Martínez
4 years
Drinkard
6 years
Krone
10 years Thibodeaux
15 years
Padgett
5 years
Lindsey
3 years
Smith
5 years
Blair
14 years
Milke
25 years
1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015
Official misconduct
Average, all races
Perjury or false accusation
Mistaken witness identification
26%
Misleading forensic evidence
26%
Inadequate legal defense
20%
Misleading forensic evidence
12%
78%
65%
Official
misconduct
Perjury
or false
accusation
Misleading
forensic
evidence
Inadequate
legal
defense
Mistaken
witness
identification
False
confession
Official misconduct
Misleading forensic evidence
35%
Perjury or false accusation
Official misconduct
Inadequate legal defense
41%
82%
65%
68%
of cases 62% 29% 25% 19% 13%
Perjury or false accusation
52%52%
56 56%%
1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015
REASON FOR
EXONERATION
Two out of three
cases involved official
misconduct, such as
concealing evidence.
In many cases a witness
lied under oath, com-
mitting perjury.
Law-and-order campaigns in
the 1980s sparked an explo-
sion of harsh punishments.
Skyrocketing incarceration
rates disproportionately
penalized African Americans.
Only two women—charged in
their children’s deaths—have
been exonerated, Debra
Milke and Sabrina Smith.
Exonerations of Black
people convicted of mur-
der were predominantly
linked to later findings of
police misconduct.
For whites, false or mis-
leading forensic evidence
was a principal reason for
wrongful convictions, five
points above the average.
For Latinos, perjury was
discovered in 14 of the 17
cases, 20 points over the
average. Inadequate legal
defense was also a top cause.
Patrick Croy, a Shasta-Karuk,
was exonerated for inade-
quate legal defense. Michael
Blair, an Asian American, was
exonerated because of mis-
taken witness identification.
CAUSE FOR EXONERATION BY RACE/ETHNICITY
DATA AS OF DECEMBER 15, 2020. ONLY INDIVIDUALS SENTENCED TO DEATH AFTER 1972 ARE INCLUDED.
MONICA SERRANO, NGM STAFF; KELSEY NOWAKOWSKI. SOURCE: DEATH PENALTY INFORMATION CENTER