
BC Innocence Program Lands Major Grant
BCIP and the Committee for Public Counsel Services (CPCS) Innocence Program received the $354,000 grant from the US Department of Justice.
Read MoreBCIP and the Committee for Public Counsel Services (CPCS) Innocence Program received the $354,000 grant from the US Department of Justice.
Read MoreStudent’s discovery of previously overlooked DNA evidence is key to release of man who served 34 years.
Read MoreBC Law’s work on an amicus brief helps the cause of the wrongly convicted.
Read MoreWrongful Conviction Day highlights two key bills in MA Legislature: forensic science and compensation reform.
Read MoreAn innocent man has been freed from prison, and BC Law recent grad Rufus Urion ’17 and the Law School’s Innocence Program contributed to the…
Read MoreOver 80 students and attorneys gathered at BC Law on September 21, 2015 for a training workshop on how to investigate post-conviction innocence cases….
Read MoreClinic hails the outcome of its three-year-long case to free the wrongly convicted Ronnie Qualls.
Read MoreHer efforts to free a wrongly convicted man was recognized by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.
Read MoreAdjunct Professor Charlotte Whitmore has a gift for freeing the wrongly convicted. But she doesn’t do it alone. Her talent is in knowing how to assist a team of colleagues and students like Lauren Rossman through a labyrinthine criminal justice system where too many people have lost their way. With the team’s help, Omar Martinez found his way out.
Read MoreIn an important new ruling, Darrell Jones, who was convicted 30 years ago of a murder that he did not commit, has had his…
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