Instructiona) Find a case in which someone was falsely convicted and sent to prison for a crime he or she did not commit. We now know the person was completely innocent because he or she was officially, fully "exonerated" - (not merely found "not guilty" by a jury) - by a prosecutor, or a judge, or a governor (but not pardoned). b) Fill out one row of this chart (which will become a contribution to a database that will appear on the mid-term exam). Methodological notes: 1) If several people were exonerated for a single criminal incident, just only pick one of them. 2) Do not pick a case where part of the data on the chart is missing. 3) If possible, pick a case involving a woman who was wrongfully imprisoned. 4) If possible, pick a case where the miscarriage of justice occurred within the New York metropolitan area. 5) Do not pick the same case (same incident) as someone else in the class has posted. 6) To answer cause or reason, select one of the categories listed in the article from the University of Michigan Law School. _____________________________ Copy these two rows and fill out the lower row.