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ck4829

(36,005 posts)
Fri Jan 13, 2023, 10:01 AM Jan 2023

A Chicago Attorney Is Getting Justice For Hundreds Of Wrongfully Convicted People All At Once

For hundreds of people across the Midwest, their new years, new lives, and new selves aren’t marked with a calendar but with a court docket. More specifically, the day that they watched 47-year-old attorney Josh Tepfer walk into a courtroom with his black backpack slung across his shoulder like a college student playing dress-up in a suit.

Tepfer’s bag is to the attorney who frees the innocent what the cape was to Superman, the hammer to Thor — the tool that helps him do the seemingly impossible. And at scale. In it, he carries the briefs, files, and other paperwork that allow him to seek the release of people convicted of crimes they didn’t commit — the raw materials from which he crafts their freedom, renews their spirits, and clears their names.

“He gave me life again,” Daniel Rodriguez, whom Tepfer helped exonerate earlier this year after Rodriguez served 17 years in prison for a murder he didn’t commit, told BuzzFeed News. “I smile a little bit more because of what he did for me and my family.”

Tepfer’s representation has led to the exoneration of 288 wrongfully convicted people — making him among the most prolific exoneration attorneys since anyone began keeping track. Last August, he spearheaded what is believed to be the first mass exoneration of people convicted of murder, all of their cases hinging on confessions and witness statements that had been obtained by a now-retired police detective, Reynaldo Guevara, who used physical force and manipulation. In a single marathon day of court, Tepfer’s work helped wipe unjust convictions from the records of seven people who’d served a collective 174 years behind bars.

https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/melissasegura/josh-tepfer-mass-exonerations-wrongfully-convicted

19 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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A Chicago Attorney Is Getting Justice For Hundreds Of Wrongfully Convicted People All At Once (Original Post) ck4829 Jan 2023 OP
Incredible! colorado_ufo Jan 2023 #1
K and R Thanks for posting. Stuart G Jan 2023 #2
K&R PatSeg Jan 2023 #3
Love it! Thanks for this info - we need more Josh Tepfer's in the world. iluvtennis Jan 2023 #4
What a hero! karin_sj Jan 2023 #5
It's not enough to release the innocent. Though it is ..... jaxexpat Jan 2023 #6
Absolutely. There does need to be accountability for those that put these people behind bars ck4829 Jan 2023 #8
Yup. This should never happen in a compassionate, modern society. AllyCat Jan 2023 #13
That's why it happens here. jaxexpat Jan 2023 #14
This message was self-deleted by its author AllyCat Jan 2023 #16
Damn, now that's what a real lawyer does Farmer-Rick Jan 2023 #7
Wonderful to read! people Jan 2023 #9
God bless this man Joinfortmill Jan 2023 #10
Amazing human being! Thank you for this great news! ancianita Jan 2023 #11
A tour de force! calimary Jan 2023 #12
Kickin' with Gusto! Faux pas Jan 2023 #15
In the dictionary when you look up hero... The Jungle 1 Jan 2023 #17
Its always the lives of poor people that hang in the balance. 70sEraVet Jan 2023 #18
Weisselberg is the perfect example of how screwed up our justice system is. The Jungle 1 Jan 2023 #19
 

jaxexpat

(7,794 posts)
6. It's not enough to release the innocent. Though it is .....
Fri Jan 13, 2023, 11:44 AM
Jan 2023

absolutely necessary. It is also necessary to convict those who improperly discharge the responsibilities of law enforcement, causing false imprisonment. That would apply to everyone from the arresting officer to the judge. A rotten system is no system at all.

Response to jaxexpat (Reply #14)

Farmer-Rick

(11,460 posts)
7. Damn, now that's what a real lawyer does
Fri Jan 13, 2023, 11:54 AM
Jan 2023

Help people.

Damn he is impacting and bringing justice to so many people. Glad he is in the world.

calimary

(84,419 posts)
12. A tour de force!
Fri Jan 13, 2023, 01:01 PM
Jan 2023

God bless Josh Tepfer! Winning relief and exoneration for all those people: “exoneration of 288 wrongfully convicted people — making him among the most prolific exoneration attorneys since anyone began keeping track.” He’s a true hero.

70sEraVet

(4,171 posts)
18. Its always the lives of poor people that hang in the balance.
Sat Jan 14, 2023, 10:29 AM
Jan 2023

Execution is reserved for those with the least power in our society.
Somehow, the 'Christians' who loudly condemn their LGBTQ neighbors because of a single phrase in their Bible, never utter a word of protest against law enforcement systems or justice systems that favor the rich and well-connected over the poor and destitute.

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