Here - Innocence Project
Transcription
Here - Innocence Project
exodus SUMMER 2015 • ISSUE XV George Toca Freed on January 29, 2015 This Valentine’s Day was George Toca’s 48th birthday; it was the first birthday he spent outside of prison in 31 years. George had just turned 17 when his best friend, Eric Batiste, was shot and killed by his partner during a botched armed robbery in uptown New Orleans in April 1984. George was arrested and convicted for that crime because an officer from their neighborhood, who knew Eric and George were friends, assumed that George would have been with Eric. The police continued this assumption even after they learned the witnesses’ description of the gunman looked nothing like George. George was nevertheless identified by two white strangers who spent less than a couple of minutes with the actual perpetrator of the attempted armed robbery. At a trial where the presentation of evidence lasted less than one day, then-18-year-old George Toca was sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison. ‑ continued on page 10 Kia Stewart enjoys the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial in Washington D.C. a month after his release. Kia Stewart Exonerated on April 13, 2015 Kia Stewart eagerly descended the courthouse steps into the arms of his waiting family and friends on Monday, April 13, 2015. In taking those strides, he also stepped back into the free world. Kia was exonerated through a unique joint effort between IPNO and the Orleans Parish District Attorney’s Office, the newly launched Conviction Integrity and Accuracy Project. The conclusion of Kia’s case, and the end of his wrongful incarceration, mark the project’s first success. Kia was mistakenly identified as the man who shot Bryant “BJ” Craig on a public street in broad daylight on July 31, 2005, just a month before Hurricane Katrina would devastate New Orleans. Within hours of the shooting, police developed Kia as a suspect in the case, ‑ continued on page 12 M. Lizabeth Talbott (Chair) Attorney at Law M. Lizabeth Talbott, APLC New Orleans, Louisiana Frank X. Neuner, Jr. Managing Partner NeunerPate Lafayette, Louisiana Kim Haddow (Secretary) President Haddow Communications New Orleans, Louisiana John A. Nolan John A. Nolan, CPA LLC New Orleans, Louisiana James R. Swanson, Esq. (Treasurer) Managing Partner Fishman Haygood New Orleans, Louisiana Melody Chang Jr. Project Manager Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice Coordination New Orleans, Louisiana Calvin Duncan Paralegal The Capital Appeals Project Former IPNO client New Orleans, Louisiana Michael Friedman Co-Owner Pizza Delicious New Orleans, Louisiana Judy Perry Martinez 2015 Harvard Advanced Leadership Initiative New Orleans, Louisiana Donald W. Washington Partner Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, LLP Lafayette, Louisiana Ariel I. White Project Coordinator 504HealthNet New Orleans, Louisiana Jason R. Williams City Councilmember-At-Large New Orleans, Louisiana Michael W. Magner Partner Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, LLP New Orleans, Louisiana Mission: In the two states with the highest incarceration rates in the world, Innocence Project New Orleans frees innocent prisoners, exposes injustice and prevents wrongful convictions. Purpose: Innocence Project New Orleans (IPNO) is a nonprofit law office that represents innocent prisoners serving life sentences in Louisiana and Mississippi, and assists them with their transition into the free world upon their release. IPNO uses its cases to explain how wrongful convictions happen and what we can all do to prevent them. IPNO works with legislators, judges, lawyers, law enforcement and policymakers to protect the innocent within the criminal justice system. As of June 2015, IPNO has freed or exonerated 26 innocent men. 2 ipno exodus | www.ip-no.org Congratulations to IPNO attorney, Charell Arnold, who got engaged to Christopher Stow-Serge in December. We are thrilled for Charell and Chris, and to their Chihuahuas on their inevitably imminent and prominent role in the solemn nuptials. IPNO is delighted to announce that Huy Dao will join our staff in October as Case Review Manager. Huy has been at the Innocence Project since 1996 and brings years of experience and commitment to IPNO. We are very excited to begin working with Huy. Congratulations to IPNO’s former client and now board member, Calvin Duncan, on being awarded an Echoing Green Fellowship for his project, Rising Foundations. Calvin’s project aims to break the cycle of incarceration of black men in New Orleans through access to housing, gainful employment, and financial services. We are so pleased for Calvin and his co-fellow, Kelly Orians, and wish them all the success in the world on this crucial project. Logo designed by IPNO client, Jerome Morgan. IPNO is so grateful to be joined by seven summer law clerks and interns this year who come from Southern University Law Center, Harvard Law School, Loyola Law School, Tulane Law School, Indiana University, Xavier University of Louisiana and University of New Orleans. We could not free innocent prisoners without students donating hundreds of hours to IPNO every year. And finally, congratulations to IPNO’s case review manager, Zacharay Crawford Pechukas, on finishing the Eugene, Oregon, half-marathon in May in 100 th place. Summer interns and staff at the Whitney Plantation on a very rainy day. Summer 2015 | ipno exodus 3 from the director Friend: I wanted to take this opportunity to welcome our new readers and welcome back those lucky people who’ve been receiving our newsletter since we began sending it in 2007. We travel around a lot, talking to people about what we do and, through that, we have learned that while many people have a general sense of what IPNO does or why it exists, people also have a lot of questions. By keeping people updated through our newsletter, we hope to answer some of those questions. Here are a few other key points about our work: Since 2001, IPNO has freed or exonerated 26 innocent men from Louisiana and Mississippi’s prisons. Those clients have served 535 years in prison between them. Of the 26 cases we have won to date, all of the defendants were young black men, none of them were given a trial where the presentation of evidence lasted more than one day, and yet all but two were sentenced to life in prison. All were innocent of the crimes with which they were charged. We exist because it is a statistical certainty that there are scores, if not hundreds, of innocent prisoners in Louisiana and Mississippi’s prisons serving life or near-life sentences. If Louisiana and Mississippi are archives of injustice simply in line with the national average on wrongful convictions, conservative, evidence-based estimates predict that around 3.3% of their combined prison population of around 70,000 (or 2,310) are factually innocent. Taking the lifer population of the two states alone, a conservative estimate of innocent prisoners serving life in prison in the two states is around 200. If you are not sentenced to death, the right to a state-funded lawyer ends after you are convicted and your conviction is affirmed on appeal. If you are innocent, and there is significant evidence of your innocence the jury did not hear before it convicted you, it is generally only after your appeal that you can bring that evidence to a court’s attention. However, it is at exactly this point you no longer have a lawyer provided. Almost everyone in prison The Louisiana Constitutional Convention of 1898 closed with a statement that it had been the mission of the all-white delegates “to establish the supremacy of the white race in this state” and “perpetuate the supremacy of the Anglo-Saxon race in Louisiana.” During the Convention, amidst a raft of discriminatory measures, a rule was enacted that permitted a criminal conviction by a non-unanimous jury verdict. This rule is still in force in Louisiana today, 117 years later. Oregon is the only other state that allows non-unanimous jury verdicts. Half of the wrongfully convicted people in Louisiana who were eligible to be convicted by a non-unanimous verdict were convicted 4 ipno exodus | www.ip-no.org is poor, and none can afford the thousands of hours of investigation and litigation that it takes to prove innocence in court after conviction (it takes IPNO – an office that specializes in these cases – upwards of 2,000 hours per exoneration). We take their cases at no cost to them, or their loved ones. IPNO takes on cases where DNA testing can prove innocence (which is not available in the vast majority of cases), and in more difficult cases where DNA does not exist or has been destroyed. While some cases are relatively simple and may require no more than an intensive review of existing documents, court filings and subsequent testing of DNA, this is not the norm. Most of our cases are complicated: they require hundreds of hours of investigation before we are even sure it is an innocence case we can take, and then years and years of litigation before an innocent prisoner is released. Something most people don’t know is that being innocent is not enough to get you out of prison (unless you have DNA, which most cases don’t have). To be able to win a new trial and prove your innocence, you have to have evidence of your innocence and a legal claim to win on. Investigating the case for those two things, and presenting them in court, often with fierce opposition, takes years. And it takes a lot of resources. After we free our clients, we also try to provide them with intensive support to help them readjust. We try to also use our clients’ cases to ask for changes in laws, policies and attitudes that cause indigent prisoners to be wrongly convicted and then make it virtually impossible for them to access the courts after. We believe in preventing wrongful convictions by increasing openness and accountability in the criminal justice system. This approach makes the system fairer for everyone who encounters it, not just the innocent. And, in Louisiana and Mississippi, the states with the nation’s highest rates of incarceration, an exceptionally high proportion of the population encounters the criminal justice system. We are lucky to have strong supporters; people who – like us – want the innocent in prison to know that they are not abandoned and that someone is coming for them. Thank you for being one of those people. Emily Maw, Director with less than 12 jurors finding them guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. In other words, in half of all the Louisiana exonerations where someone was tried for a non-capital crime, at least one juror voted not-guilty but the person was nevertheless convicted. This includes Louisiana’s most recent exoneree, Kia Stewart, who was convicted on a 10-2 jury vote. Many of these wrongful convictions only occurred because the votes of most, or all, of the non-white members of the jury were nullified by the non-unanimous verdict rule. Recently the LSU Press published “Jim Crow’s Last Stand: Nonunanimous Criminal Jury Verdicts in Louisiana” by Professor Thomas Aiello. This book covers the history of this unfortunate rule in more detail. Summer 2015 | ipno exodus 5 JusticeAid raised over $100,000 for Innocence Project New Orleans and the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project in May, and is doing it again in October! Emily Maw and Kia Stewart at JusticeAid Concert in Washington D.C. We’re still spinning from an incredible concert with the Blind Boys of Alabama and Ani DiFranco – presented by JusticeAid at the Lincoln Theatre in Washington D.C. The Blind Boys of Alabama soared like righteous eagles and the Righteous Babe Records singer-songwriter Ani DiFranco lived up to her star billing. Together, they formed amazing grace. With every dollar in concert ticket sales goes directly to IPNO and MAIP, we raised over $100,000 for our two organizations. IPNO’s most recent exoneree, Kia Stewart, was able to join us in D.C. It was his first trip out of Louisiana. Ani DiFranco JusticeAid is developing our next concert, to be held at the House of Blues on Saturday, October 17 th in New Orleans with Ani DiFranco, Hurray for the Riff Raff and more! Tickets will be on sale soon and can be purchased through JusticeAid.org. Blind Boys of Alabama To get updates, be sure to follow us on Facebook and/or sign up for alerts at www.ip-no.org. 6 ipno exodus | www.ip-no.org If you would like to join the host committee and help us spread the word and sell tickets, e-mail Jené O’Keefe Trigg at jeneot@ip-no.org case updates Jerome Morgan and Robert Jones win in the Louisiana Supreme Court Robert Jones and Jerome Morgan were both teenagers (19 and 17 respectively) when they were arrested in New Orleans for rape (Robert) and murder (Jerome) in 1992 and 1993 respectively. Both were wrongly convicted after brief trials marked by the State withholding significant exculpatory evidence and woefully inadequate investigations by their lawyers. Both were sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. After far-reaching investigation on their cases, IPNO found a wealth of evidence that neither man did the crime that he is imprisoned for. After extensive proceedings, IPNO presented this evidence to the courts in 2013 and each man had his conviction vacated during 2014 (Jerome’s by the trial court and Robert’s by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal). In each case, however, the prosecution filed in the Louisiana Supreme Court asking that each man’s conviction be reinstated, despite the considerable evidence of prosecutorial misconduct in each case. We are delighted to report that the Louisiana Supreme Court declined to reinstate either man’s conviction: on March 27, 2015, the Louisiana Supreme Court announced it would not review the decision to vacate Jerome’s conviction and on June 1, 2015, it made the same announcement in Robert’s case. Despite these long-awaited victories, neither man’s struggle for freedom is over. While Jerome is finally allowed to leave his home and go to work (he had previously been on home incarceration with an electronic ankle monitor), he still lives with a curfew and the prosecution maintains that it will retry him despite the fact that it has yet to identify any evidence it can present against him. Meanwhile, at the time of writing, Robert Jones remains incarcerated. IPNO had been investigating each case for years before signing on to represent Robert and Jerome in 2010 and 2011 respectively. We will represent both of them until they are completely free. Summer 2015 | ipno exodus 7 from the inside Q&A with John Floyd Q : John, how old are you? A : I turned 66 last month. Q : How long have you been in prison? A : 35 years. Q : What do you do at Angola? A : I’m a groundsman working at the ranch house. I keep up all the grounds, gardens, chickens. I also have dogs I tend to and peacocks. It’s Warden Cain’s ranch house. That’s who I work for – the Warden. Q : Tell me about the peacocks? A : Oh those peacocks. They’re beautiful birds. The freedom they have. They can leave here, we can’t, but none of them have. It’s a lot of responsibility to take care of them. They have to be well taken care of. Warden Cain loves them. Q : How do you stay positive? A : When I came here I was real negative. Warden Cain told me about being positive. That when you do good, good will come back to you. That is why I’m positive. That is why I’ve made it in the system even though I’m innocent. Q : What is your proudest achievement at Angola? A : I was sent to New Orleans to help after Katrina. I was handpicked – just seven inmates out of 5,000. We were all over the city. The same city I was convicted in. When I came here I couldn’t read and write. I’ve learned some. That’s something else I’m proud of. I had a cassette player to play a tape that spelled out the words so I could learn them. At the time of writing, the most recent Q : What is your biggest hope? action in John Floyd’s case was a A : It’s freedom. Getting out. I’ve federal magistrate reporting that, lost five members of my family while he was “troubled” by the facts while I am here. I’d like to get out of Mr. Floyd’s case, he recommended while some are still alive. I just want that Mr. Floyd be barred from having to see justice done in this case. any federal court review his conviction. Q : How can people support you? Letters and cards of support can be A : I’d love to get letters. mailed to John at: John Floyd, DOC# 98651, Louisiana State Penitentiary, Angola, LA 70172. 8 ipno exodus | www.ip-no.org from the outside George Toca It’s been great being free. Life has been exciting – reuniting with family and friends and making new friends. But it has also been a struggle to re-adjust to society. I went to prison so young and so much has changed. The city as a whole is different. The streets are deserted at night. Everyone just seems isolated, living in their own worlds. And everything is so much more expensive now. I’m amazed at the costs of things. I love breakfast foods and I LOVE eating at IHOP, but it’s expensive. I can’t eat there as much as I would like to. I’ve been working hard and I’ve started a business – Royalty Horticulture, LLC. We handle landscaping and pest control. It’s a challenge for me to work every day, but it’s also important. I have to pay my bills and I want to help my family as well as I can. It takes three things to start a business: A lot of hard work, sacrifice and money. It’s expensive to start a business – buying the tools, paying for licenses and supplies – but I think worth it. For now, I mainly get clients through word-of-mouth. I hand out a lot of business cards. I’m working on learning how to bid on state contracts. I recently financed a truck – something I have to have to get around with my tools. It’s not easy paying the car note and insurance every month. But it’s also all so exciting. I’m still staying with family, but I hope to be able to get my own place soon. I’ve never lived by myself before and I am really looking forward to it. I’m looking forward to finding someone special to spend my life with and start a family with. Family is really important to me. I love kids. And I want to travel. I want to go on a cruise, to Las Vegas and Hawaii. I recently flew to Chicago. It was my second time there, I went with my best friend Eric in 1983, but that time we took the bus as I was afraid to fly. The trip brought back a lot of memories. And I learned how to catch a flight, and how to not miss a flight (like I did!). Another big piece of my life is my faith. I recently joined the church that, while I was in Angola, I knew I wanted to be a part of. I completed a four-year degree program in Angola, a bachelor’s degree in Christian Ministry from the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. My faith and the church bring me great comfort. I hope to someday work with troubled youth, to help keep them on a right path and share my Christian faith with them. I’m just blessed to be free but I’m always thinking about the guys I left behind. I pray for them and I hope that everything works out for them. Summer 2015 | ipno exodus 9 ‑ George Toca, continued from page 1 George and Eric’s families fought for over 30 years to overturn his wrongful conviction. George’s was one of the first cases IPNO took on. After seven years of working on the case and doing investigation that George’s trial attorney never did, IPNO got George’s case back into court in 2010. Unfortunately, that was only the beginning of the fight. Then-Trial Judge Julian Parker granted the State’s procedural objections, so we had to take George’s fight to the appellate courts, where we won and the trial court’s decision against him was overturned. Meanwhile, in 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Miller v. Alabama, held that mandatory life sentences for children convicted of homicide were unconstitu‑ tional. Since George was barely 17 years old when the crime happened and he was given a mandatory life sentence (and since correcting his sentence after 30 years in prison may have seen him released sooner than proving his wrongful conviction), we filed a motion to correct his illegal sentence and requested a sentencing hearing. Again, procedural issues got in the way of him seeing any substantive justice. The State argued that the Miller decision should not apply retroactively to men like George who were already serving the unconstitution‑ al mandatory life sentence. In a different case, the Louisiana Supreme Court agreed with the State’s argument and held that Miller would not be applied retroactively; and so, George’s case was denied as well. George continued his fight to the U.S. Supreme Court. He filed an application for a writ of certiorari, and the Court granted it. George’s case was going to be the case that determined whether Miller would apply retroactively to the hundreds of men nationwide serving 10 ipno exodus | www.ip-no.org George Toca life sentences they were given when they were children. George never gave up on fighting to prove his innocence, but he also made the best of his time in jail. He worked hard every day to improve himself. George entered prison as a high school dropout who’d just been wrongly convicted, but while in prison, he worked to get a GED, associate degree, and bachelor’s degree. He also worked for certificates and diplomas from nearly every program available to him at Angola. Each time someone from IPNO visited George, we would talk with him about his case, and then spend time listening to him tell us about his latest goals and achievements. Regardless of his innocence, he was a perfect example of how people change and mature with time. When George’s IPNO attorneys visited him, to talk to him about his case in the U.S. Supreme Court, he had just finished his horticulture certificate. He had just begun a new job caring for the grounds of Angola, but he told us that he had requested to be assigned to a job in the greenhouse because he needed to stay near the classrooms in order to begin his next goal of getting a landscaping certificate. George had mastered walking a line between staying sane in prison, while never losing sight of his freedom. The next time IPNO visited with George, he was faced with the hardest decision of his life: would he accept a plea offer from the State that would guarantee his immediate freedom, but would end the fight in the Supreme Court, and require him to take responsibility for a crime he did not commit? George was devastated and knew that he was carrying the hopes of scores of his fellow prisoners with him to the Supreme Court. Be he also knew that he had to put his family – his mother and sisters – out of their misery and come home. He also knew that Eric Batiste’s family had lived for 30 years without Eric and with the pain of knowing George was wrongly imprisoned and that it was time for them to be able to move on. With a heavy heart, George agreed to plead guilty to a crime he did not commit. Having made that anguished decision, on January 29, 2015, Judge Byron Williams vacated his murder conviction and George entered an Alford plea (in which the accused is permitted to plead guilty because it is in his best interests but is not forced to admit his guilt) to manslaughter and pled guilty to attempted armed robbery. Later that night, after over 30 years of visits that ended with his family driving away from Angola heartbroken, he was able to walk out of the front gates of Angola prison, get in the car with his family, and drive home to New Orleans. Within a few weeks of being released, George had a job and was taking the first steps toward starting his own landscaping business. He is reconnecting with his family, friends and the community he was taken from 30 years ago. He writes about his new life on the outside on page 9. If you would like to help George, he has an Amazon wish list at http://tinyurl. com/GeorgeTwishlist. George Toca, hugged by family after he walked out of Angola. Summer 2015 | ipno exodus 11 ‑ Kia Stewart, continued from page 1 based on a factually inaccurate anonymous tip. By the end of the day, without canvassing the scene for witnesses or doing anything else to develop leads, police included Kia’s photograph in an array for BJ’s distraught friend to identify. This single eyewitness identification was the only evidence against Kia. At the time of his arrest, Kia was just 17 years old. He was forced to suffer through the hells of Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath from the Orleans Parish Prison, where – he believed – he would be left to drown in a cell. Even after being belatedly evacuated, he waited for months without an attorney and with no way to contact his family. In 2006, the Tulane University Law Clinic accepted an appointment to represent Kia on his second degree murder charge. Though the Clinic students and attorneys were dedicated to Kia’s case, they were unable to locate witnesses in post-Katrina New Orleans. Four years after his arrest, Kia was wrongly convicted after a short trial at which the State presented one eyewitness. Shortly after his conviction, the Clinic began to uncover some of the many witnesses who would eventually prove his innocence. Unfortunately, despite the Clinic filing several Motions for New Trial based on this evidence, Kia’s conviction became final and he was sent to the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, where he was sent to work in the fields. IPNO began work on Kia’s case in 2013. In total, through vigorous investigation, we discovered at least 18 witnesses who either saw the crime and saw that Kia was not the shooter, heard the true perpetrator confess to the crime or who proved Kia’s alibi. After bringing the case to the District Attorney’s office and doing a joint review of the evidence, 12 ipno exodus | www.ip-no.org Kia Stewart and mother Terry Stewart IPNO and the Orleans Parish District Attorney’s Office entered into a series of joint stipulations concerning the breadth of this new evidence. On April 13, 2015, Judge Darryl Derbigny reviewed these stipulations and ordered that Kia’s conviction be vacated and that he be immediately released from custody. The District Attorney’s Office immediately agreed to dismiss all charges against Kia for this crime. Kia left the court house surrounded by members of his loyal and loving family and friends, as well as IPNO staff. Kia celebrated his exoneration with chicken salad, per his request. Since his release, Kia has been getting in touch with old friends and spending time with his family – especially his little nieces and nephews. He is so glad he gets to be “Uncle Kia” now. Kia has also had the opportunity to travel to Washington, D.C. and to speak with a variety of groups concerning his case. He is working hard to make up for spending the first 10 years of his adult life in prison for a crime he did not commit. With help from Café Reconcile and its partners and Operation Spark, Kia is already building a good array of marketable skills and has begun working his first jobs. If you would like to help Kia get back on his feet, you can send money to him through this fundraising page: www. gofundme.com/s4mz4m2tw or check out his Amazon wish list at http://tinyurl. com/KiaSWishlist. Young Professionals this year, IPNO created a Young Professionals Committee Earlier Committee (YPC) to help fundraise and raise Launched awareness. The committee is comprised of emerging leaders who are passionate about the mission of IPNO and are willing to devote time and energy to further the organization’s critical work through grassroots efforts. IPNO is honored to announce the inaugural Young Professionals Committee members: Rachael Bauer, Cynthia Browne, Ashley Crawford, Royce Duplessis, Cat Forrester, Kyle J. Jones, Elizabeth Kiefer, Charlie King, Whitney Magendie, Melanie, Anna Singleton, Angela Tucker, Elizabeth Williams. In April, the committee held its first YPC Happy Hour for IPNO at the Rusty Nail – raising nearly $1,000 and introducing our work to dozens of new people. To learn about future events, be sure to follow us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/IPNOLA Amazon.com Helps You Support IPNO Amazon.com enables our supporters to help IPNO and our clients simply by shopping – and you have already raised thousands of dollars for our work and provided thousands of dollars’ worth of necessities to our freed clients. Here’s a summary of Amazon tools you can use to help us and our clients. Every time you visit http://ip-no.org/ make-a-difference and click through the Amazon link to shop on Amazon, IPNO gets $$. The more you buy, the more $$ we get – up to 15 percent of your purchase! When you shop with Amazon Smile, 0.5% of your purchase is donated back to IPNO. Simply go to smile.amazon.com, choose “Innocence Project New Orleans” and every time you shop on the site IPNO will receive 0.5% of your purchase. Which option should you choose? It’s up to you. The affiliate program takes more of your time because you have to get into it by going through our Web site every time, but gives us a much larger donation. With Smile, once you have selected us as your charity you are done and we will get 0.5% of every purchase. IPNO sets up Amazon wishlists to enable people to donate tangible things to our freed clients to help them get on their feet. We recently set up lists for: Kia Stewart: http://tinyurl.com/KiaSWishlist George Toca: http://tinyurl.com/GeorgeTwishlist For additional lists, visit: http://ip-no.org/ make-a-difference Summer 2015 | ipno exodus 13 IPNO thanks its recent donors, especially those who have given $250+ and those who give monthly: INDIVIDUALS Alfredo Kemm Andy Rittenberg & Amy Lit Ani DiFranco Anonymous Ariel White Arthur & Marcia Waterman Barbara & Donald Shack Ben LaBranche Bishop Joe Morris Doss Brian Robbins Caitlyn Silhan Carol Strasburger in memory of Larry Strasburger Denny LeBouef Emily Ratner Erin Bannister George & Milly Denegre George Pelecanos H. Bruce and Jacqueline Shreves Hamilton Simons-Jones & Annette Hollowell Helena Blundell Henry & Suzanne Bass in memory of Larry Strasburger Hon. Fredericka Wicker J. Gordon Cooney Jack & Kristalina Taylor Jacob Pitts Jancy Hoeffel & Steve Singer Jane Clarke Jeffrey Alexander Jimmy Robertson & Linda Thompson John & Elizabeth Futrell John Dias John Sullivan John Watson Joseph Olivier Joseph Pappalardo Julia & Chris Spear Julia Romano Julie & Seth Harris Julie Ferris Kerry Cuccia Kim & George Haddow Kim M. Boyle Kristen Terry Lauren McCulloch Lee Cline Leslie Langhetee Leslie Lowe Lynne Burkart M. Lizabeth Talbott & Galen Brown Mallory McDuff Margaret & Jonathan Lewis Mary Zervigon Meg Fidler Michael Avery Michael Zeneg Michael Harris Michelle Moore Smith Michelle Rutherford Monique Lafontaine Mr. & Mrs. Louis Glade Mr. Herschel Richard, Jr. & Rev. Mary Richard Nandi F. Campbell Noelie Alito Olivia Pritchard Peter Coyote Peter Neufeld Rob Mink Rosemary Ryan S. William & Elizabeth Livingston Sara Johnson Scott Clugstone Scott Norris Sean Cummings Simone Levine & Will Harrell Stacey Wexler Stephanie Green Stephen Bright & Charlotta Norby Steve Milliken Timothy A. Meche, Esq. Timothy Crowley Tom Klotz Virginia & Carl Schlueter F O U N D AT I O N S & O R G A N I Z AT I O N S Baptist Community Ministries Department of Justice: Bureau of Justice Assistance Department of Justice: National Institute of Justice Frank & Denise Quattrone Foundation Gulf Coast Bank JusticeAid Keller Family Foundation Kendall Vick Public Law Foundation Law Offices of Robert Toale Lorenzi & Barnatt, L.L.P. Louisiana Bar Foundation Louisiana Public Defender Board NOLA Investigates 14 ipno exodus | www.ip-no.org Pizza Delicious Rittenberg Family Foundation Rockefeller Family Fund The Rusty Nail Sanderson Farms Southern Poverty Law Center St. Vincent de Paul | Catholic Charities Wise Carter On May 15 th , nearly 300 guests joined Innocence Project New Orleans in honoring our innocent clients and their loved ones and recognizing 14 years of freeing innocent prisoners, exposing injustice and preventing wrongful convictions. Darrin Hill and Family Emily Maw and City Councilmember Jason Williams Hon. Calvin Johnson Reginald Adams and his family Earl Truvia, Michael Williams and Jerome Morgan Clients’ loved ones onstage Betty Anne Waters, Guest Speaker — LEADER SPONSORS — — SUSTAINER SPONSORS — Fishman Haygood | Jason Rogers Williams & Associates Law Office of Stephen J. Haedicke | NeunerPate | The Quarter Stitch I N - K I N D S P O N S O R S ASAP Printing & Digital Imaging | Jacques-Imos Summer 2015 | Nine Design | ipno exodus 15 4051 Ulloa Street New Orleans, LA 70119 NEW ORLEANS LA PERMIT NO. 392 PAID NONPROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE 535 candles were lit at the 14 th Anniversary Gala – one for each year our innocent clients spent behind wrongly incarcerated.