CSAFE, which supports forensic research at Duke Law, wins federal renewal for another five-year term At Duke Law, funds from the Center for Statistics and Applications in Forensic Evidence are used to improve the way forensic evidence is used in the courts. DNA exoneree Keith Harward told his story at the CSAFE conference hosted by Duke Law […]
Category: Blog
The Pandemic and North Carolinians Battling Drug Addiction
New op-ed at NC Policy Watch by Dr. Allison Robertson, PhD, MPH – an Associate Professor in the Services Effectiveness Research Program, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, and faculty member with Duke Law Center for Science and Justice. Dr. Robertson is currently researching a series of LEAD programs in North Carolina – and […]
Judging Risk
Just published this past week – John Monahan and Brandon Garrett’s piece “Judging Risk” in the California Law Review. The abstract: Risk assessment plays an increasingly pervasive role in criminal justice in the United States at all stages of the process—from policing to pretrial detention, sentencing, corrections, and parole. As efforts to reduce mass incarceration […]
NC Criminal Debt Panel Discussion
A panel discussion, launching Duke CSJ’s new report and website on fines and fees in criminal cases, with the NC ACLU’s Kristie Puckett Williams, Cristina Becker, NC Justice Center’s Daniel Bowes, and Forward Justice’s Whitley Carpenter, Fines and Fees Justice Center’s Joanna Weiss, and Duke CSJ Director Brandon Garrett and Executive Director Tom Maher. To […]
Assistance for Incarcerated People Discharged during a Pandemic
Read this new op-ed in NC Policy Watch by Dr. Marvin Swartz, “Assistance for incarcerated people discharged during the pandemic: The humane and constitutional thing to do.” Dr. Swartz, who heads the Division of Social & Community Psychiatry in the Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences at Duke University and is faculty in the Duke […]
Effects of COVID-19 on Community Programs for Justice-involved Adults with Behavioral Health Disorders
by Dr. Allison Robertson, Associate Professor, Services Effectiveness Research Program, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine Much important attention is focusing on how the COVID-19 pandemic is gravely affecting people who are incarcerated in US jails and prisons, a crisis that is worsening daily. There are also very serious concerns about justice-involved people who […]
Consenting to Relief to Remove Vulnerable People from Prison
Updated May 4, 2020: On April 23, this post discussed the use of consent MAR’s to address the risk from COVID-19 to individuals in North Carolina’s prisons. Since then, the risk from COVID-19 in prisons has increased. Pending litigation challenges the response from the prison system to COVID-19. In response to the litigation, Superior Court […]
Our NC Fines and Fees Data Website
Today we launched a new CSJ report on the explosion of fines and fees in North Carolina. As a companion to the report, we created, with outstanding work by Caroline Levenson, Duke Class of ’22, a data resource website here. The About page where you start, gives you a brief overview of our findings – […]
Our New Report: The Explosion of Unpaid Criminal Fines and Fees in NC
A new report, just released by the Center for Science and Justice at Duke Law, analyzes the burden of fines and fees in North Carolina. Unpaid court debt, much of it stemming from minor traffic infractions, affects one in 12 North Carolinians – a disproportionate number of them minority residents – and we are calling on state […]
The Innocence Files
The new Netflix series, the “Innocence Files,” features the stories of eight Innocence Project exoneration cases. The exonerates are: Kennedy Brewer, Levon Brooks, Alfred Dewayne Brown, Franky Carrillo, Keith Harward, Thomas Haynesworth, Chester Hollman II, and Kenneth Wyniemko. The focus of the series is flawed forensics, eyewitness misidentifications, and prosecutorial misconduct – three (of many) […]