Loading [Contrib]/a11y/accessibility-menu.js
Capital University Law Review
Menu
Articles
Advertising Regulation
Arbitration
Bankruptcy
Business Associations
Children & Family
Civil Rights
Constitutional Law & Criminal Procedure
Criminal Law & Criminal Justice
Cyber Security
Economic Regulation
Environmental
Estates & Trusts
Health & Healthcare
Immigration & Nationalization
Intellectual Property
International
Introductions & Dedications
Judges & Courts
Labor & Employment
Legal Education
Legislation
Oil, Gas & Mineral
Personal Injury/General Tort
Professional Responsibility
Rules of Evidence & Civil Procedure
Social Security/Disability
Tax
Teaching Law
All
For Authors
Editorial Board
About
Issues
search
Sorry, something went wrong. Please try your search again.
×
Articles
Blog posts
RSS Feed
Enter the URL below into your favorite RSS reader.
https://www.capitallawreview.org/feed
×
Criminal Law & Criminal Justice
Vol. 48, Issue 2, 2020
May 19, 2020 EDT
Informants v. Innocents: Informant Testimony and its Contribution to Wrongful Convictions
Melanie B. Fessinger
,
Brian H. Bornstein
,
Jeffrey S. Neuschatz
,
Danielle DeLoach
,
Megan A. Hillgartner
,
Stacy A. Wetmore
,
Amy Bradfield Douglass
,
psycholegal research
wrongful conviction
innocence project
informant testimony
informant
Photo by
Emiliano Bar
on
Unsplash
Capital University Law Review
Melanie B. Fessinger et al.,
Informants v. Innocents: Informant Testimony and Its Contribution to Wrongful Convictions
, 48
Capital University Law Review
149 (2020).
Save article as...
▾
PDF
XML
Citation (BibTeX)