19/05/2026
He was convicted in under 2 hours.
He spent 18 years in prison.
The evidence that could have freed him was sitting in storage the entire time.
This is the case that exposed how wrongful convictions happen โ and why the system is designed to never admit it got it wrong.
I just published a full breakdown on my channel Docket Decoded covering:
๐ต The three systemic failures that put an innocent man behind bars
๐ต How eyewitness identification became the most dangerous evidence in a courtroom
๐ต What the Innocence Project found โ and what happened when the state tried to block DNA testing
๐ต The Global Angle โ how this plays out differently in India, the US, UK and Australia
๐ต Why India's Article 32 is the only wrongful conviction remedy available โ and why almost no one can actually use it
This is not just an American story. Every point in this video applies directly to how Indian criminal courts handle eyewitness testimony and post-conviction review today.
Full video (10 minutes, free):
๐ https://youtu.be/L0DUVlvE3dk
Would love to hear what advocates and law students think in the comments โ especially on the India section. Do you think an Innocence Project equivalent would work in the Indian legal system?
He was convicted in under two hours. He spent 18 years in prison. And the system that put him there almost never admitted it was wrong.0:00 โ The Hook0:42 โ ...