The Innocence Project: The Freedom Fighters

Two men holding hands

In 1992, two lawyers named Peter Neufeld and Barry Scheck were wrestling with a growing problem in the American justice system: the number of people who were convicted on false eyewitness testimony. 

Too often, in the heat and panic of the moment, people who witness crimes incorrectly remember certain details and end up convicting the wrong person. 

One study found that over 70% of wrongful convictions in the US can be at least partly blamed on incorrect eyewitness testimony.

Scheck and Neufeld’s solution was to found the Innocence Project, a nonprofit legal group that uses sound science like DNA testing to help exonerate innocent people and get them back to their homes and families. 

Since then, they’ve helped secure the release of 343 innocent people, 20 of whom were on death row. They’ve also helped bring the right people to justice, using their expertise to land more than 147 real perps behind bars.

Two men holding hands
Photo courtesy of The Innocence Project

Incorrect eyewitness testimony isn’t the only reason innocent people wind up in jail. According to the Innocence Project, about half the cases they’ve gotten involved in also involve bad forensic science and outdated methods of proving someone’s guilt. 

Even more concerning, the group says about a quarter of cases they’ve studied involve innocent people who actually plead guilty because they were coerced into it. 

To help those people and others, the Innocence Project launched what’s called the Innocence Network, a collective of law schools, journalism schools, and public defenders that team up to help get wrongfully convicted felons out of jail. 

They’re working in 26 states and even overseas, in countries like Australia, Ireland, New Zealand, and the UK.

But the group isn’t interested in only temporary solutions, but also real, systemic change. 

They have a whole policy team that works with everyone from local leaders to Congress, helping pass laws that make it harder to convict the wrong person and easier to get innocent people out of jail.

A version of this article was originally published in Issue 01 of the Goodnewspaper in July 2017.

Article Details

July 1, 2017 4:33 PM
A woman's hands wring out clothes in soapy water in a red bucket.

60% of globe hand-washes laundry, and women bear the burden. A new hand-crank washing machine helps them reclaim 15 hours/week

In developing countries, women and girls bear the burden of hand-washing laundry. A new manual, off-grid washer requires only a few hand cranks to run a 30-minute cycle, and saves precious time.
Taliyah Murphy standing on a podium

Sweeping changes for trans women in Colorado prisons could have positive ripple effects

Colorado’s prison system must now provide the same gender-affirming health care covered by state Medicaid, and trans women must have the option to be housed with other women.
Bryan Stevenson

Bryan Stevenson: Mercy, He Wrote

In 1995, he founded the Equal Justice Initiative, a nonprofit organization that seeks fair sentences for minorities, the poor, and, especially, children who find themselves in the justice system.
Campaign To End The Death Penalty — On a Yellow Banner

Why and How To Abolish the Death Penalty in the United States

The U.S. has a disproportionately high number of executions — and there are four key problems with the death penalty. But it's possible to bring an end to them for good — here's how...

Want to stay up-to-date on positive news?

The best email in your inbox.
Filled with the day’s best good news.