More than 300 of the more than 1,900 people who have been
exonerated in the U.S. since 1989 pleaded guilty, according to an estimate by
the National Registry of Exonerations, reported The Associated Press. The registry is maintained by the
University of Michigan Law School using public information, such as court
documents and news articles.
Last year, 68 out of 157 exonerations were cases in which
the defendant pleaded guilty, more than any previous year.
Critics say the numbers reflect an overwhelmed criminal
justice system with public defenders who have more cases than they can handle
and expedience on the part of court officials, who can save the government
money with plea bargains compared with costly trials.
"Our criminal justice system has lost its way,"
said David O. Markus, a prominent Miami defense attorney. "For a long
time, it was our country's crown jewel, built on the principle that it was
better that 10 guilty go free than one innocent be wrongfully convicted. Now
sadly, the system accepts and even encourages innocent people to plead
guilty."
In the 1970s and 1980s, state and federal lawmakers reacted
to rising crime rates by imposing mandatory minimums and other sentencing laws
to crack down on felons. As the penalties and risk of going to prison grew, so
did the percentage of defendants who opted to plead guilty.
Last year, more than 97 percent of criminal defendants
sentenced in federal court pleaded guilty compared with about 85 percent more
than 30 years ago, according to data collected by the Administrative Office of
the U.S. Courts. The increase in guilty pleas has been a gradual rise over the
last three decades.
No entity gathers statistics for all state courts, but
prosecutors, defense attorneys and law professors say they have also seen more
cases at that level resolved by guilty pleas and fewer cases going to trial.
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