Rutgers Law launches New Jersey Innocence Project to help wrongfully convicted people

Rutgers Law School has launched a statewide project to help exonerate people who have been convicted of crimes they did not commit.

The New Jersey Innocence Project will be based at Rutgers University-Camden and will tap the resources of the law school, which has locations in Camden and Newark.

“We hope to provide support for those people and their families, and we hope to have influence on criminal justice policies that make wrongful convictions more likely,” said Jill Friedman, associate dean for Pro Bono and Public Interest Project at Rutgers Law School in Camden. She is also a co-founder of the project and a former public defender in New York.

Friedman hopes to provide support for people who seek their services “in multiple ways related to their health and well-being; psychological, social, vocational [and] educational,” in addition to providing legal support.

“We hope to build the capacity to meet those needs,” she said

There are similar projects in the state, including The Last Resort Exoneration Project at Seton Hall Law School in Newark, Centurion in Princeton, and the state Attorney General’s Conviction Review Unit, established in 2019.

Until now, New Jersey was the only state that did not have a project associated with the national Innocence Network based in New York, which Friedman said provided “so much generous guidance” in establishing this new affiliate.

“They are the mothership … They have years and decades of experience doing this work,” she said. “There is so much collective wisdom in that organization.”

According to the National Registry of Exonerations, 39 people have been exonerated in New Jersey since 1989, as well as 78 in Pennsylvania and three in Delaware. The Innocence Project Delaware launched in October 2020.