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 Task Force on Wrongful Convictions
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Welcome to the Task Force on Wrongful Convictions
Task Force Created to Study Prolifteration of
Wrongful Convictions
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"There should be no higher priority than to ensure the
fair administration of justice."
- NYSBA President Bernice
Leber
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Noting that the number of criminal convictions overturned in New York
State is undermining public confidence in our justice system, New York
State Bar Association President Bernice Leber (Arent Fox, LLP) announced
the creation of a Task Force on Wrongful Convictions.
The blue ribbon task force, chaired by Barry M. Kamins, Immediate
Past President of the New York City Bar Association and adjunct
professor at Brooklyn and Fordham Law Schools, will study the systemic,
procedural and statutory causes that contribute to wrongful convictions
and propose solutions to this growing problem. The Task Force is
comprised of distinguished jurists, prosecutors, criminal defense
attorneys, members of law enforcement, good government groups and
leading members of academia.
“For each wrongful conviction that surfaces, how many others
are still unfairly resolved? Ensuring the fair administration of justice
must be the number one priority in our criminal justice system. As
leaders of the profession, we have a responsibility to do everything we
can to protect the innocent and make sure men and women are not punished
– not even for even one day – for crimes they did not
commit,” said Leber. “That so many distinguished New Yorkers
have agreed to serve on the Task Force speaks to the importance of our
mission. I am extremely pleased that these leaders have taken up this
great challenge.”
Read
the full news release on the establishment of the Task Force on Wrongful
Convictions.
Articles
of Interest on the Task Force on Wrongful Convictions
Mission
Statement:
The number of
exonerations in New York
undermines the assumption that the criminal justice
system sufficiently protects the innocent. Many of the exonerations do
not involve DNA evidence. The consequences are far-reaching, considering
among other things, the lengthy incarcerations some defendants have
experienced.
The Task Force is charged with
identifying the causes for wrongful convictions, and to attempt to
eliminate them.
The Task Force shall identify
all of the causes of the wrongful convictions and isolate the systemic
causes that produced these injustices.
The Task Force shall focus on
current rules, procedures and statutes that were implicated in each
caser and propose solutions in the form of procedural changes and
legislation.
The Task Force shall provide
opportunities to educate the profession and the public on the causes of
these erroneous convictions with the aim of ensuring that our laws,
policies and practices are designed to reduce the risk of convicting the
innocent and increasing the likelihood of convicting the
guilty.
In addition, the Task Force
shall review and report on the current remedies/compensation available
to those wrongly convicted and propose reforms, where
appropriate.
The Task Force shall also
prepare a report recommending any appropriate reforms, both by statute,
policy and practice, to the Executive Committee and the House of
Delegates.
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