Barry Scheck is among the United States' leading experts on innocence issues. Scheck and Neufeld founded and
direct the Innocence Project, which seeks postconviction release through DNA testing. Perhaps the most prominent
civil rights attorneys in the country, both are in private practice in New York City.
Neufeld, Peter :
Peter Neufeld is among the United States' leading experts on innocence issues. Scheck and Neufeld founded and
direct the Innocence Project, which seeks postconviction release through DNA testing. Perhaps the most prominent
civil rights attorneys in the country, both are in private practice in New York City.
Dwyer, Jim :
Jim Dwyer is among the United States' leading experts on innocence issues. Scheck and Neufeld founded and direct
the Innocence Project, which seeks postconviction release through DNA testing. Perhaps the most prominent civil
rights attorneys in the country, both are in private practice in New York City. Dwyer, the two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning
columnist for the New York Daily News, began inquiring into wrongful convictions in 1992. He is also the author
of Subway Lives: 24 Hours in the Life of the New York City Subway, and co-author of Two Seconds Under the World,
an account of the World Trade Center bombing.
Review
"Actual Innocence is a gut-wrenching, terrifying, hair-raising account of how fatally wrong things can
go inside the American criminal justice system. But it's also--thank God--a chronicle of redemption, of how science
and a group of dedicated individuals have exposed those wrongs."
--Jonathan Harr, Author of A Civil Action
"Actual Innocence is a powerful and illuminating look into the obscene quagmire of American criminal prosecutions.
DNA has at last provided the key to the jailhouse door for a veritable host of innocent victims of this system.
The book is a great service to justice."
--Arthur Miller
"Actual Innocence is a real-life legal thriller, the harrowing account of ten innocent men wrongfully convicted
by a justice system that too often just doesn't work. Well written and well researched, this book is like a clarion
call alerting us to how easily corruption, prejudice, laziness, and flat-out stupidity can cause tragic errors--and
how difficult those errors are to correct. This may be the most important book on American criminal justice in
a decade."
--William Bernhardt, author of Dark Justice
"Actual Innocence is a remarkably compelling book. Using real-life stories more horrifyingly gripping than
any fiction, the authors make clear the deep flaws in our criminal justice system, and the positive difference
that is being made by DNA identification methods whose use [Scheck and Neufeld] pioneered. Telling their tale clearly
and without fanfare, they let the human drama speak for itself. I couldn't put Actual Innocence down; it's a book
everyone should read."
--Philip Friedman, author of No Higher Law
Random House, Inc. Web Site, February, 2001
Summary
Extraordinarily powerful stories of ordinary people locked up for crimes they did not commit, and how they were
freed against great odds.
A nightmare from a thousand B-movies: a horrible crime is committed in your neighborhood, and the police knock
at your door. A witness swears you are the perpetrator; you have no alibi, and no one believes your protestations
of innocence. You're convicted, sentenced to hard time in maximum security, or even death row, where you await
the executioner's needle.
Tragically, this is no movie script but reality for hundreds of American citizens. Our criminal justice system
is broken, and people from all walks of life have been destroyed by its failures. But science and a group of incredibly
dedicated crusaders are working to repair the damage.
In the last ten years, DNA testing has uncovered stone-cold proof that sixty-five completely innocent people have
been sent to prison and death row. But even in cases where there is physical evidence, the criminal justice system
frees prisoners only after a torturous legal process. Incredibly, according to many trial judges, "actual
innocence" is not grounds for release from prison.
At the Innocence Project, Barry Scheck and Peter Neufeld have helped to free thirty-seven wrongly convicted people,
and have taken up the cause of hundreds more. Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Jim Dwyer has been covering innocence
cases for a decade. In Actual Innocence, Scheck, Neufeld, and Dwyer relate the harrowing stories of ten innocent
men--convicted by sloppy police work, corrupt prosecutors, jailhouse snitches, mistaken eyewitnesses, and other
all-too-common flaws of the trial system--and tell of the heroic efforts to free them.
Intense, startling, and utterly compelling, Actual Innocence is a passionate and fascinating journey through the
looking glass of the American criminal justice system.