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  1. The California Innocence Project was founded in 1999 at California Western School of Law in San Diego, California by Director Justin Brooks and Law Professor Jan Stiglitz. CIP was the fourth innocence project to form in the United States as part of the national innocence movement [1] or Innocence Network .

  2. Justin Brooks is a criminal defence lawyer and co-founder of the California Innocence Project, which has freed 35 people wrongfully convicted of serious crimes. He shares his story of how he started his quest for justice and his visits to his Derbyshire home.

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  3. Justin Brooks is the director of the California Innocence Project and a lawyer who has freed dozens of innocent people from prison. His book, "You Might Go to Prison, Even Though You're Innocent," explores the causes and consequences of wrongful convictions through stories, cases, and research.

  4. Aug 8, 2019 · Justin Brooks (LL.M.'92) traces the success in his academic career to Georgetown Law. Now a professor at the California Western School of Law and a co-founder of the California Innocence Project, he once supervised Georgetown Law students teaching classes in Lorton Prison — teaching inmates about their legal rights and helping them ...

  5. A book by a criminal defense lawyer and the Founding Director of the California Innocence Project, who shares stories of innocent people wrongly imprisoned and the causes of wrongful convictions. Learn how to avoid the system's flaws and protect your rights from a broken justice system.

  6. Justin Brooks is a Professor of Practice at University of San Diego School of Law and Co-Founder of the California Innocence Project. He has freed 40 innocent people from prison and written a book on wrongful convictions.

  7. Film highlights Justin Brooks ’90 and his work to exonerate a young athlete who was wrongfully imprisoned. By Karen Brooks. If you look closely at the whiteboard behind actor Greg Kinnear when he’s briefing interns during an early scene in “Brian Banks,” you can see “follow @justinobrooks” scrawled among the legal jargon.