Feb 11, 2020 · Feb. 10, 2020 “For Life,” the new ABC drama about a Bronx inmate on a life sentence who becomes a lawyer, belongs in the small but increasingly relevant genre of the unjust-incarceration story,...
Nov 22, 2021 · When Brooks was identified, the immediate question became how someone who was charged with multiple felonies, including with domestic abuse assessments, was let out of jail on just a $1,000 bond two days prior. The answer to that question is becoming clearer as we learn about the prosecutor’s office that handled those cases.
Big-city lawyer Hank Palmer returns to his childhood home where his father, the town's judge, is suspected of murder. Hank sets out to discover the truth and, along the way, reconnects with his estranged family. Director: David Dobkin | Stars: Robert Downey Jr., Robert Duvall, Vera Farmiga, Billy Bob Thornton.
That’s why you hire a lawyer. Even though it’s a case where it looks like when we’re talking on the phone, it looks like you may be looking at the real likelihood of jail, you never know what outcomes may be possible when the rubber meets the road at court. In some cases there is a strong likelihood of jail.
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.
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.
Fear of 13. Nick Yarris is the sole subject of this 2015 documentary feature. Nick tells his story starting with his youth to his murder conviction. He explains the 21 years he spent on death row and his exoneration. The film was nominated for Best Documentary Film at the 2015 London Film Festival.
The show started in 2013 and three seasons have been released, with a fourth on its way.
Frontline: “Death by Fire”. This 2010 episode of PBS’ Frontline examines the case of Cameron Todd Willingham, who was executed in Texas in 2004 for allegedly setting a fire that killed his three young daughters 13 years earlier.
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.”.
FOR LIFE, inspired by the life of Isaac Wright, Jr., is about prisoner Aaron Wallace (Nicholas Pinnock), who becomes a lawyer, litigating cases for other inmates while fighting to overturn his own life sentence for a crime he didn’t commit.
Rollo has written over 680 film, TV show, short film, Blu-ray, and 4K-Ultra reviews. His reviews are published in IMDb's External Reviews and in Google News. Previously you could find his work at Empire Movies, Blogcritics, and AltFilmGuide. Now you can find his work at FilmBook.
The new State Constitution replaced a unanimity requirement with one that said the votes of nine jurors out of 12 were enough to convict defendants of noncapital felonies. In 1973, the Constitution was amended to require 10 jurors to agree.
In prison, Mr. Duncan enjoyed the respect and affection of his fellow prisoners. One of them, the acclaimed journalist Wilbert Rideau, wrote in his memoir that Mr. Duncan had “the most brilliant legal mind in Angola,” the nation’s largest maximum-security prison.
He had a 10th-grade education, and he was serving a life sentence for murder. The prison paid him 20 cents an hour to help his fellow prisoners with their cases. He got good at it, and he used his increasingly formidable legal skills to help free several inmates.
Mr. Rideau was released in 2005 after Mr. Duncan helped him get a new trial. “He did the legal research,” Mr. Rideau said. “He put together the case. I would not be here but for Calvin. But I’m not the only guy. He got other guys out of prison, too.”.
Mr. Duncan, left, at a news conference in 2014. He had worked on about two dozen attempts to persuade the Supreme Court to address the issue of non-unanimous jury verdicts before the justices agreed in March to decide the question.
Over time, many people came to question the Louisiana law, which allowed convictions by a 10-to-2 vote. Oregon is the only other state that allows non-unanimous verdicts in criminal cases. Last year, Louisiana’s voters amended the State Constitution to require unanimity, though only for crimes committed after 2018.
In April, The Advocate newspaper in Baton Rouge won a Pulitzer Prize for a series of articles on the subject. Mr. Duncan himself has nothing to gain from his efforts, having been convicted by a unanimous jury.
If you have a court date scheduled and wish to go before a judge for a decision, stand your ground. There is no guarantee you will get a better settlement from the judge but, you will at least know you were in control of how your divorce played out. 3.
If you find yourself unable to come to an agreement with your spouse and you do have to schedule a court date be wary of these hallway settlements. You hire a lawyer to protect your interests but you have to put pro-active energy into making sure those interests are truly protected. 3. Judges don’t enforce court orders.
Divorce is a civil action, and every state has rules of civil procedure. What you don’t hear about but, have probably fallen victim to, are the unwritten family court rules. These “unwritten rules,” are the rules that define how judges and lawyers conduct themselves with each other. These unwritten rules, the rules that define what goes on ...
3 Unwritten Family Court Rules: 1. Lawyers and judges cover for each other. Most judges and lawyers will not report each other for misconduct or violations of judicial ethics. Judges especially can get away with bad behavior because lawyers don’t want to get on a judge’s bad side. Lawyers know they will go before that judge again ...
Judges have the power to enforce awards but are typically reluctant to force men to honor their support obligations to their families because, under the law, men who don’t’ comply would have to be jailed, and judges are often highly reluctant to jail a deadbeat dad.”
Judges have the power to enforce awards but are typically reluctant to force men to honor their support obligations to their families because, under the law, men who don’t’ comply would have to be jailed, and judges are often highly reluctant to jail a deadbeat dad.”.
For 11 years, Cathy was the About.com Expert to Divorce Support where she covered all aspects of the divorce process.