Professor Cookie Ridolfi and Todd Fries, Operations Director of the Northern California Innocence Project, will speak at the official release of the report “Material Indifference: How Courts Are Impeding Fair Disclosure in Criminal Cases” at The National Press Club in Washington, D.C. on Monday, November 17th, 2014.

 

The Foundation for Criminal Justice, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, the VERITAS Initiative, and the Santa Clara University School of Law cordially invite you to the official release of

MATERIAL INDIFFERENCE:
How Courts Are Impeding Fair Disclosure in Criminal Cases

Featuring

The Honorable Alex Kozinski
Chief Judge for the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals

and

Former Deputy Attorney General David W. Ogden

Joined by

Todd H. Fries, Pro Bono Research Attorney, The VERITAS Initiative, Santa Clara University School of Law
Tiffany M. Joslyn, Counsel, White Collar Crime Policy, National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
Norman L. Reimer, Executive Director, National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
Kathleen “Cookie” Ridolfi, Director, The VERITAS Initiative, Santa Clara University School of Law
Theodore Simon, President, National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers

The National Press Club
529 14th St. NW, Holeman Lounge, Washington, DC 20045

Monday, November 17, 2014 at 12:30 p.m.

Lunch will be served

Open to the public and the press

RSVP by Nov. 12, 2014 at material-indifference-release.eventbrite.com

In courtrooms across the nation, accused persons are convicted without ever having seen information that was favorable to their defense. The frequency with which this occurs and the role it plays in wrongful convictions prompted NACDL and the VERITAS Initiative to undertake an unprecedented study of Brady claims litigated in federal courts over a five-year period. The Study asked: What role does judicial review play in the disclosure of favorable information to accused? The results revealed a troubling answer—the judiciary is impeding fair disclosure in criminal cases and, in doing so, encouraging prosecutors to disclose as little favorable information as possible. We invite you to join us for this report release and a conversation about this serious problem and the reforms that could provide much needed relief.

On November 17, the report will be available online at: www.nacdl.org/discoveryreform/materialindifference.