NY lawmakers vote to make it easier to challenge wrongful convictions

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New York will make it easier for a defendant to challenge a wrongful conviction even in cases where they have already pleaded guilty โ€” if Gov. Kathy Hochul signs a newly passed bill into law.

The Democrat-led state Assembly voted largely along party lines on Tuesday to pass the measure that would overhaul the stateโ€™s process for overturning convictions when new evidence comes to light, which supporters say would help clear innocent people who may be behind bars or carry a wrongful conviction on their record.

But the bill โ€” which the state Senate passed earlier this month โ€” is not a done deal. It will next head to Hochul, a Democrat who has not taken a public position on the measure and is likely to face a lobbying effort from prosecutors who are hoping she vetoes it.

โ€œI’ll be looking at all bills very closely with my team and analyzing them and doing the right thing,โ€ Hochul told reporters in Albany on Tuesday.

The Assemblyโ€™s 91-46 vote came in what amounts to overtime for the chamber, which was scheduled to wrap up its annual session earlier this month. But Assembly leadership summoned rank-and-file members back to Albany this week to take up dozens of bills left pending when the regular session ended, including the wrongful conviction measure.

The newly passed bill takes a number of steps to ease the process for post-conviction challenges, most notably by allowing more people who pleaded guilty to a crime to petition a court to reconsider their conviction.

Under current law and through court precedent, if a defendant pleads guilty in New York, they can only challenge their conviction if new DNA-related evidence is uncovered.

If signed by Hochul, the bill would expand that to other types of evidence, such as an expert who later backtracks on their testimony or a technological advancement that calls a prior piece of evidence into question.

The bill โ€” sponsored by Assemblymember Jeffrion Aubry of Queens and Sen. Zellnor Myrie of Brooklyn โ€” would also…

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