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The Innocence Protection
Act pledge to press forward with the bill in the new 108th
Congress –
Joint Statement by
Senators Patrick Leahy, Gordon Smith and Susan Collins, and
Congressmen Bill Delahunt and Ray LaHood
THE INNOCENCE PROTECTION ACT
February 4, 2003
Three years ago, we joined
together to introduce the Innocence Protection Act, a balanced,
bipartisan package of sensible criminal justice reforms aimed at
reducing the risk that innocent persons may be executed—and ensuring
that inmates who have been wrongfully convicted have access to the
evidence that can establish their innocence.
The bill would achieve
these goals in two principal ways: first, by ensuring that eligible
inmates are not denied access to DNA testing that can establish their
innocence; and second, by helping states improve the quality of legal
representation in capital cases so that fewer defendants are
wrongfully convicted in the first place.
This legislation gained
enormous momentum during the last Congress, with 32 Senators and 250
Representatives—well over half the House—signed on in support.
Hearings were held in each House, and a version of the bill was
reported out of the Senate Judiciary Committee in July.
Many of the bill’s
cosponsors are supporters of the death penalty. Many others oppose it.
But all are united in the belief that a just society cannot condone
the execution or wrongful incarceration of the innocent.
An unending stream of
exonerations of innocent persons, many of whom had spent years on
death row, has continued to highlight the urgent importance of the
Innocence Protection Act. We pledge to continue to work toward a
bipartisan consensus that will enable this lifesaving measure to be
signed into law this year.
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