013023 UNDOCUMENTED UNPUNISHED MURDERS DURING JIM CROW - MARGARET BURNHAM PART 2 artwork
PURSUING JUSTICE

013023 UNDOCUMENTED UNPUNISHED MURDERS DURING JIM CROW - MARGARET BURNHAM PART 2

  • S2023E4
  • 26:45
  • January 30th 2023

Professor Margaret Burnham teaches law at Northeastern University and is the founding director of the Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Project at Northeastern University School of Law. A civil rights lawyer, a defense attorney and a judge, she is the author of the new book:By Hands Not Known:Jim Crow’s Legal Executioners.

Between 1920~1960 in the South there is a piece of history that is both forgotten and overlooked: 1,000 cases of racial violence and death. The stories in this riveting book are a call to recognize the horrific injustice which occurred.The book highlights a legal system which lacked justice for the victims and accountability for the offenders.

PURSUING JUSTICE

What if you or someone you love were arrested, convicted and incarcerated for a crime but was innocent?

What if the lawyer you hired was incompetent and you were out of money and out of options?

What if years and decades had gone by and you or the person you cared about was still behind bars?

Where would you turn?

Wrongful conviction in the United States occurs more often than you might think.

Just last year, according to the National Registry of Exonerations, 156 people were released from prison after being proven innocent.

Since 1989, 2,479 people were exonerated across the country. Since 1973, 156 people were taken off Death Row and walked out of prison.

For every 10 people executed, 1 person was set free.

Who was behind these exonerations? Innocence Projects (nearly one for every state) and some Conviction Integrity Review Units.

Innocence Projects investigate and litigate pro bono for every client they help.

This podcast will explore causes of wrongful conviction, speak to exonerees and their families, learn what it is like to advocate

for innocent people, share books written by the exonerees themselves and discuss films about wrongful conviction.

Harriet Hendel is on the Board of Directors of the Innocence Project of Florida. She has been active with the organization since 2009.

She will be interviewing men who have been exonerated by the Innocence Project of Florida along with the Executive Director of the Project.

Harriet has created many different classes centered around the topic of wrongful conviction which she teaches in Sarasota, FL.

She also speaks to civic groups, churches, synagogues, retirement homes and colleges about the work of The Innocence Project of Florida.