Mark attended the Innocence Network Board of Directors meeting in Madison, Wisconsin.
Mark spoke about the Innocence Movement at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, to the UC alumni group in Chicago,a nd to UC Law alumnus here in Cincinnati.
In the Roger Dean Gillispie case, which Mark and the OIP have been investigating and litigating for nearly a decade, the Ohio Supreme Court declined jurisdiction of the State’s appeal, meaning that Gillispie’s exoneration is complete.
Mark assisted lead Ohio Innocence Project attorney Donald Caster in litigating the Glenn Tinney innocence case in Richland County Court of Common Pleas. Click here to read more about Tinney’s case.
Several of Mark’s articles were cited:
- False Justice and the ‘True’ Prosecutor: A Memoir, Tribute, and Commentary, 9 Ohio St. J. Crim. L. 789 (2012), in Christopher T. Robertson, Contingent Compensation of Post-Conviction Counsel: A Modest Proposal to Identify Meritorious Claims and Reduce Wasteful Government Spending, 64 Me. L. Rev. 513 (2012);
- Miranda’s Final Frontier–The International Arena: A Critical Analysis of United States v. Bin Laden, and a Proposal for a New Miranda Exception Abroad, 51 Duke L.J. 1703 (2002), in Dru Stevenson, Judicial Deference to Legislatures in Constitutional Analysis, 90 N.C. L. Rev. 2083 (2012);
- Reformulating the Miranda Warnings in Light of Contemporary Law and Understandings, 90 Minn. L. Rev. 781 (2006), in Laurent Sacharoff, Miranda’s Hidden Right, 63 Ala. L. Rev. 535 (2012);
- Rethinking the Involuntary Confession Rule: Toward a Workable Test for Identifying Compelled Self-Incrimination, 93 Calif. L. Rev. 465 (2005), in Dru Stevenson, Judicial Deference to Legislatures in Constitutional Analysis, 90 N.C. L. Rev. 2083 (2012); and
- She Blinded Me with Science: Wrongful Convictions and the “Reverse CSI Effect”, 17 Tex. Wesleyan L. Rev. 481 (2011), in Forty-Third Selected Bibliography on Computers, Technology and the Law, 38 Rutgers Computer & Tech. L.J. 277 (2012).