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The Innocence Project: Should They Have Been Incarcerated?

Decent Essays

Should they have been incarcerated?
In the year of 1996 the 250th person to be freed by DNA testing since the year of 1992. Those 250 “ex-convicts” served a total of 3160 years between them all. Which still leaves the conspicuous question… How many innocent people are still incarcerated? In today’s society, there are many false convictions to all sex, gender. The Innocence Project was designed to assist wrongly convicted individuals. This paper attempts to identify how many cases with organization adopts per year and determine the accuracy rate of cases tried within the criminal justice system.
My Questions
The Innocence Project plays a great role in today’s society. There are many individuals who have lost there all due to others actions. Being wrongfully convicted is “A conviction of a person accused of a crime which, in the result of subsequent investigation, proves erroneous.” In the United States there are currently 1,351,000 people in state prisons, 646,000 in local prisons, 211,00 in federal prison. Regardless of the minority of the crime, the evidence against you should be accurate and oodles.
The Innocence Project has helped exonerate 347 people in the United States by DNA testing, including 20 individuals …show more content…

Before beginning research, I had to choose a topic that interested me. I decided to select “The Innocence Project”. It brought interest but also curiosity. Next, I did some preliminary research to help develop three open ended questions. To which would be discussed in my paper. From there on, I began to do in depth research based on the questions I produced. Throughout the research I completed ten source cards, documenting my evidence. Then, I produced a thesis statement, which help control the ideas of the paper. Afterward the outline was completed. At this point all was left to do was write the actual paper (rough draft), which revised and edited led to my final

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