Obsessed with Netflix documentation Tiger King: murder, mayhem and madness The streaming service has released a new true criminal document that sheds light on America's flawed criminal justice system. 5 years after the breakthrough and striking series Making a killerNetflix is back this time Innocence file.
According to people Three directors of the magazine, episode 9 of the episode documents – Liz Garbers, Roger Ross Williams, and Alex Gibney – “I want more than anger and disgust.” Instead, we want to inspire viewers to engage in criminal justice reform.
It doesn't shock my family and many others at all. The Innoence Files: A shocking Netflix series of false beliefs. The new document reveals an incredibly criminal system of justice using individual cases of false beliefs. https://t.co/vZYCqZlbAv
— Mick Geen (@ J4BenGeen) April 15, 2020
“It's really about having a justice system that really seeks the truth,” says Gibney. "The prosecution always hides the indifference that it's protecting the public, but it doesn't protect the public if it frees innocent people from prison and convictions to commit crimes."
This new series focuses on the Innosense Project, a non-profit organization committed to helping imprisoned prison inmates, and tells stories of eight men who have been imprisoned for years in prison after being imprisoned for eight years.
This series shows how the criminal justice system convicts people using inaccurate science, junk science, and old-school investigative methods. It also points to a way too narrow to gain confidence that prosecutors who are keen on overcoming the case at all costs can ignore the truth.
Throughout the episode, directors are regular parts of the criminal justice system and focus on three unreliable mechanisms used to put people in jail: evidence, witnesses and prosecution. Each case they highlight shows how these things can be used to be convicted even if the defendant is innocent.
For those new to my Twitter & Dewayne's story, The Innoence Files is great, but injustice continues. He was not compensated for the stolen time from 12 to 62 days. Consider making a willing contribution to help him fix his life.https: //t.co/Ylm10hLNy6
— Bryan stolarz (@brianstolarz) April 15, 2020
Peter Neufeld, co-founder of the innocence project, thinks Innocence file It will spark a debate on "these criminal justice issues," and hope to inspire people to think about how we can reform the broken system.
“You are bound by an individual who passes through this tunnel and is eventually expelled. And everyone agrees that he is innocent, but you also have additional redemption-some sort of social redemption-systematically wrong with these various issues, whether we are junk science or witness identification or prosecutorial misconduct. ”Neufeld explains.
9 episodes of Innocence file Streaming on Netflix.
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