RMIC Fundraiser and Celebration of Wrongful Conviction Day 2022

RMIC Fundraiser and Celebration of Wrongful Conviction Day 2022

Join us for food, drinks, networking, & silent auction at RMIC's first in-person fundraising event since 2019 & Special Guest Dean Gillispie

By Rocky Mountain Innocence Center

Date and time

Thursday, September 29, 2022 · 6 - 10pm MDT

Location

The Leonardo

209 East 500 South Salt Lake City, UT 84111

Refund Policy

Contact the organizer to request a refund.
Eventbrite's fee is nonrefundable.

About this event

Come join us for food, drinks, and networking at RMIC's first in-person fundraising event since 2019 to celebrate the 9th Annual Wrongful Conviction Day! This year's theme, through the Innocence Network, is "Collective Impact," and at RMIC, we believe that we are collectively impacted – as communities and as a society at large – by ongoing, widespread miscarriages of justice and broad scale failures of the criminal justice system. RMIC, along with our supporters and our community, can help fight these injustices through our many different roles, perspectives, and contributions. Our clients and all exonerees deserve an extensive network of support and collective care. Let's keep that at the forefront of our minds as we come together for this fundraising and networking event! You are sure to see many new faces!

Get your tickets NOW, as there is a limited amount available to allow for social distancing. Two drink tickets included.

If you are unable to attend, please donate here!

All proceeds benefit RMIC.

A VERY SPECIAL THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS:

The Galbraith Family Foundation

Cumming Foundation

About RMIC:

The Rocky Mountain Innocence Center (RMIC) is a non-profit organization working to correct and prevent the wrongful conviction of innocent people in Utah, Nevada, and Wyoming.

We are the only organization in the region providing innocence investigation and litigation services – and we provide them entirely for free.

Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.

For more than 22 years, the Rocky Mountain Innocence Center (RMIC) has worked to correct and prevent wrongful convictions in Utah, Nevada, and Wyoming. During that time, we have grown from a few volunteers handling post-conviction claims of innocence, to a small full-time staff and dozens of pro-bono attorneys handling our current caseload of 50 cases. Each case is meticulously screened to ensure precious resources are directed to worthy claims of innocence.

Because of generous supporters like you, RMIC is able to complete this work at no cost to any of its clients. There is still a great deal of work to be done and each case has expenses—DNA testing, client visits, private investigation, document and evidence requests, prison communication services, and operating costs that can quickly add up.

This is RMIC's first in-person event post-COVID and with new leadership, including a new Executive Director and many new Board members! Come meet us at this event! We have taken special care to select an amazing venue where we will only occupy at 50% of its capacity with outside access to allow for safe distancing between attendees.

Please support RMIC by attending our event or donating if you are unable to attend. Your contribution is 100% tax deductible and will be used to bring the innocent home and to prevent further wrongful convictions.

Learn more about our work and impact.

DeMarlo Berry

DeMarlo Berry was wrongfully convicted in 1995 at the age of 19 for the 1994 Las Vegas murder of Charles Burkes. Mr. Berry always maintained his innocence. Although there was no physical evidence linking Mr. Berry to the crime – no gun, no fingerprints, and no DNA – he was convicted and sentenced to life in prison, where he would spend the next 22+ years.

In 2011, RMIC began a post-conviction investigation that uncovered important evidence, eventually proving that Mr. Berry was completely innocent. This evidence included a confession from the actual perpetrator, a recantation from an incentivized jailhouse informant, and other corroborating evidence. In 2017, DeMarlo was finally exonerated and reunited with his family!

Deb Brown

Deb Brown spent 17 years in prison for a murder she did not commit. She was convicted in 1995 of murdering her friend and employer, Lael Brown, who was found shot to death in his home in Logan, Utah.

On November 7, 1993, Deb Brown went to her employer’s home to check on him because he had been ailing. She found a pot of soup on the front porch that she had left for him a day earlier. When she used her own key to gain entry, she found him in bed, fatally shot three times in the head. She called police, who found her on the front porch in hysterics. Despite solid evidence of an alibi, a passed polygraph and case built entirely on circumstantial evidence, Deb was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison.

In 2002, Deb sought help from the Rocky Mountain Innocence Center. After years of investigation, RMIC, in cooperation with Snell & Wilmer LLC, filed a petition seeking a hearing on the issue of Deb’s innocence under a new factual innocence statute that RMIC helped to pass. In 2011, the innocence hearing was held and on May 2, 2011, District Court Judge Michael Direda ruled that Deb was factually innocent. On May 9, 2011, Deb was released from prison. The State appealed the ruling. On July 14, 2013, the Utah Supreme Court upheld Judge Direda’s finding of innocence and Deb was finally able to move forward. She is now the proud owner of a small cafe in northern Idaho.

Harry Miller

In December 2000, a woman was robbed at knifepoint in a store in Salt Lake City, Utah. The woman told police the robber was between 18 and 21 years old.Three years later, the victim identified Harry Miller, a 47-year-old man, as her robber. Miller told police that he had lived in Louisiana since May 2000, and was there at the time of the robbery. Indeed, two weeks before the crime, he had suffered a stroke. He was unable to drive and required frequent care. His in-home nurse said that she had visited him in Louisiana on the day before the crime. Nonetheless, Miller was charged with of the robbery and in December 2003, a jury convicted Miller based solely on the mistaken eyewitness identification. Mr. Miller appealed his conviction, and after the State stipulated to a retrial. A week before retrial, the district attorney dismissed all charges. Following the dismissal of the charges, Miller filed a petition for a finding of factual innocence, a prerequisite to receive statutory compensation for the years he was wrongfully incarcerated. Though Miller’s petition was initially denied, he appealed, and was successful. RMIC became involved in the case on remand and, on September 11, 2011, the State stipulated to Mr. Miller’s factual innocence and compensation for the time he was wrongfully incarcerated.

Christopher Wickham

Christopher Wickham was wrongfully convicted in 1997 of two counts of aggravated sexual assault in Salt Lake City. He spent approximately 15 years in prison and was placed on the sex offender registry. Rocky Mountain Innocence Center began investigating Wickham’s claim of innocence seven years ago, and in 2018, attorneys from the Salt Lake City office of Stoel Rives joined them in litigating the case which ultimately showed Wickham to be innocent of all charges. Rocky Mountain Innocence Center’s investigation uncovered numerous pieces of new evidence such as an alibi confirmation showing he was admitted at a local hospital for an automobile accident at the time of the assault and a statement from the actual perpetrator that Wickham was not present during the assault. Utah Third District Court Judge Royal I. Hansen signed an order on September 10, 2019, exonerating Mr. Wickham. Rocky Mountain Innocence Center said they work to correct and prevent the wrongful conviction of innocent people in Utah, Nevada, and Wyoming. RMIC advocates for systemic reform to improve the justice system and to create meaningful opportunities for the wrongfully convicted to prove their innocence and to receive compensation for unjust incarceration.

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