Downstate Illinois Innocence Project®
Request Assistance
The Downstate Illinois Innocence Project provides investigative and legal research services to attorneys representing inmates who both the attorneys and the Project have good reason to believe did not commit the crimes for which they were convicted. The Project involves degree seeking undergraduate and graduate students, under the supervision of the inmate’s attorney and Project faculty and/or criminal investigator, in providing these services. The Project does not provide legal representation directly to defendants or inmates.
Our resources are limited and we are able to assist only a very few inmates at a time. As a result, to receive the assistance of the Innocence Project the inmate's case must meet all of these guidelines:
- The inmate must be seeking to establish his or her actual innocence of the crime(s) for which he or she is incarcerated. More specifically, we take those cases in which there appears to be a significant chance that substantial evidence can be found to prove one innocent. Further, once we have agreed to work on a case, we reserve the right to withdraw for any reason, including an inability to prove a claim of actual innocence.
- The inmate must be represented by an attorney who also seeks the assistance of the Project in handling the case. The attorney must be willing to have the Project work with him or her, assign tasks to students, and supervise the work and work products of those students.
- The inmate must have been convicted of a felony crime committed in downstate Illinois (counties below Interstate 80).
- In most instances, the inmate must be incarcerated and have at least 48 months remaining on your sentence. The substantial amount of time involved in investigation and follow-up activity makes it impractical to provide assistance on cases where the remaining prison time is less than that.
- Finally, the Project does not provide assistance to individuals who are awaiting trial or whose only claim is that their rights were violated. The program usually cannot help in the following situations:
- (1) where a defendant admits to killing or assaulting someone, but claims that it was done in self-defense;
- (2) where a defendant admits to sexual contact with a person, but claims that the person consented to the contact;
- (3) where a defendant was convicted as an accessory (or as a party-to-the-crime) and seeks to show that he or she did not play a major role in the crime
In deciding whether a case meets the requirement that there be a strong likelihood that the inmate is actually innocent of the crime for which he or she has been convicted, project staff and the Advisory Board will exam such factors as the following:
- The absence of physical evidence linking the inmate to the crime.
- Problems with the reliability of eye witnesses.
- Lack of credibility of an inmate’s confession.
- The inconsistency of the nature of the crime as compared to the background of the inmate.
- The identification of alternative suspects.
- The availability of DNA evidence that might exonerate the inmate.
- The availability of new evidence exonerating the inmate.
- Police or prosecutorial misconduct.
- The length of time and consistency of the inmate’s claim of innocence.
An attorney who believes his or her inmate's case meets all of these guidelines and would like to seek the assistance of the Downstate Illinois Innocence Project can request assistance by completing the “Attorney Request for Assistance” form and returning it to us. The attorney can e-mail the form to Innocence Proj@uis.edu or send the form to this address:
Downstate Illinois Innocence Project
Institute for Legal and Policy Studies
University of Illinois at Springfield
One University Plaza, MS PAC 451
Springfield, IL. 62703-5407.
After we have received an attorney request, we will get back in touch with the attorney as quickly as we can. Be aware however that because the project is working at capacity, it may be awhile before new cases can be accepted.

