You’ve taken the quiz, you’ve read the books (or the list of books), or maybe you’ve even watched a documentary that moved you. You’re ready to take the next step by volunteering in your own home and on your own time to prevent wrongful conviction.
But how? That’s where I come in. As our volunteer coordinator, here are a few ways to get involved.
Get started today with one of these options
Sign up to help us win reforms in 2020
We’re gearing up to fight for key wrongful conviction reforms in 2020—and we need your help to win. When you sign up, we’ll count on you to contact your lawmaker to help pass important wrongful conviction reforms. Together, last year we passed 21 reforms in 17 states.
Launch a Facebook fundraiser for the Innocence Project
If the people we love don’t know much about wrongful conviction, they can’t help us fight for justice. This is a great and easy way to start a conversation and raise funds for the Innocence Project.
However you get involved, I’m so glad that you’re here.
Thank you,
Donna Kenton
Volunteer Coordinator
Started in 1992 as a legal clinic at Cardozo School of Law, the Innocence Project is now an independent nonprofit, affiliated with Cardozo, that exonerates the wrongly convicted through DNA testing and reforms the criminal justice system to prevent future injustice. www.innocenceproject.org