Plain English Breakdown
The official source material did not provide specific details on the fiscal impact, leaving it uncertain how much money might be needed for indigent defense funds or other expenses related to new trials.
Post-Conviction Relief for Actual Innocence
This law allows people convicted of crimes and district attorneys to file a petition based on new evidence showing actual innocence at any time.
What This Bill Does
- Allows a person who was found guilty of a crime or the district attorney general to file a petition for relief based on new evidence showing actual innocence, if no previous petition has been filed with the same evidence.
- Requires the court to assume the truthfulness of the new evidence when deciding whether to schedule a hearing.
- Gives the petitioner the responsibility to prove at the hearing that the new evidence shows they are actually innocent.
- Permits the filing of petitions regardless of how the conviction was determined, such as through a guilty plea or no contest plea.
- Specifies that if the court finds the new evidence proves actual innocence, it must vacate the conviction and order a new trial.
Who It Names or Affects
- People who have been convicted of crimes in Tennessee
- District attorneys general
Terms To Know
- Actual Innocence
- New evidence that establishes the petitioner's innocence by clear and convincing evidence or creates a substantial probability of a different result on retrial.
- New Evidence
- Evidence not known by the judge or jury at the time guilt was determined or at the time of conviction, including both scientific and non-scientific evidence.
Limits and Unknowns
- The exact fiscal impact, such as reductions in state incarceration costs, cannot be precisely determined.
- The law does not specify how much money might be needed for indigent defense funds or other expenses related to new trials.