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Innocence Project

Joint enterprise: how driving friends to buy a pizza could get you convicted for murder – Julie Price

Posted on 14 July 2014 by Christopher Burns

This blog first appeared on The Conversation The legal concept of joint enterprise caused outrage in South Africa in 2012, when 270 miners were charged with the murder of 34 […]

Diary of a UK Innocence Project 12: Once there was hope, now there is Nunn – Julie Price

Posted on 23 June 2014 by Christopher Burns

This blog first appeared on thejusticegap.com On this week’s Supreme Court ruling in the case of Kevin Nunn, Louise Shorter at Inside Justice observes, ‘This places an important new duty […]

Diary of a UK Innocence Project 11: A Case of Joint Enterprise – Julie Price

Posted on 28 May 2014 by Christopher Burns

This blog first appeared on thejusticegap.com This is the story behind Cardiff Law School’s Innocence Project’s eighth submission to the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC). ‘It was the late 1970s. […]

Diary of a UK Innocence Project 10: To e, or not to e: Electronic v Paper Case Management – Julie Price

Posted on 2 May 2014 by Alison Tobin

This blog first appeared on thejusticegap.com Paperwork: don’t you just love it? Actually, yes we do at our innocence project. If we’re going to make any sort of progress in […]

Diary of a UK Innocence Project 9: A Week of Innocence and Common Purpose – Julie Price

Posted on 17 April 2014 by Christopher Burns

This blog first appeared on thejusticegap.com Our fourth Innocence Week has been and gone. It’s Cardiff Law School’s annual contribution to raising awareness of wrongful convictions and problems with the […]

Diary of UK Innocence Project 6: Not expecting the unexpected – Julie Price

Posted on 15 November 2013 by Christopher Burns

This blog first appeared on thejusticegap.com We have just received news that has come as a shock, but for the right reasons. After eight years of the hard slog of […]