Manufacturing False Convictions: Lies and the Corrupt Use of Jailhouse Informants
Publication Title
University of Colorado Law Review
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2025
Abstract
Through the combined efforts of the innocence bar, conviction integrity units, and an expanding cohort of multidisciplinary scholars, new data about the mechanisms underlying wrongful convictions is rapidly accumulating. Jailhouse informants--jail inmates who testify against fellow prisoners in exchange for charge and sentence reductions and other rewards--have long been identified as significant contributors to false convictions. The new data demonstrates with fresh clarity the extent to which reliance on incentivized jailhouse (and other) witnesses poses severe hazards to the integrity of the criminal legal system. Indeed, the new data reveals overwhelming evidence of the link between the use of jailhouse informants and patterns of corruption and misconduct.
This Study draws on recent exoneration data, taken from the National Registry of Exonerations (“NRE”), consisting of cases in which innocent individuals were wrongfully convicted based, in whole or in part, on false testimony from jailhouse informants. This Study examines these cases to identify commonalities and patterns. Its primary finding, and one confirming prior research, is that there is a powerful link between law enforcement misconduct and the use of jailhouse informants and other incentivized witnesses. The Study also provides further insight into the specific pathways by which this misconduct tends to manifest, revealing how false jailhouse informant testimony is induced, generated, and *132 insulated from close inspection or challenge. Another important finding of the Study is a significant correlation between the incidence of false confessions and false testimony from jailhouse informants. This correlation helps to further build the profile of what likely wrongful convictions look like, and can be used by concerned prosecutors, judges, and innocence lawyers to help identify cases that call for closer scrutiny. It also provides the basis for reform measures to further limit the damage done to the truth-seeking process through the use of jailhouse informants and other incentivized witnesses.
Recommended Citation
Russell D. Covey, Manufacturing False Convictions: Lies and the Corrupt Use of Jailhouse Informants, 96 U. Colo. L. Rev. 131 (2025).
Institutional Repository Citation
Russell D. Covey,
Manufacturing False Convictions: Lies and the Corrupt Use of Jailhouse Informants,
Faculty Publications By Year
3681
(2025)
https://readingroom.law.gsu.edu/faculty_pub/3681
Volume
96
First Page
131
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