Crime and Misdirected Punishment

Imagine the prison door slamming closed, locking you away from society for a crime you did not commit. Ten, twenty, fifty years stretching in front of you—no family, no career, no possessions, no life.

The numbers are startling. The first DNA exoneration in the United States occurred in 1989, and since 2000, there have been 144 exonerations.

The Innocence Project was founded in 1992 to assist prisoners who could be proven innocent through DNA testing. The Georgia Innocence Project, based on the same model, was launched five years ago, and has since won the exoneration of three men based on DNA evidence. Clarence Harrison, Robert Clark, and Willie O. “Pete” Williams served a combined sixty-five years in prison for crimes they did not commit. But they are now free.

Aimee Maxwell is the executive director of the Georgia Innocence Project, and agreed to answer questions about her experiences at the helm of the nonprofit, her effort to serve prisoners in Alabama, and her mission to revamp eyewitness identifications.

Q: The Georgia House hearings on eyewitness identification procedures are currently being held. What would you most like to see come of these hearings?

A: We hope these hearings will bring all interested parties (law enforcement, prosecutors, and legislators) to the table to discuss the need for eyewitness identification reform. More than 75 percent of the 207 Americans exonerated by DNA evidence were mistakenly identified by victims and/or witnesses to the crimes for which they were wrongly convicted. In Georgia, it’s 100 percent: all six Georgia exonerees were identified on the witness stand by the victims. Sadly, those victims were just mistaken. And that cost these six Georgia men, collectively, nearly one hundred years in prison and left the true perpetrators free to hurt others victims.

Q: Your group has analyzed responses from 296 law enforcement agencies around the state regarding their eyewitness ID procedures. Based on this, what are the specific changes you’d like to see in eyewitness identification procedures?

A: We’d like to see best practices implemented statewide as they currently are in New Jersey and North Carolina. These best practices include what’s called “sequential double blind protocol.” It sounds very complicated but is actually simple.

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10.03.2007
Suha Araj
I think the innocence project is amazing. This best practice of 'sequential double blind protocol' makes a lot of sense. When you understand some of the details its easy to see how people can slip thru the cracks and wind up on death row. Congrats on all of your hard work.
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