A pair of reports released Tuesday examining wrongful convictions in
the United States found that there were a record number of exonerations
in 2016 — the third such record-setting year in a row — and that
innocent black people face a raft of racial disparities that make them
more likely to wind up behind bars, and to remain there longer than
whites.
Researchers at the National Registry of Exonerations, which is run by the University of California, the University of Michigan and Michigan State, published the data.
Samuel Gross, a law professor at the University of Michigan and an
author of the race study, attributed the growing number of exonerations
to increased awareness and resources, and he said they were part of
persistent pattern: the number of exonerations climbed to 166 last year,
up from 149 the year before and more than double the number of cases in 2011.
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