Witness to Innocence utilizes the innocence list compiled by the
Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC) of people exonerated from death row. The criteria for inclusion on the DPIC innocence list states that, "Defendants must have been convicted, sentenced to death and subsequently either
a) their conviction was overturned
AND i) they were acquitted at re-trial or
ii) all charges were dropped
b) they were given an absolute pardon by the governor based on new evidence of innocence." Proponents of the death penalty cast doubt on the validity of this list, partially because not all of the exonerated former prisoners were on death row at the time of exoneration. All of the 138 people currently on the DPIC list were at some time sentenced to death and were exonerated by the aforementioned legal standards.
News, books, and media Witness to Innocence and its members have been featured in numerous publications and news articles, including
Parade magazine, the
Tucson Weekly, the
Austin American-Statesman, the
Fort Worth Star-Telegram,
The Litchfield County Times,
Westport News, and the North Carolina
Star-News. WTI member and the 100th former death row prisoner to be exonerated, Ray Krone, was also featured on
Good Morning America and an episode of
Extreme Makeover in its third season.
The play and made-for-
cable television film,
The Exonerated, features Witness to Innocence members Delbert Tibbs (played by
Delroy Lindo) and
David Keaton (played by
Danny Glover) as two of its characters. Other projects that feature innocent former death row prisoners include
John Grisham's first nonfiction work,
The Innocent Man, Frank Baumgartner's
The Decline of the Death Penalty and the Discovery of Innocence, and sociologist
Stanley Cohen's ''The Wrong Men: America's epidemic of wrongful death row convictions''. ==References==