• “What Jennifer Saw” (1997) – An examination of flaws in eyewitness identifications as evidence, through the lens of the case of Ronald Cotton, who served 12 years in North Carolina prison for a crime he didn’t commit.
A working mother puts herself through law school in an effort to represent her brother, who has been wrongfully convicted of murder and has exhausted his chances to appeal his conviction thr... Read all
Scenes of a Crime explores a nearly 10-hour interrogation that culminates in a disputed confession, and an intense, high-profile child murder trial in New York state. Watch instantly on iTunes, Vimeo or Distrify.
After the murder of Katherina Reitz Brow on May 21, 1980, in Ayer, Massachusetts, Kenny is initially taken in for questioning by Sergeant Nancy Taylor, but released. Two years later, based on new testimony from two witnesses, Kenny is arrested and tried.
'Conviction': A True Story, Prettied Up For A Picture A true tale of a woman's courageous campaign on behalf of her wrongly imprisoned brother, the film features strong performances from Hilary Swank and Minnie Driver, but feels just a little too tidy for a story based on real-life events.
Since then, Waters has resumed her work at Aidan's Pub in Bristol, R.I., where she is general manager and co-owner. She continues to do pro bono work with the Innocence Project to help others who were wrongfully convicted and advocate for legislation and other reforms.
On June 19, 2001, the District Attorney's office dropped all charges against Waters and his exoneration became official. Sadly, after only six months of freedom, Waters fell 15 feet off a wall taking a shortcut home. He died on September 19, 2001.
Despite claiming his innocence, Kenny is convicted and sentenced to life without parole. Kenny's sister Betty Ann (Hilary Swank) has always been close to her brother, even though they grew up in separate foster homes.
The estate of the late Kenneth Waters, who was exonerated in 2001 after spending 18 years in prison, has settled their case against the town of Ayer for a total of 3.4 million dollars.
Kenneth Waters, 47, fractured his skull Sept. 6 when he fell from a 15-foot wall while taking a shortcut to his brother's house after a dinner with his mother.
A server at an Irish pub with a GED, Waters realized that nobody was going to fight like she would fight to get her wrongly convicted brother out of a Massachusetts prison. So she went to law school herself and used that education to successfully bring home her brother, Kenny Waters.
Betty Anne WatersBetty Anne Waters was the inspiration for the new movie "Conviction." She's shown here with the film's director, Tony Goldwyn. Betty Anne Waters once believed everyone in prison was guilty. Then, a Massachusetts court sentenced her brother Kenny to life imprisonment for a brutal murder he claimed he hadn't committed.
Production began in February 2009, in Dexter, Michigan. Filming also took place in Ann Arbor, Howell, Pinckney, Chelsea and Ypsilanti. In Ypsilanti, filming took place in the historic Depot Town at a restaurant called Sidetrack Bar & Grill.
Conviction (TV Movie 2002) - Drake as Fish - IMDb.
Conviction, a crime drama series starring Hayley Atwell, Eddie Cahill, and Shawn Ashmore is available to stream now. Watch it on Prime Video, VUDU, Vudu Movie & TV Store, Apple TV or Pluto TV - It's Free TV on your Roku device.
August 1950Convicted / Initial release
Betty Anne Waters (Swank) is a high school dropout who spent nearly two decades working as a single mother while putting herself through law school, tirelessly trying to beat the system and overturn her brother's (Rockwell) unjust murder conviction. — Fox Searchlight Pictures
Betty Waters says "The movie is so true to life. Not every scene happened, but every emotion happened."
What was the official certification given to Conviction (2010) in Brazil?
Waters was positively voluble when it came to discussing “Conviction,” directed by Tony Goldwyn (“They really cared about getting it right”), and her work in helping those who have been wrongfully convicted.
Come Friday, though, when the movie “Conviction” opens in select cities, considerably more people will get to know Betty Anne Waters. The movie, starring Hilary Swank as Ms. Waters, tells her story; how she doggedly searched for DNA evidence that had supposedly been destroyed; how she enlisted Mr.
No fame. “As I got to know her, I understood it,” said Barry Scheck, a lawyer who assisted her on the case. “She did not become a lawyer to be a lawyer. She became a lawyer to get her brother out of jail.”. Come Friday, though, when the movie “Conviction” opens in select cities, considerably more people will get to know Betty Anne Waters.
Budget. $12.5 million. Box office. $11.1 million. Conviction is a 2010 biographical legal drama film directed by Tony Goldwyn, written by Pamela Gray, and starring Hilary Swank and Sam Rockwell. The film premiered on September 11, 2010, at the Toronto International Film Festival and was released in the US on October 15, 2010.
Betty Anne and Kenny are overjoyed anticipating his release, but Martha Coakley, of the District Attorney's office, refuses to vacate the conviction, claiming that there was still enough evidence to convict Kenny as an accomplice.
Plot. Betty Anne Waters' life revolves around her brother Kenneth, who is now in jail for murder. Despite Kenny's knack for getting in trouble, they have always been close. After the murder of Katherina Reitz Brow on May 21, 1980, in Ayer, Massachusetts, Kenny is initially taken in for questioning by Sergeant Nancy Taylor, but released.
In the process, Betty Anne learns that Nancy Taylor was fired from the police department for fabricating evidence in another case, which deepens Betty Anne's suspicions about Kenny's conviction and the evidence presented at trial.
Betty Anne is heartbroken again, but refuses to give up after Scheck advises her that their discovery not only proves Kenny's innocence, but also that the main witnesses against him were lying. Betty Anne, Abra, and Scheck visit the other two main trial witnesses, Kenny's ex-wife and his ex-girlfriend.
Martha Coakley, Attorney General of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, who was portrayed in the film, commented after seeing a pre-screening on October 12, 2010, that it was a compelling film but there were legal inaccuracies and temporal exaggerations.
In 1986 Michael Morton’s wife Christine is brutally murdered in front of their only child, and Michael is convicted of the crime. Locked away in Texas prisons for a quarter century, he has years to ponder questions of justice and innocence, truth and fate. Though he is virtually invisible to society, a team of dedicated attorneys spends years fighting for the right to test DNA evidence found at the murder scene. Their discoveries ultimately reveal that the price of a wrongful conviction goes well beyond one man’s loss of freedom.
This documentary, produced by a former Innocence Project clinic student, focuses on the DNA exonerations of seven wrongfully convicted men. It received the 2005 Sundance Film Festival Special Jury Prize.
The Central Park Five. In 1989, five black and Latino teenagers were arrested and charged with brutally attacking and raping a white female jogger in Central Park. News media swarmed the case, calling them a “wolfpack.”.
Filmmakers Ray Klonsky and Marc Lamy set out to help their friend David McCallum, who was forced to confess to a 1985 murder he didn’t commit as a teenager, prove his innocence. The friendship between Klonsky and McCallum began over a decade ago, when McCallum contacted Klonsky’s father after reading an article he wrote about Rubin “Hurricane” Carter, a former boxer and exoneree who became a strong advocate for the wrongly convicted.
This documentary, directed by Jean-Xavier de Lestrade, is based on the true story of Brenton Butler, who was 15 years old when he was wrongfully convicted of murder. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Film at the 74th Academy Awards in 2002.
After Northwestern journalism students uncovered new evidence that exonerated 13 people on Illinois death row, Illinois Governor George Ryan ordered a moratorium on the death penalty. This 2004 documentary follows the process of rehearing all the death row cases in Illinois and the history of the death penalty in America through a critical lens.
Conviction. Directed by Tony Goldwyn and starring Hilary Swank and Sam Rockwell, Conviction (2010) tells the true story of a woman’s fight to prove her brother’s innocence. Watch instantly on Netflix, buy a DVD or watch instantly on Amazon. Watch the story behind the film in this three-minute Innocence Project video.
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