The Amanda Knox Case: A Forensic Examination of Italian Justice Gone Wrong
How prosecutorial theories, compromised evidence, and systemic failures led to one of the most notorious wrongful convictions of the modern era.
Cases where the official verdict does not hold up.
How prosecutorial theories, compromised evidence, and systemic failures led to one of the most notorious wrongful convictions of the modern era.
The Chamberlain case exposed a criminal justice system that privileged circumstantial theories over empirical evidence, creating a template for wrongful conviction that reverberates through courts today.
The Roy Meadow cases reveal how flawed statistical testimony and prosecutorial zealotry created a systematic miscarriage of justice, sending grieving mothers to prison for infant deaths that were likely natural.
Barry George spent eight years in prison for killing Jill Dando based on a single particle of forensic evidence that experts later said proved nothing at all.
Stefan Kiszko served sixteen years for a child murder he could not have committed, while police concealed forensic evidence that would have cleared him at trial.
Cameron Todd Willingham died by lethal injection in 2004 for murdering his three children in an arson attack. But mounting evidence suggests the fire was an accident—and the state killed an innocent man.
The case against the West Memphis Three collapsed under scrutiny, yet it took 18 years to undo the damage wrought by prejudice, panic, and prosecutorial tunnel vision.
How six innocent Irishmen were condemned for the deadliest mainland bombing since World War II, and why it took sixteen years to expose one of Britain's most shameful miscarriages of justice.
Britain's most damning miscarriage of justice reveals a criminal justice system riddled with fabricated evidence, coerced confessions, and a decades-long cover-up that reaches to the highest levels of government.