Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bolstering justice by acknowledg­ing, righting wrongs

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Thirty years ago, two attorneys who served on O.J. Simpson’s “dream” legal team paired up to form the Innocence Project at Yeshiva University’s Cardoza School of Law in New York City. The purpose was to use advancing technology — DNA and the like — to exonerate people who had been falsely convicted of serious crimes.

The effort has had several high-profile successes over the years, including the release of one death row inmate. It has also spawned a worldwide network of similar organizati­ons dedicated to ferreting out wrongful conviction­s. And now the movement has come to Nevada.

This week, a group of legal experts announced the formation of the Innocence Center of Nevada, which will investigat­e cases in which inmates claim they have been falsely convicted. The effort — which will be funded through private donations — includes former state Supreme Court Justice Michael Douglas, who retired in 2019.

“Folks who have been wrongly convicted and are stating ‘I’m innocent’ deserve an opportunit­y to have their case reviewed one more time,” Mr. Douglas said. “If it’s one person out of 100, we need to do that. We need to have true justice. Justice should not be just for the rich. Justice should not be just for individual­s who can afford the best attorneys, the best investigat­ors. Everyone deserves equal justice.”

It’s worth noting that wrongful conviction­s are exceedingl­y rare and that the great majority of those in prison committed the crimes for which they pleaded guilty or stood trial. Jailhouse innocents represent a minuscule percentage of those who find themselves facing criminal charges. But no system created and run by human beings is perfect, and efforts to identify mistakes — or worse — deserve robust support. “It is better that 10 guilty persons escape,” English jurist William Blackstone famously said, “than that one innocent person suffer.”

The bulk of those involved in the justice system — from jurors to police to prosecutor­s to defense attorneys to judges — understand the gravity of their jobs and respect the awesome power they wield, the power to imprison individual­s and deprive them of their most basic human liberties and freedoms. It is precisely because errors can have such significan­t consequenc­es that additional checks should be welcomed.

The Innocence Center of Nevada represents a noble undertakin­g. Identifyin­g and addressing wrongful conviction­s can lead to improvemen­ts designed to ensure that mistakes are not repeated and can help instill public confidence that the criminal justice system is operating fairly and capable of righting wrongs. Errors are inevitable — but acknowledg­ing that the system isn’t infallible and that mistakes must be rectified will go a long way toward strengthen­ing the American system of justice.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal.

All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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