New Scholarship Spotlight: The Unexonerated: Factually Innocent Defendants Who Plead Guilty

 

Professor John Blume

John Blume of Cornell and Rebecca Helm have posted the above-titled article on SSRN.  Download article here.  The abstract states:

Several recent high profile cases, including the case of the West Memphis Three, have revealed (again), that factually innocent defendants do plead guilty. And, more disturbingly in many of the cases, the defendant’s innocence is known, or at least highly suspected at the time the plea is entered. Innocent defendants plead guilty most often, but not always, in two sets of cases: first, low level offenses where a quick guilty plea provides the key to the cellblock door; and second, cases where defendants have been wrongfully convicted, prevail on appeal, and are then offered a plea bargain which will assure their immediate or imminent release. There are three primary contributing factors leading a criminal justice system where significant numbers of innocent defendants plead guilty to crimes they did not commit. The first is the perceived need that all defendants must plead. The second is the current draconian sentencing regime for criminal offenses. And, the final contributing factor is that plea bargaining is, for the most part, an unregulated industry. This article discusses cases in which innocent defendants plead guilty to obtain their release, thus joining the “unexonerated” and then propose several options the criminal justice system should embrace to avoid, or at least ameliorate the plight of innocent defendants who plead guilty.

2 responses to “New Scholarship Spotlight: The Unexonerated: Factually Innocent Defendants Who Plead Guilty

  1. Pingback: Boxed in, Even Before Prison | On SBS

  2. I am very happy to find your website. I was convicted of crimes I did not commit and learned the very hard way how unjust and inequitable our criminal justice system is. I was convicted because a prosecutor committed misconduct. Not much happened to him, but I went to jail, spent seven years in the system and hundreds of thousands of dollars to win my appeal. I consider myself lucky that I had family to borrow money from to file an appeal.

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