at someone on the fourth tier, and what it sounded like when a chorus of shouts, hoots and lewd screams erupted.

We can tell you what we saw when we walked in the “round house”, the only round house prison left in the world. The room was cement and steel gray; 5 floors of cages, circling around a guard station in the middle, shotguns at the ready. Prisoners threw themselves against the bars of their cells or the plastic that had been put there to protect guards from urination or spitting. I can describe the madness in the eyes of some as they watched us, free, standing and observing them as if in a zoo.

I can tell you what it was like to walk into the death chamber – the kleig lights making it look like a tiny stage, the exhaust fan with mint green paint chips hanging from it, remnants of days when executions were done by electrocution. Silver brackets hung on the wall, ready to be adorned with IVs and used for lethal injections. Despite a moratorium on executions in Illinois, the red phone was still on the wall, awaiting a call from the governor to halt everything. And a few steps down and visible through a Plexiglas wall was the gallery. Where people could watch someone else be killed.

I can describe all these things in more detail. I will in my future book. But I don’t know if I will ever be able to describe the energy of the place, the feeling of being in that round house, the vibrations that coursed through our bodies as we stood in the death chamber. How do you write those feelings? I suppose I “know” them now. But I can’t find the words. “Jumping out of my skin” is way overused. So I need some suggestions. Got any? To use another cliche, I’m all ears.

Another Victory for Life After Innocence

September 25th, 2009 by mtomlin

by Laura Caldwell

The Life After Innocence Project had a huge victory! We filed an amicus brief (as a ‘friend of the court’, along with Lisa Madigan’s office and the Center on Wrongful Convictions) supporting the constitutionality of the Certificate of… Innocence, a gateway for Illinois exonerees to get funds after they are found innocent and released from prison. The judge in DuPage County just upheld the constiutionality. Thanks to attorney, Larry Stein, for bringing this to our attention. And congrats to my students who worked hard on this!

Here is an excerpt of the judge’s opinion:

The argument of the State that 735 ILCS 5/2-702 is an unconstitutional usurpation of the Governor’s exclusive right to grant pardons is simply wrong. The Illinois Supreme Court discussed the meaning of “pardon” in Talarico v. Dunlap, 177 Ill.2d 185 at 190, 685 N.E.2d 325 [S.Ct., 1997]:

“Some courts have held that a pardon not only relieves the punishment for the offense but blots out the existence of the guilt of the offender [citations]. This court, however, has held that a pardon merely releases an inmate from custody and supervision. [citation] Since the very essence of a pardon is forgiveness or remission of penalty, assessed on the basis of the conviction of the offender, a pardon implies guilt; it does not obliterate the fact of the commission of the crime and the conviction thereof. [citation] In other words, a pardon “involves forgiveness but not forgetfulness”.

In the case at bar, there is no question that the Appellate Court reversed the conviction of the Plaintiff. She is therefore not guilty of having committed the crime with which she was charged. As the Plaintiff and the amici point out, the reversal obliterates that conviction as though it had never occurred. Legally, she has not committed a crime, so there remains nothing for which she could even receive a pardon. The argument of the State that the statute authorizing the procedure for obtaining a Certificate of Innocence is unconstitutional is totally without merit.

The reasoning the Court cited from Talarico v. Dunlap was cited in the amicus brief filed by the Life After Innocence Clinic, as well as briefs filed by the other amici.

USA Today article addresses changes made in police lineups

September 17th, 2009 by edeyoe

Five states, and some large U.S. cities, have changed the way police lineups are conducted in reaction to the large number of wrongful convictions that have problems with eyewitness misidentification according to an article in yesterday’s USA Today.  According to The Innocence Project, 75% of the 242 exonerees’ cases involved mistaken identification and the article focuses on how police departments are instituting changes to help combat the problems. 

Read the whole article here

Alton Logan

September 11th, 2009 by mtomlin

by Laura Caldwell

Alton Logan is one of the newer clients of the Life After Innocence Project. Briefly his story is this—Alton was convicted of being an accessory to the killing a security guard on the south side of Chicago, and he did twenty-six years in jail before he was freed. We hear often of DNA evidence which exonerates someone. This was not the case with Alton. Instead, lawyers for a man named Andrew Wilson knew that their client (who they were representing on an unrelated cop-killing case) was the real perpetrator of the crime. Andrew Wilson had confessed to them almost immediately. What were they to do?

The attorney-client privilege in our country, for some very good reasons, provides that an attorney may not disclose anything a client has told him, unless under extreme circumstances, such as if the client discloses an intent to kill someone in the near future. In this case, their client had told them that he had helped killed someone in the past. In looking into it, they realized that another man was in jail for that crime. The attorneys couldn’t convince their client to come forward, so they had him sign an affidavit stating that upon his death they could disclose his confession. So many years later, when Wilson died, that’s exactly what happened, and Alton Logan was exonerated.

When I first saw Alton speak at Loyola University Chicago School of Law, I was struck, as I have been by so many other exonerees, at his lack of bitterness. He was speaking on a panel and sitting immediately next to the attorney who, because of the attorney-client privilege, felt he was forced to wait all those years to disclose his client’s confession, and yet Alton did not seem to harbor any resentment toward the man. Much debate has been had about the attorneys and what they should have done. Many experts I’ve asked have indicated that it is a trickier situation than most people think. By breaking the attorney-client privilege, the lawyers could, hypothetically, have lost their law licenses. But many of those experts think they should have hired outside counsel to find a way to disclose the confession within the ethics rules and the laws.

But coming back to Alton. As I mentioned, he is now a client of the Life After Innocence Project, of which I’m the director. At our project, we aid exonerees, after they’ve been found innocent to reclaim their lives—get their records expunged, help find state money, locate jobs and housing, obtain counseling if necessary and a lot more. In Alton’s case, we’re helping to get him some much-needed medical attention, ensuring that his conviction doesn’t keep showing up on his record, getting him some financial counseling, and working with the state to obtain the relatively small amount of funds he will eventually receive.

But when I think of his case, I keep returning to Alton himself. He is employed and is in a relationship. He is working hard to learn the ways of the world—Google, email, cell phones, automated everything—and he is succeeding. In large part that success is due to that lack of bitterness. We see this same thing in all our clients. They tell us that they choose, every day, sometimes many times a day, not to be bitter, not to be angry, because somewhere along their journey they realized that those emotions will hurt no one but themselves. I often wonder if I could do the same thing. Could you?

Former LAI member John Maki on HuffPo

September 10th, 2009 by edeyoe

Read John Maki’s excellent Huffington Post piece on Juan Rivera and Cameron Todd Willingham here

Florida Man released tonight after 26 years in prison

September 8th, 2009 by edeyoe

Anthony Caravella has served 26 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit.  Today, justice prevailed.

Read more about Anthony’s release here