David talks with Maurice Possley, a
Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, about exonerations - the cases of
people sentenced to a prison term, sometimes for life, sometimes for
death, for a crime they didn’t commit. His work on this subject was
influential in the decision of the governor of Illinois to commute the
death sentences in his state, and also in the abolition of the death
penalty there in 2011. Maurice Possley is the Senior Researcher for the
National Registry of Exonerations and also writes for the Marshal
Project. Read more about his work at: http://www.mauricepossley.com
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