PETER NEUFELD
Peter Neufeld and Barry Scheck co-founded and direct the Innocence
Project at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in February 2000,
Actual Innocence: Five Days to Execution, and Other Dispatches
From the Wrongly Convicted, written by Peter, Barry, and Pulitzer
Prize-winning New York Times reporter Jim Dwyer, was published by
Doubleday. This non-fiction book grew out of the cases and stories
of the Innocence Project.
In 1988, Peter and Barry became involved in studying and litigating issues concerning the use of forensic DNA testing. Their work not only shaped the course of case law across the country but helped lead to an influential study by the National Academy of Sciences of forensic DNA testing. They both serve as members of the New York State's Commission of Forensic Science, a body that regulates all crime and forensic DNA laboratories in the state.
Peter and Barry have litigated and taught extensively in both the "hard" and behavioral forensic sciences. Their trials frequently redefine and expand the parameters of permissible defenses involving forensic psychiatry and laboratory science. Most of this work is pro bono and of public interest. Their cases often result in enhancing public awareness of systemic problems, improving the criminal justice system, and legislative reform.
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Last updated April 16, 2002