Jim Petro was a practicing attorney and served as an elected four-term Ohio state legislator, and a two-term Ohio Auditor of State, before he was elected Attorney General of Ohio. Committed to a strong law-and-order platform, he launched a breakthrough effort that added 210,000 criminal DNA profiles to the CODIS database, which solved many cold cases but also revealed wrongful convictions. He retired in 2013 as Chancellor of Ohio's public colleges and universities and remains an advocate for criminal justice reform. Nancy Petro had a career in marketing, publishing, entrepreneurship, and business management before her introduction to wrongful criminal conviction through her husband Jim Petro's work. Nancy retired as president of a sports software company to focus on criminal justice reform advocacy. She has authored or co-authored op-eds, blog articles, academic book chapters, and three editions of False Justice.
Description
(Praise for the Previous Edition) "One of the most important and influential books on the subject of wrongful convictions...A must read for any person or student interested in the eye-opening truth about wrongful conviction." --Mark Godsey, Director of the Rosenthal Institute for Justice/Ohio Innocence Project and author of Blind Injustice: A Former Prosecutor Exposes the Psychology and Politics of Wrongful Convictions "Jim Petro reveals in False Justice how the lessons of DNA analysis of crime scene evidence changed his views on criminal justice. Petro became motivated not only to represent the wrongfully convicted but also to change the system. This former prosecutor and state attorney general is an important voice for criminal justice reform." --Barry Scheck, cofounder and codirector of the Innocence Project at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law

