Preview

last paragraph

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
254 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
last paragraph
Rasheem “Brown”-Slater
DRE-S204
Mrs. Jennifer Leigh
02, May 4, 2014

Thesis: Determination can lead to many positive outcomes. It takes determination to seek justice. While seeking truth you got to have faith. My wife Tammy supported her brother while he was going to court for his trail. Her brother child mother made false reports to the police station saying he harassed, and assaulted her. Wisdom got on the stand and lie. Tammy was determined to seek the truth she integrated her to she told the truth. As a result she admitted everything was a lie and she just wanted to see harm come to him. In the movie convection Betty Ann was determined to find out why the woman lied on the stand. On the other hand, determination led to the truth that Nancy Taylor was a crook it (Convection). Being determined can bring a positive outcome by finding the truth in justice. Also overturning wrongful conviction. Scott a personal friend of mine was wrongfully convicted on a rape charge and sent to prison for a minimum of five years. As a result he served two and a half years until the actual perpetrator confessed to the crime. In picking cotton Ronald Cotton was wrongfully accused of rape and served twelve years in prison. During his time he was determined. He took pictures of Bobby Poole and brought him to court (Picking Cotton). Determination can lead to justice over wrongful conviction, in fact more than 2000 of wrongful convictions overturned every year.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Courtroom Chart

    • 1062 Words
    • 5 Pages

    | |convince a judge and a jury that law enforcement has|always be a conviction. Sometimes justice is a dismissal |…

    • 1062 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Peter Neufeld and Barry Scheck, the co-founders of the Innocence Project, which works to exonerate those who were wrongly convicted and fights for equality in the criminal justice system, are a social entrepreneurial unit I identify with. Following the release of a study establishing that 70% of wrongful convictions were the results of incorrect eyewitness reports, Neufeld and Scheck took it upon themselves to help the lives of those falsely identified and imprisoned, who were too poor or oppressed by the bias of the justice system to unbury themselves from their judicial graves. I find this especially important because those who are already oppressed in our society are silenced further with a system that is supposed to protect and give justice…

    • 267 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Sadly, many people have served time for crimes they did not commit. Unfortunately, this is an ongoing epidemic that has terrible consequences for the innocent people who are wrongfully accused and incarcerated. In class, we watched a video about a man who was convicted of burglary and rape in the first degree and sentenced to life plus fifty years. According to a reporter by the name of Lesley Stahl, who did a 60-minute Broadcast on this case, the individual who was wrongfully accused and convicted of this crime, endured 11 years in prison until he was finally exonerated of all charges and released from prison.…

    • 299 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Unit 6 Assignment

    • 836 Words
    • 3 Pages

    There are several reasons that wrongful convictions happen, and essentially what it boils down to is errors of either the criminal justice professional, or the eyewitness testimony. In many of the cases of wrongful conviction there were a lot of the same errors that led to the conviction of innocent people. Errors in eyewitness identification; in some cases the eyewitness was pressured into identifying someone, even if they were not sure. Antiquated forensic testing; in many cases outdated equipment and methods had been use during forensic tests, which lead to inaccurate results. Testimony by questionable informants; during the trials there were witness testimonies that were questionable, because their stories were not straight, or the witness themselves had a background that would make their story questionable. These are just a few of many reasons why innocent people were incarcerated.…

    • 836 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Chapter 5 describes how, within the last century, mounting scholarly evidence has exposed institutional flaws within our judicial and police systems, resulting in the convictions of innocent persons for capital crimes. In some cases, overzealous behavior by police and prosecutors, led to the imprisonment of “factually” innocent defendants. While police sometimes coerced confessions or failed to conduct full investigations, prosectors and judges failed to evidence which might exonerate the defendant. Other judicial violations found through study included failure to follow courtroom procedures related to rule of law. One of the first wrongful conviction initiatives was through a congressional investigation in 1912. Although a noble undertaking for its time, the reports was flawed in its evidentiary compilation. The data was poorly collected and its findings poorly deduced. According to the report, no innocent person had been executed by the Federal government.…

    • 509 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The adversarial nature of formal conflict resolution upon which our common law system is based often neglects to provide American citizens with justice. Clearly justice can be defined in a list of different ways, and justice cannot be regarded as one definite, worldwide accepted ideal. For the purposes of this discussion, however, the function of criminal trials in the U.S. will be defined in the most simple of terms: the discovery of the truth in a given situation through due process of law, such that those who are guilty of crimes portrayed by arranged laws are punished through fines, imprisonment, and other established reprimands. This truth, however, is sometimes not reached in trials, and the adversarial system is often to blame for this failure. More specifically, it is the roll that attorneys play within this system in which it is the responsibility of these officials only to win cases with any means legally possible, not to aid the discovery of true facts that prevent the system’s ability to uncover the truth in matters. Thus, the adversarial roll of lawyers within the legal system hinders the pursuit of discovering who, in fact, is innocent, and who is guilty in legal disputes and trials, effectively impeding the system’s ability to achieve its purpose in the aforesaid…

    • 1737 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Lying informants, incorrect eyewitness reports, and the improper use of forensic science are many reasons that people are wrongfully convicted. Thankfully, there have been incredible advances in the technology used to test DNA that can now be used to help these wrongfully convicted people get back to the free world. It’s terrible to think of the years that they lost or even the lives that they might have lost if they were given the death penalty, but at least organizations like the Innocence Project are doing what they can to exonerate these wrongfully convicted people. The story of Kenneth Ireland is a sad tale of a young man falsely committed of raping and murdering a woman. He spent nineteen and a half years in prison for a crime he did not commit, missing out on his entire twenties and most of his thirties. These years are critical for people as they go to college, begin a career, and start a family. These are years that he cannot get back, but he is very fortunate to have the ability to move on as a free man as he looks towards the…

    • 1763 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    paragraph 175

    • 434 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Paragraph 175 is a documentary about the homosexuals that were singled and killed for being who they were. Most of them had resided in Berlin during the 1920’s and during that time that’s what the town was known for homosexuals until the Nazi’s came into power. When I watched the movie Paragraph 175 my first reaction was disbelief in the regards of how they were treated. I got teary eyed for the simple fact that these grown men and the exception of the one women, were still torn by the events that took place. I thought the movie had some unnecessary parts in the beginning as far as showing nude pictures of guys I really asked myself were those even needed. The words alone that the victims were saying was enough to make the movie to me. The victims not only suffered the torture inside the camp, but they had to deal with the pain when it was all over. Heinz F. said when he got liberated he couldn’t even go to anyone to talk to about what happened to him. When he tried no one would listen they would brush him off saying it’s over now get over it in so many words. His father had passed away about time he got out and to him that was the only person he felt would listen. When I saw him break down and cry it put me to tears because I felt his pain on a personal level not necessarily the same subject but I felt him. There has been times I was hurting inside and the only person I felt would listen and understand live in North Carolina and that also was my dad. Life after the holocaust I think was the roughest part for these homosexuals. Some spent up to 8 years in the camps. Don’t get me wrong those weren’t the best of times for those survivors but having to live with the shame, broken hearts and in one’s case Pierre Seel was tortured by the Nazi. They stuck 25 centimeters of wood up his butt. If you heard how torn he was and didn’t even get teary eyed I question if you’re human. I asked my tutor did she even know about…

    • 434 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    The United States criminal justice system prides itself on being fair and just. Even if it is one of the best systems in existence, it is not flawless. Wrongful convictions continue to occur despite existing safeguards aimed at limiting wrongful convictions. According to the Global Registry of Claims of Innocence, approximately 15% of inmates claim to be innocent nationwide (2014). Based on exoneration rates, of the 15% claiming innocence between one and five percent of inmates are truly innocent (Global Registry of Claims of Innocence, 2014). Several factors prevent wrongfully convicted individuals from proving his or…

    • 2617 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    While it is important to understand the causes of wrongful convictions, there are gaps related to the research on each of the specific contributing factors in exoneration cases as well as the total number of…

    • 157 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    “A wrongful conviction is when a subsequent investigation finds that an individual who has been tried and found guilty of a crime is, in fact, innocent of that crime” (Bako). A wrongful conviction is not just a simple mistake, lives and families are devastated. This happens more often than people think it does. Even though this person very well may be innocent, it takes years to even appeal their case if they can even get that far. The key issues with wrongful convictions are that prosecutors rely on unreliable evidence such as eyewitness identification of a person that does not really know what he or she saw on that specific date and much, much more. The Innocence project strives to exonerate those whose rights have been unconstitutionally taken away from them through the use of DNA evidence. “The development of DNA testing has allowed the Innocence Project to help exonerate 344 innocent Americans - 20 of whom were on death row (Bako).” These 344 exonerees represent how the American criminal justice system can fail the people she was designed to protect. The innocence project works to raise awareness to the issue our justice system faces when it comes to minorities in particular. Continued research and advocacy, as well as improving the effectiveness of the criminal justice process itself, are all necessary steps to ensuring the innocence of those wrongly accused of a crime. Over 75% of…

    • 1488 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Wrongful Conviction

    • 1145 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Imagine a completely innocent individual being convicted for a crime he or she had no involvement in but being in the wrong place at the wrong time. The individual lives out his or her jail sentence in an orderly fashion only to be found not guilty after more than a decade with the discovery of vital evidence produced by advanced technology. This is just one of countless cases of wrongful conviction of innocent people by the justice system. Since 1989, countless of cases were found wrongfully convicted after the case had been closed, but were reopened thanks to the advancement in the justice system such as the usage of DNA testing. Problem is, if this is the state of our justice system at the moment, where there is such a large chance of someone being wrongfully accused and having to serve in prison for so many years and only to be released after the damage has already been done, one would always fear that type of justice system. The innocent should fear the justice system no matter how…

    • 1145 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As an innocent man or woman is sent to prison the guilty person is free to commit more crimes. They have already gotten away with it and feel more confident to commit another crime. The innocent people who go to prison loose a part of their selves society will never be able to restore. They may go to prison innocent but come out very guilty. Elimination of wrongful convictions is a necessity. We need to do everything in our power to make sure the innocent do not pay for crimes they did not commit. Removal of wrongful convictions from our judicial system will improve society. Punishing an innocent man or woman of a crime he or she did not commit is a crime in…

    • 1347 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Success in all our endeavors is what we all want but, most of us forget that for reaching success, the road is not strewn with roses. The walk is not a cakewalk, nor is it a gift on a platter. Success is an achievement by constant diligence and most of us fail to achieve because most of us lack the essential quality of diligence.…

    • 323 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays