The New England Innocence Project has a new home!
Please note our NEW address and phone number:
New England Innocence Project
1035 Cambridge St., Suite 28A
Cambridge, MA 02141
Our NEW phone:
617-945-0762
Your Custom Text Here
Please note our NEW address and phone number:
New England Innocence Project
1035 Cambridge St., Suite 28A
Cambridge, MA 02141
Our NEW phone:
617-945-0762
We are happy to share that our mask donation drive (July - September, 2020) was a success. Over the last three months, we delivered more than 4,000 reusable cloth masks to MCI-Shirley, the prison with one of the largest COVID-19 outbreaks in Massachusetts. An enormous thank you to everyone who sewed or donated cloth masks!
Since detention conditions do not allow for adequate social distancing, sanitation, or medical attention, they are ideal incubators for COVID-19 and threaten our community members. Many people, as a result of their incarceration, suffer from conditions that put them at greater risk for illness or death should they contract the virus.
Your efforts are helping save lives by protecting incarcerated people in Massachusetts, including our clients. A special thank you also to Sewa International and Boston Area Mask Initiative for their bulk donations.
We’re incredibly grateful to our entire community for your support!
REVISED: Thanks to our community, we reached our goal of unlocking $50,000 toward the fight for freedom! We greatly appreciate all who participated. While we reached our financial goal, together we can continue to raise awareness about the root causes of wrongful convictions and their devastating impacts.
Take the quiz, share it with friends and family, and view our new Resource Guide to help us meet our new goal of reaching 2,600 people with the quiz by July 31. Go to the Quiz
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Unlock a $100 Donation Toward the Fight for Freedom
Understanding root causes of wrongful convictions and their devastating impacts is an important part of the fight against injustice.
Take our 5-minute Wrongful Convictions Quiz and unlock a $100 gift toward the fight for freedom.
Share the quiz with your family and friends to raise awareness and help us reach our goal of unlocking $50,000 by July 31.
On May 25th, George Floyd, a 46-year old Black man, was killed by police after an officer kneeled on his neck for nearly nine minutes. Floyd’s life and future is one of many taken unjustly by police brutality. Between 2013 and 2019, police violence in the United States led to the deaths of 7,666 people, most of them Black Americans. The number of police killings in the country disproportionately affects Black people, who are three times as likely as white Americans to be killed by the police. In 8 of the 100 largest cities in the United States, police departments kill Black men at higher rates than the U.S. murder rate itself. It makes no difference the crime rate of the city—levels of violent crime in U.S. cities do not determine rates of police violence. And rarely is there ever any accountability; in 99% of the cases where an officer killed a civilian between 2013 – 2019, the officer was not charged with a crime.
Police brutality is not new, and the protests against police brutality represent the pain and hurt not just for the death of George Floyd but for the deaths of all Black people killed by police before him. The root of the George Floyd unjust killing— the systemic and racist view that Black people must prove they are not dangerous, that they are not entitled to a presumption of innocence—has resulted in the death of Black people in the United States for centuries through police brutality and wrongful convictions.
The work of the Innocence Network— made up of 67 independent innocence organizations [including the New England Innocence Project] —often lays bare the reach and effects of systemic racism and white supremacy within the criminal [legal] system and our society at large. The Innocence Network joins the Black Lives Matter movement in condemning the senseless murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, and all Black individuals killed by police brutality. The organizations of the Innocence Network offer our sincerest condolences to their families and to the many unnamed families who continue to face the heartbreaking loss of loved ones at the hands of white supremacy.
As a coalition of organizations dedicated to freeing people incarcerated for crimes they did not commit, we affirm our commitment to combat white supremacy and anti-blackness in all forms and in all places. This includes in our own organizations, institutions, practices, and offices. The Innocence Network values racial equity and understands that we must first grapple with our own complicity before we can even begin to tackle racial justice at large. Finally, we acknowledge the unbelievable pain and burden this causes our clients and colleagues of color in the Network. To our clients, coworkers, colleagues, and friends: we stand with you.
May we utilize the breaths we take for granted to fight for those who have lost theirs. As James Baldwin taught us, "not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced."
The Innocence Network
View the Innocence Network Resource Guide
Commonwealth Drops Case Against Keyon Sprinkle
Who Was Wrongfully Convicted in 2002
BOSTON, Mass. [May 12, 2020] – Yesterday, the Suffolk County District Attorney’s office dropped its case against Keyon Sprinkle, of Boston, MA, who was wrongfully convicted of a 1999 murder and spent 20 years incarcerated for a crime he did not commit. The case against Mr. Sprinkle’s co-defendant, Clarence Williams, was also dropped.
On January 29, 2020, the Suffolk Superior Court allowed Mr. Sprinkle’s motion for new trial, officially overturning his murder conviction. After a lengthy hearing, the Court found credible evidence that two other people – discovered through extensive investigation – were responsible for committing the murder for which Mr. Sprinkle was wrongfully convicted.
The Court specifically noted that Mr. Sprinkle “has been steadfast in his claim that he is innocent,” and his testimony was so compelling that it made the Court more certain that “justice was not done” in his case.
After his conviction was overturned, Mr. Sprinkle was released from prison on February 6, 2020, with the consent of the District Attorney’s office. Yesterday, the District Attorney filed a nolle prosequi, declining to pursue the case further.
"We are thrilled that this nightmare is finally over for Mr. Sprinkle,” said Radha Natarajan, Executive Director of the New England Innocence Project, an organization supporting Mr. Sprinkle’s innocence case. “Over the last 20 years, Mr. Sprinkle has never stopped fighting to prove his innocence. Now he can enjoy his freedom with his family.”
Along with Mr. Williams, Mr. Sprinkle was convicted of the murder of Charles Taylor on November 16, 1999. Mr. Sprinkle refused a plea offer by the government in the middle of trial, consistently maintaining that he had no role in Mr. Taylor’s killing. Mr. Sprinkle was represented by a pro bono team of attorneys, including Peter Parker; Joseph Savage and Ashley Drake of Goodwin Law; and Chad Higgins of Bernstein Shur.
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How can we ever thank our supporters enough? In honor of Giving Tuesday Now, a global movement to respond to unprecedented need due to COVID-19, we want to share some of the heartfelt notes of hope and gratitude we've received from the innocent men and women currently fighting for their freedom from behind prison walls. We cannot imagine the incredible challenges our clients face amid this pandemic, and we are humbled and inspired by their words. Thank you for your support and for making our work possible. As you can see by the above 2-minute video letter, it means the world to all of us.
April 25 is National DNA Day, an opportunity to share how forensic DNA analysis has transformed our understanding of the criminal legal system. While the American legal system was premised on the notion that it is better to have ten guilty people go free than to have one innocent person imprisoned, DNA testing has revealed how far we are from the ideal of that bedrock principle.
Because DNA testing can reliably help identify the person who committed a crime, it has been crucial to revealing how flawed investigations, prosecutions, and jury decisions have led to the wrongful imprisonment of innocent people.
Before the use of DNA testing, there was a general belief that our criminal legal system was infallible. Even where there was an acknowledgement of error, it was seen as the product of an isolated mistake due to the bad faith of a single bad actor. However, beginning in 1989, a steady stream of DNA exonerations has clearly demonstrated – to all willing to look – that wrongful convictions of innocent people do happen. Not because of a single bad actor, but as a result of common problems within our legal system and our culture of fear-driven mass incarceration.
DNA testing has revealed the myriad ways in which innocent people can be convicted of crimes they did not commit, such as mistaken eyewitness identifications, false confessions, flawed forensics, unreliable informants, and racism. Yet, DNA testing can only be performed in a small fraction of the criminal cases prosecuted. Fortunately, data from over 30 years of exonerations helps us identify these red flags in wrongful conviction cases, enabling us to detect and uncover evidence of error even where DNA testing is unavailable.
While the majority of the cases NEIP handles do not involve any evidence that can be tested for DNA, DNA exonerations establish the bookends of our nearly 20-year fight for justice. One of the very first exonerations we celebrated was for Dennis Maher in 2003. Dennis, then a sergeant in the United States Army, was wrongfully convicted of sexual assault in 1984 based entirely on mistaken eyewitness identifications. Once DNA testing became available, Dennis and his legal team tried unsuccessfully for years to locate and test the evidence in his case. Prosecutors and the Court repeatedly opposed his efforts because they were so convinced of his guilt. However, after the evidence was located, Dennis was finally given the opportunity to prove his innocence through DNA testing, and the results were conclusive. In 2003, after serving 19 years in prison for crimes he did not commit, Dennis was exonerated and able to return home to his loved ones.
This past winter, with the help of a Ropes & Gray pro-bono legal team, we celebrated the exoneration of Gary Cifizzari. (It is not lost on us that, had it been even a couple of months later, Gary’s underlying health conditions could have turned his wrongful conviction into a death sentence with the rise of COVID-19 in our overcrowded prisons.) Gary was wrongfully convicted in 1984 based solely on faulty forensics: now debunked bitemark evidence. As with Dennis’s case, and with many other wrongfully conviction cases, Gary’s legal team tried for years to locate the physical evidence from the crime scene to test it for DNA, but they were told it was lost or destroyed. Fortunately, the evidence still existed and, when tested, established what Gary had said for 35 long years: He was innocent. Gary was finally exonerated in December 2019.
In all of our cases, those that involve DNA and those that do not, our clients face a lengthy uphill battle as people continue to believe the myth that a person convicted within our criminal legal system must be guilty. We meet the challenge by using reliable methods to demonstrate innocence, including scientific testing, scientific advancement, and fact investigation, methods that are time-consuming and costly. We have learned that, while it is relatively easy for a wrongful conviction to happen, it takes a wealth of resources to correct even one.
On this National DNA day, we recognize and celebrate the significant role DNA has played in exposing flaws in our criminal legal system, one wrongfully convicted victim at a time. It is time to learn from our mistakes and invest in prevention by taking all the knowledge about wrongful convictions we’ve amassed over the last 30 years and overhaul our criminal legal system so it can, one day, be closer to a system of justice.
At a time when we are physically isolated from each other, I wanted to reach out to you personally to thank you for being part of our community, for caring about those who are wrongfully convicted, and for supporting our work to fight injustice. I also want you to know that, at a time when it feels like everything has come to a halt, we know that we must continue our work to free innocent people in prison.
In fact, our work is more important now than it ever has been. We have all begun to understand that social distancing and careful hygiene are keys to holding this virus at bay, so it is hard to imagine a worse place to fight this virus than our overcrowded jails and prisons. Since detention conditions do not allow for social distancing, proper sanitation, or adequate medical attention, they are ideal incubators for COVID-19. Those who come in and out can bring the virus inside with them undetected or carry it out into the community.
For that reason, we have made the very difficult decision to cease all in-person prison visits for the time being. We do not want to put any of our clients at risk. This is one of the hardest aspects of the pandemic for our entire team: being more distant from our innocent clients who sit behind prison walls.
However, we have assured them, and we want to assure you, that we are still forging ahead with our cases and strategizing on the best approaches to free our clients. We are still conducting investigations, working with experts, drafting legal motions, and communicating with everyone as best we can. Even a pandemic cannot diminish our commitment to bringing our clients home.
At the same time, we continue to advocate for broader changes in the criminal legal system, including supporting emergency legislation to decarcerate, and drastically reduce jail and prison populations, to promote the safety and health of our communities. [If you want to take action with us, please contact your legislator to seek their support of the Decarceration and COVID-19 bill.]
We know that each and every one of you have been impacted by this pandemic. We consider you an essential part of our “innocence family,” and we truly hope you and your loved ones are safe and healthy during this difficult time. We are so grateful for this community and we will continue to serve it, throughout this crisis and beyond.
Sincerely,
Radha Natarajan
Executive Director, New England Innocence Project
When given the chance to receive a valuable incentive — money, assistance with housing, or being released from jail — informants are willing to say anything, including false statements that lead to the arrest, prosecution, and conviction of innocent people. Unreliable informant testimony is a major cause of wrongful convictions, and Massachusetts must do more to prevent these injustices.
A new bill filed by Senator Joseph A. Boncore, Senate Bill 832, would provide much needed regulation around incentivized informant testimony, including:
The creation of a statewide tracking system of cases involving informant testimony, that will allow all Massachusetts prosecutors to be informed about all current and prior incentives given to a particular witness.
The disclosure of an informant’s criminal history, in addition to any special deals, promises, or benefits the prosecution made with the information “now or in the future” in exchange for their testimony.
Requiring a pre-trial reliability hearing so a judge can determine whether the proposed informant testimony is reliable before it can be heard by a jury, just as they do for expert witnesses.
Requiring victim notification when trading leniency in exchange for testimony. When an informant is given leniency in their cases — such as a reduced charge or sentence and/or early release from jail — in exchange for their testimony, victims of the informant’s crimes have no say in the process. This bill would require the informant’s victims to be notified.
We’re grateful to the Boston Globe’s Editorial Board for taking on this important issue in a recent opinion piece and joining us in the call for these basic regulations of informant testimony to help prevent the wrongful conviction of innocent people.
CASE STUDY: Laurance Adams was sentenced to death and spent 30 years wrongfully imprisoned for the 1974 murder of a Boston transit worker. His conviction was based on the false testimony of two informants who claimed that Laurance confessed to them. The Commonwealth had failed to disclose that both informants had their criminal charges dismissed or reduced in exchange for their testimony. Years later, this critical evidence emerged and there was evidence that both informants had lied. Adams was exonerated in 2004 and won a federal civil rights lawsuit against the city of Boston for $2.1 million and received $325,000 in state compensation.
Worcester, MA [December 10, 2019] - The Worcester County District Attorney dropped its case against Gary Cifizzari of Taunton, Mass., who was wrongfully convicted of a 1979 murder and spent 35 years in prison for a crime he did not commit.
"Exonerations are always bittersweet,” said Radha Natarajan, co-counsel for Cifizzari and Executive Director of the New England Innocence Project. “During 35 years of wrongful imprisonment, Gary Cifizzari endured so much and lost so much. But today, he finally receives the justice he deserves and can celebrate the freedom he has again. Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case -- and lessons from it -- can prevent future injustices."
“We are thrilled that Mr Cifizzari was rightly exonerated today. No one should spend decades behind bars for a crime they did not commit,” said Ropes & Gray litigation and enforcement partner Kirsten Mayer. “We commend the Worcester District Attorney for assenting to our motion for a new trial and concluding that the charges against Mr. Cifizzari should be dropped in the interest of justice.”
On May 31, 2019, the New England Innocence Project and a pro bono Ropes & Gray litigation team filed a motion for a new trial in Worcester Superior Court on behalf of Mr. Cifizzari. Along with his brother, Mr. Cifizzari was wrongfully convicted of the 1979 murder of his great aunt, 75-year-old Concetta Schiappa. The May 31 motion exposed newly discovered and tested DNA evidence developed from the semen and saliva on the victim’s nightgown that exonerated Mr. Cifizzari and identified Michael Giroux as the true perpetrator of the crime through a CODIS DNA match. Mr. Giroux, now deceased, was originally a suspect in the case and questioned by police, but was never charged and later went on to commit other crimes.
In addition, the motion detailed how the Commonwealth’s case against Mr. Cifizzari was built entirely on flawed bitemark comparison testimony, which the scientific community has since condemned as lacking any scientific basis. The motion also explained how one of the Commonwealth’s original experts, Dr. Richard Souviron, has since recanted the testimony he offered at Mr. Cifizzari’s trial, which was used to convict Mr. Cifizzari.
On July 12, 2019, the court allowed Mr. Cifizzari to be released from prison after 35 years while the court considered his motion for a new trial.
Today, the District Attorney filed an assent to the motion for a new trial, and the court allowed the motion for a new trial, officially overturning Mr. Cifizzari’s conviction. In addition, today the District Attorney filed a motion for nolle prosequi, stating that it is not in the interests of justice to prosecute Mr. Cifizzari further.
“Worcester District Attorney Drops Charges Against Gary Cifizzari in 1979 Milford Slaying”
— MetroWest Daily News
“D.A. Dismisses Murder Charge in 1979 Milford Killing” — Associated Press
”Murder Charge Dropped Against Gary Cifizzari in Killing of his 75-year-old Aunt in Milford 40 years Ago” — MassLive.com
Forensic science errors, which include bitemark comparisons, are a leading cause of wrongful convictions nationwide. Yet, prosecutors are still bringing the practice into the courtroom, where it is often used as key evidence leading to a conviction.
Since the availability and use of DNA testing, which was born in the scientific community and can provide precise identifications, the wrongful convictions of innocent men and women due to faulty bitemark comparison evidence have been exposed years or even decades later. View our Bitemark Backgrounder
Additional information and research:
National Academy of Sciences: “Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States,” 2009
”Forensic Science in Criminal Courts: Ensuring Scientific Validity of Feature-Comparison Methods,” President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, September 2016
”A bite mark matching advocacy group just conducted a study that discredits bite mark evidence,” Radley Balko, The Washington Post, April 8, 2005
ARC OF JUSTICE AWARD: Ropes & Gray
The New England innocence Project honored the Ropes & Gray litigation team with the “Arc of Justice” award for their pro bono partnership on Gary’s case at our inaugural storytelling event on Dec. 3, 2019 at City Winery Boston. Learn More
Ropes & Gray Pro Bono Team Recognized for its Outstanding Partnership to
Free an Innocent Man from Prison and Effect Lasting Change in the Criminal Justice System
The New England Innocence Project honored Ropes & Gray partner Kirsten Mayer and a pro bono Ropes & Gray litigation team with the 2019 ARC OF JUSTICE award at the Voices of the Innocent: Still We Rise storytelling event on December 3 at City Winery Boston.
The inaugural ARC OF JUSTICE award recognizes a New England Innocence Project partner who has demonstrated unparalleled commitment, tenacity, and courage to "bend the arc of the moral universe toward justice" for innocent people convicted of crimes they did not commit.
The New England Innocence Project celebrates Ropes & Gray as the first recipient of this award for the firm’s partnership in helping to free Gary Cifizzari, an innocent Massachusetts man wrongly convicted for a crime he did not commit, and who was released in July 2019 after serving 35 years in prison.
“It is our distinct honor to present the inaugural 2019 ARC OF JUSTICE Award to Kirsten Mayer & the Cifizzari Team of Ropes & Gray for their fierce, compassionate, and steadfast partnership to free an innocent man from prison and effect lasting change in the criminal legal system by challenging unreliable forensic science. Through this close partnership, Ropes & Gray demonstrated tremendous perseverance pulling the arc toward justice and succeeding,” said Radha Natarajan, Executive Director of the New England Innocence Project.
While the namesake quote, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice," is attributed to Martin Luther King, Jr., the concept was originally invoked by an abolitionist, Theodore Parker, who was born in Lexington Massachusetts. Recently, Former Attorney General Eric Holder added an important postscript: "The arc bends toward justice, but it only bends toward justice because people pull it towards justice. It doesn’t happen on its own."
“I am honored to accept this award on behalf of the entire team who worked to ensure that Mr. Cifizzari was justly released from prison while the Court decides his Motion for New Trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence,” said Kirsten Mayer, litigation partner at Ropes & Gray. “The firm is proud to support the critical work carried out by our colleagues at The New England Innocence Project.”
New England Innocence Project, CPCS Innocence Program, Boston College Innocence Program partner with local exonerees to talk to Boston area students about wrongful convictions
On October 2, the New England Innocence Project, CPCS Innocence Program, Boston College Innocence Program, along with thousands of people around the globe, will honor International Wrongful Conviction Day — the annual international observance dedicated to ending wrongful convictions of innocent people convicted of crimes they did not commit.
In an effort to raise awareness of the causes and remedies of wrongful convictions and to recognize the tremendous personal, social, and emotional costs of wrongful convictions for innocent people and their families, the three organizations are partnering with exonerees from New England to speak to students about wrongful convictions at 12 local high schools throughout the Boston area. The organizations are scheduled to reach approximately 800 students in one day!
For more school speaking events details, materials, and a list of ways the general public can get involved, visit: newenglandinnocence.org/wrongful-conviction-day.
For further information, please visit iwcd.org.
Gary Cifizzari of Taunton Released from Prison after Being Incarcerated for
More Than 35 Years for a Crime he did Not Commit
WORCESTER – July 12, 2019 – The New England Innocence Project and a pro bono Ropes & Gray litigation team announced today that Gary Cifizzari of Taunton has been released after serving 35 years in prison for a crime that he did not commit.
The court’s decision today allows Mr. Cifizzari to be released while the court considers his Motion for a New Trial. Mr. Cifizzari’s release is in large part due to the strength of the evidence that he has presented in support of his Motion, which Mr. Cifizzari’s legal team filed on May 31, 2019 after newly discovered DNA evidence affirmed his innocence. Mr. Cifizzari was wrongfully convicted in Worcester County Superior Court of the 1979 murder of his great aunt, 75-year-old Concetta Schiappa. His brother Michael Cifizzari, also convicted, died in prison before the new DNA evidence could exonerate him.
“We are grateful to the Court for granting our Motion for Stay of Execution of Sentence while it decides Mr. Cifizzari’s Motion for New Trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence,” said Ropes & Gray litigation and enforcement partner Kirsten Mayer. “We’re pleased that the Court recognized the facts of Mr. Cifizzari’s case in making the decision today.”
“Today, Gary Cifizzari finally saw justice. It took 35 years, and he never gave up hope. We will not stop fighting for him until this wrongful conviction is overturned,” said Radha Natarajan, executive director of the New England Innocence Project.
Newly tested DNA evidence from the murder scene, including semen and saliva found on the victim’s nightgown, excludes Mr. Cifizzari and also identifies Michael Giroux as the true perpetrator of the crime through a CODIS DNA match. In addition, the Commonwealth’s case against Mr. Cifizzari was built entirely on flawed bitemark comparison testimony, which the scientific community has since condemned as lacking any scientific basis. Mr. Giroux, now deceased, was originally a suspect in the case and questioned by police, but was never charged and later went on to commit other crimes.
In the coming months, Mr. Cifizzari’s legal team and the Commonwealth will submit additional briefing. Going forward, Mr. Cifizzari will take small steps to start rebuilding his life after decades of wrongful incarceration, and he has a growing team of supporters that will help him do that.
About the New England Innocence Project
The New England Innocence Project (NEIP) is a non-profit committed to correcting and preventing the wrongful convictions of innocent men and women in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island, Connecticut and Maine. Through pro bono legal and investigative services, education, systemic reform efforts, and support as exonerees rebuild their lives, NEIP is devoted to ensuring justice within the criminal legal system. Visit New England Innocence Project at NewEnglandInnocence.org for more information and to get involved.
About Ropes & Gray
Ropes & Gray is a preeminent global law firm with approximately 1,400 lawyers and legal professionals serving clients in major centers of business, finance, technology and government. The firm has offices in New York, Boston, Washington, D.C., Chicago, San Francisco, Silicon Valley, London, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Tokyo and Seoul, and has consistently been recognized for its leading practices in many areas, including private equity, M&A, finance, asset management, real estate, tax, antitrust, life sciences, health care, intellectual property, litigation & enforcement, privacy & cybersecurity, and business restructuring.
We are excited to share that the New England Innocence Project is one of 100 local nonprofits to receive a grant of $100,000 through the Cummings Foundation’s “$100K for 100” program. We were chosen from a total of 574 applicants during a competitive review process.
Our team plans to use the funds to support the hiring of an attorney with specific expertise in forensic science for a 2-year project. This Forensic Science Justice Attorney will provide expertise on cases with complex forensic science issues in Suffolk and Middlesex Counties in both the post-conviction stage to correct wrongful convictions and the pretrial stage to prevent future wrongful convictions.
“It is our goal to bridge the gap between science and law – to bring more accuracy and reliability into the courtroom, and as a result, a sense of integrity and justice. Without the Cummings Foundation, we would not have the resources to pilot this project, to begin exploring how specialized training could enhance our current work correcting wrongful convictions and how knowledge might actually prevent these tragedies from occurring in the first place,” said Radha Natarajan, Executive Director of the New England Innocence Project.
In more than 70% of wrongful convictions revealed through DNA evidence, eyewitness misidentification was a factor, and in almost half (45%), there was a ‘misapplication’ of forensic science. Through expertise in the science of memory, DNA, pathology, or a pattern-matching discipline, the Forensic Science Justice Attorney would work to address some of the greatest causes of wrongful conviction.
“We are so grateful that the Cummings Foundation is partnering with us in this visionary project that we hope will be a model for staffing forensics experts throughout our 6-state territory, ultimately helping our organization to better achieve its mission,” added Natarajan.
Learn more about the Cummings Foundation at www.CummingsFoundation.org.
New England Innocence Project Executive Director, Radha Natarajan (middle) and Treasurer, Cheryl Schaffer (left) pose at the photo booth with Cummings Foundation Trustee, Paul Casey at the reception for grant recipients in Woburn.
DNA Match Solves 40-year-old Murder in Milford;
Affirms Local Man was Wrongfully Convicted of the Crime
New England Innocence Project and Ropes & Gray File Motion for a New Trial for
Gary Cifizzari of Taunton Who Has Served 35 Years for a Crime He Did Not Commit
Today, the New England Innocence Project and a pro bono Ropes & Gray litigation team hosted a press conference after filing a motion for a new trial in the Worcester Superior Court for Gary Cifizzari of Taunton. Newly discovered DNA evidence affirms Cifizzari’s innocence.
Mr. Cifizzari was wrongfully convicted in Worcester County Superior Court of the gruesome 1979 murder of his great aunt, Concetta Schiappa. Mr. Cifizzari has spent 35 years in prison for a crime he did not commit. His brother Michael Cifizzari, also convicted, died in prison before the new DNA evidence could exonerate him.
The motion outlines how newly tested DNA evidence from the murder scene, including semen and saliva found on the victim’s nightgown, excludes Gary Cifizzari and also identifies Michael Giroux as the true perpetrator of the crime through a CODIS DNA match. In addition, the motion details how the Commonwealth’s case against Mr. Cifizzari was built entirely on flawed bitemark comparison testimony, which the scientific community has since condemned as lacking any scientific basis. The motion also explains how one of the Commonwealth’s original experts, Dr. Richard Souviron, has since recanted the testimony he offered at Mr. Cifizzari’s trial. The testimony was used to convict him.
Mr. Giroux, now deceased, was originally a suspect in the case and questioned by police, but was never charged and later went on to commit other crimes.
Watch the full VIDEO of the press conference on our Facebook page.
We’ve come a long way. Just two years ago, the New England Innocence Project was faced with the possibility of closing its doors for good. Our hearts were heavy as we took on the difficult task of informing our clients that we may no longer be able to advocate for their freedom. It was during this time that we turned to you for help and you answered the call. With your support, we not only kept our doors open, we became stronger.
Today, we are proud to share that we are now growing as an organization! This year, we have expanded our team with several new staff hires. That means we can help even more innocent men and women in New England through increased litigation and investigation, policy reform, education and trainings, fundraising events, sharing powerful exoneree stories, and more -- in 2019 and beyond.
Cynthia Mousseau, New Hampshire Staff Attorney
Cynthia has been an attorney for 10 years and has worked as a public defender in both Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Due to her previous working relationships with the judiciary, law enforcement, prosecution, and the defense bar, she will be instrumental in expanding our mission in New Hampshire. Cynthia’s desire to pursue a deeper, more creative form of advocacy and her love of science inspires her work at the New England Innocence Project. She plans educational events for attorneys and judges and has assembled a Policy Advisory Committee in New Hampshire to advise on and support important New Hampshire legislative reforms. In addition to screening and litigating NEIP post-conviction cases, Cynthia also works with attorneys pre-trial in an effort to prevent wrongful convictions before they happen.
Jordan Salvatoriello, Director of Development & Communications
Jordan has more than 15 years of experience in communications, public relations, fundraising and community outreach. She is an award-winning documentary filmmaker with a proven history of creating and sharing powerful social justice stories that mobilize communities and create change. Jordan specializes in developing and executing communications and development strategies aimed at increasing public awareness of NEIP’s mission to correct and prevent wrongful convictions, tapping vital public support, while also providing a forum for exonerees and their family members to share, heal, and inspire action.
Eleanor Umphres, Legal Fellow
Eleanor has more than a decade of professional and volunteer experience in service of those who are incarcerated. Having visited more than twenty-five confinement facilities across six states and personally witnessed unjustifiable brutality and inhumanity therein, Eleanor’s long-term aim is to improve the conditions in U.S. prisons and reform sentencing policies. Eleanor went to law school specifically to aid those who are imprisoned, and she is therefore humbled by the opportunity to begin her professional legal career within the multi-faceted post-conviction litigation space.
Nina Thacker, Data Analyst
After interning at NEIP last year while completing her Master's Degree, Nina has returned to the organization as a Data Analyst. Currently working to organize, digitize, and compile data on NEIP's extensive case files and identify and analyze trends that can inform our future work, Nina is passionate about efforts to reform the criminal legal system and grateful for the opportunity to work within the field of preventing and correcting wrongful convictions.
Our entire NEIP staff, board members, and select NEIP volunteers and interns.
Exoneree, Victor Rosario (left) with his daughter, Maria.
In April, our NEIP team attended the annual Innocence Network Conference in Atlanta, which had a record-breaking attendance with more than 900 attendees from innocence organizations across the globe, including 250 exonerees -- a number that grows every year -- and 150 of their family members and support people.
Some highlights of the conference included a panel with members of the Central Park Five, a Moth Storytelling Performance featuring exoneree stories, as well as the Rally for Justice (click here to watch a rally video recap).
In one of the most powerful moments of the weekend, the 2018 exonerees were called to the stage one-by-one, men and women who were finally exonerated in the past year after being wrongfully convicted. They embraced each other and stood together in solidarity under the stage lights, greeted by thunderous applause and a standing ovation. Together, they served more than 1,000 years for crimes they did not commit. Boston’s very own Sean Ellis was among them, finally able to shed the shackles of his wrongful conviction.
Most of us are familiar with the phrase “innocent until proven guilty.” In fact, it is thought to be the cornerstone of our criminal legal system. However, for many, this theory of the presumption of innocence is hardly a reality. It was not a reality for the individuals on stage in Atlanta when they were arrested, charged, and convicted. And after conviction -- when the theoretical presumption is removed -- the uphill battle to prove a wrongful conviction begins. For the innocent, and innocence advocates like the New England innocence Project, we are constantly fighting a system that values finality over justice.
We were inspired by the dedication, tenacity, strength, and resilience of those we met at the conference. We are humbled by the wrongfully convicted men and women who we learn from each day.
Today is a BIG day. Today, the Rhode Island state legislature will conduct a hearing on House bill 5329 requiring compensation for those wrongfully convicted, like former Warwick, RI Police Detective Scott Hornoff, who received a life sentence for a crime he did not commit. NEIP will be there to show our support and fight for justice. If passed, Rhode Island will join 33 states nationwide that provide some form of compensation for the innocent who, through no fault of their own, suffered great loss.
Nothing can replace the years innocent people like Scott lost behind bars. And for exonerees like Scott, once the shackles are gone, many barriers to re-entering society remain: No access to good paying jobs, no affordable housing, no mental or physical healthcare. In addition, exonerees receive no assistance from the very state that unjustly took their liberty. (Even those convicted of a crime are offered supports and services once released!)
Together, let’s help those the system has failed. If you reside in Rhode Island, join us in the fight for compensation for the innocent by contacting your Rhode Island legislators today and let them know "it's time for Rhode Island to do right by its exonerees, pass HB 5329!"
If you are not a Rhode Island resident, we still need you to ACT! Please take a moment right now to sign the national Innocence Project petition to show your support for passing HB 5329 to compensate and bring justice to the wrongfully convicted. Sign the Petition
[Republished with the generous permission of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly]
PHOTO CREDIT: Sylvia Stagg-Guiliano, http://www.stagg-giuliano.com/
Boston-area lawyers gathered at Foley Hoag for a cocktail reception in recognition and support of the New England Innocence Project. NEIP aims to raise public awareness of the prevalence, causes and costs of wrongful convictions, and provides pro bono legal representation to wrongfully convicted New Englanders. Among the speakers at the event were Foley Hoag partner Martin P. Murphy, NEIP Executive Director Denise McWilliams, NEIP board member and exoneree Dennis Maher, and NEIP board Chairman David M. Siegel, a professor at New England Law Boston.
Maher (left) with Jill Reilly and Foley Hoag’s Murphy
From left: David P. Rosenblatt, Douglas M. Henry, NEIP board member William Swenson and NEIP Treasurer Cheryl Schaffer
From left: Claire Ward, Janice Bassil, Jennifer Sunderland and Joana Stathi
Michael K. Loucks (left) with Jill Reilly and Murphy
Joana Stath
Joseph F. Savage Jr. (left) with Maher
David P. Rosenblatt (left) and Joseph F. Savage Jr.
Janice Bassil
Howard D. Medwed (left) and Siegel
From left: Elaine Emmerich, Eve Horwitz, NEIP staff attorney Radha Natarajan and NEIP Executive Director McWilliams
Siegel, chair of NEIP’s board
Earlier this week, a 42 year old Las Vegas man who had spent half of his life in prison for a murder he didn’t commit was exonerated and freed. A Clark County judge overturned DeMarlo Berry’s conviction based on new evidence secured by Berry’s attorneys in collaboration with the Rocky Mountain Innocence Center.
DeMarlo Berry at a press conference after his release.
The U.S. Constitution requires that prosecutors hand over exculpatory evidence to the defense. In a Supreme Court opinion that went largely unnoticed at the end of the term, however, the court ruled 6-2 to give prosecutors a free pass for their bad behavior. 20 years after a heinous murder, the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project uncovered evidence that the prosecutors had withheld from the defense. The suppressed evidence suggested that someone other than the defendants committed the murder, and while everyone—including the government—agreed that prosecutors should have turned over the evidence at trial, the justices upheld the convictions.
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New research expands the notions of collateral consequences beyond post-release barriers and discrimination. Two studies show that incarceration shortens life expectancy, at both the national and individual levels. The first, a 2016 study by Professor Christopher Wildeman, offers us an explanation for the U.S. falling behind on life expectancy: mass incarceration. The sheer magnitude of how many people are locked up shortens our entire nation’s life expectancy. The second, a 2013 analysis of New York state parole data conducted by Professor Evelyn Patterson, identified a linear relationship between incarceration and life expectancy: for each year lived behind bars, a person can expect to lose two years off their life expectancy.
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A man who was convicted at 13 and later exonerated after falsely confessing to murder says he is grateful a court revived his request for compensation in Mississippi — and that others might benefit from a change in how the state handles wrongful conviction lawsuits."I had lost a lot of faith in Mississippi's judicial system," said Tyler Edmonds, now 28. Mississippi allows up to $50,000 for every year someone is imprisoned after a wrongful conviction. People must sue the state for the compensation. A judge rejected Edmonds' compensation request in 2015, saying the false confession amounted to fabrication of evidence.