today's new york times offers an impressive set of articles and multimedia features on 115 former prisoners who were exonerated by dna evidence.
Most of the 137 exonerated inmates researched by The Times entered prison in their teens or 20s, and they stayed there while some of their peers on the outside settled on careers, married, started families, bought homes and began saving for retirement. They emerged many years behind, and it has been difficult to catch up.
in addition to the in-depth interviews, photographs, and video, there's even a decent methods section.
Sunday, November 25, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment