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Who is Walter Swift?

Who is Walter Swift?

Walter Swift served 26 years in Michigan prisons for rape before evidence of his innocence led to his exoneration and release in 2008. He was wrongfully convicted based in part on a highly questionable eyewitness identification and incomplete forensic testimony.

Who is Walter D Smith?

Walter D. Smith is a motivational speaker and professional body builder.

Who was the first person freed by the Innocence Project?

First DNA-Based Death Row Exoneree Kirk Bloodsworth Marks 25 Years of Freedom. In 1993, Kirk Bloodsworth became the first person on death row to be exonerated based on DNA testing.

What year was the Innocence Project?

1992
The Innocence Project, founded in 1992 by Peter Neufeld and Barry Scheck at Cardozo School of Law, exonerates the wrongly convicted through DNA testing and reforms the criminal justice system to prevent future injustice.

What happened to Walter Swift?

(DETROIT, MI; May 21, 2008) – Walter Swift, who was wrongfully convicted of a Detroit rape in 1982, is being exonerated today because a wide range of solid evidence shows he did not commit the crime for which he has served 26 years in prison, according to the Innocence Project, which represents Swift.

Where is Kirk Bloodsworth from?

Maryland
Kirk Bloodsworth

State: Maryland
Race/Ethnicity: White
Sex: Male
Age at the date of reported crime: 23
Contributing Factors: Mistaken Witness ID, Official Misconduct

Did Kirk Bloodsworth get compensation?

Former death row inmate Kirk Bloodsworth to receive $421,000 in compensation | FOX45 News; Oct. 6, 2021.

How many wrongful convictions have the Innocence Project helped overturn?

As of January 2020, the Innocence Project has documented over 365 DNA exonerations in the United States. Twenty-one of these exonerees had previously been sentenced to death. The vast majority (97%) of these people were wrongfully convicted of committing sexual assault and/or murder.

Is Kirk Bloodsworth married?

CAMBRIDGE, Maryland (CNN) — Kirk Bloodsworth is a free man now. He is free to pursue a living as a crab and commercial fisherman in his hometown of Cambridge, on Maryland’s rustic Eastern Shore. He got married last year and bought a new fishing boat two years ago.

What does Kirk Bloodsworth do now?

Just over 25 years later, Bloodsworth has become a part of the movement to end capital punishment. Now, he crosses the country telling firsthand prison stories and serves as interim executive director of Witness to Innocence. He has settled in Ambler, and has discovered a new passion: silversmithing.

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