Categories: Uncategorized

Wrongful Convictions and Snitching Cellmates

Yesterday, Governor Brown signed into law legislation that will protect innocent people from getting wrongfully convicted based on the say-so of jailhouse informants. The claims of jailhouse informants that a defendant confessed to them are notoriously unreliable. Why? The informant, an inmate himself, will often do anything or say anything in order to get a more lenient sentence.

The new law which goes into effect next year requires that any testimony by jailhouse informants that a defendant “confessed” must by corroborated by other evidence that the defendant committed the crime.
Governor Schwarzenneger had vetoed this legislation. But, Jerry Brown, who previously served as the California Attorney General, realized that this modest reform will do nothing more than help to ensure that criminal convictions are fair and based on fact.

Published by
Alanna D. Coopersmith

Recent Posts

Supreme Court strikes down unaffordable bail

The much-awaited case In re Humphrey was decided last week by the California Supreme Court.…

3 years ago

New California Law, AB 1950, Shortens Probation

Effective as law on January 1 of 2021, California Assembly Bill 1950 places strict limits…

3 years ago

Fourth Amendment Right to Privacy

I recently learned that a friend who is African-American has been detained by the police…

3 years ago

Can a DUI be a Felony?

A routine question I ask my new clients is whether they’ve ever been convicted of…

4 years ago

Legacy of Exonerations

Check out the National Registry of Exonerations. This database, which is jointly sponsored by the…

4 years ago

Goodbye to the Felony-Murder Rule

To be guilty of murder, don’t you have to kill someone? You would think. After…

6 years ago