Every person in the table below confessed to a crime they did not commit — and was later exonerated. Compiled from the National Registry of Exonerations, each case links to the actual court records and the news coverage behind it. False confessions aren't rare accidents; they're predictable outcomes of specific interrogation practices. Use this as a study resource — then learn the interviewing methods that prevent them.
Search or scroll the 480+ false confession wrongful conviction (FCWC) documented cases below. Click any name to open that person's page with links to court records, media, information and news coverage.
Name | State | Crime | Convicted | Exonerated |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Christopher Abernathy | Illinois | Murder | 1987 | 2015 |
Eruby Abrego | Illinois | Murder | 2004 | 2022 |
Johnathan Adams | Georgia | Murder | 2005 | 2006 |
Reginald Adams | Louisiana | Murder | 1983 | 2014 |
Gregory Agnew | Illinois | Robbery | 1988 | 2001 |
Omar Aguirre | Illinois | Murder | 1999 | 2003 |
Kadafi Ala | New York | Attempt, Violent | 2001 | 2021 |
Joel Alcox | California | Murder | 1987 | 2016 |
Donovan Allen | Washington | Murder | 2002 | 2015 |
George Jr. Allen | Missouri | Murder | 1983 | 2013 |
James Allen | Illinois | Murder | 1987 | 2021 |
Fernando Almanza | Arizona | Child Sex Abuse | 2013 | 2024 |
Arthur Almendarez | Illinois | Murder | 1990 | 2022 |
William Amor | Illinois | Murder | 1997 | 2018 |
Daniel Andersen | Illinois | Murder | 1982 | 2015 |
James Andrews | Illinois | Murder | 1985 | 2008 |
Richard Anthony | Illinois | Assault | 1994 | 2025 |
Bladimil Arroyo | New York | Murder | 2002 | 2019 |
Isaac Aryee | Colorado | Child Sex Abuse | 2011 | 2020 |
William Avery | Wisconsin | Murder | 2005 | 2010 |
Gabriel Baddeley | Washington | Arson | 2002 | 2004 |
Darryl Bailey | Tennessee | Murder | 1994 | 2000 |
Kevin Bailey | Illinois | Murder | 1990 | 2018 |
Ben Baker | Illinois | Drug Possession or Sale | 2006 | 2016 |
Edward Baker | Pennsylvania | Murder | 1974 | 2002 |
Jarvis Ballard | Louisiana | Sexual Assault | 1999 | 2021 |
Gregory Banks | Illinois | Murder | 1985 | 1990 |
Medell Banks | Alabama | Manslaughter | 2001 | 2003 |
Joshua Bargery | Tennessee | Murder | 2015 | 2022 |
Corey Batchelor | Illinois | Murder | 1991 | 2018 |
David Bates | Illinois | Murder | 1985 | 1995 |
Ronnie Baylor | California | Sexual Assault | 1987 | 1996 |
George Bell | New York | Murder | 1999 | 2021 |
Francisco Benitez | Illinois | Murder | 1991 | 2023 |
Sandeep Bharadia | Georgia | Sexual Assault | 2003 | 2025 |
David Bintz | Wisconsin | Murder | 2000 | 2024 |
Phillip Bivens | Mississippi | Murder | 1980 | 2010 |
Justin Black | West Virginia | Murder | 2008 | 2021 |
James Blackmon | North Carolina | Murder | 1988 | 2019 |
Brian Boles | New York | Murder | 1995 | 2025 |
Marcellius Bradford | Illinois | Kidnapping | 1988 | 2001 |
Ted Bradford | Washington | Sexual Assault | 1996 | 2010 |
Timothy Britt | North Carolina | Child Sex Abuse | 2013 | 2017 |
Robert Britton | Illinois | Sexual Assault | 1996 | 2014 |
Corey Brock | Michigan | Sexual Assault | 2000 | 2025 |
Stephen Brodie | Texas | Child Sex Abuse | 1993 | 2010 |
Arthur Brown | Illinois | Murder | 1990 | 2017 |
Dennis Brown | Louisiana | Sexual Assault | 1985 | 2005 |
Keith Brown | North Carolina | Sexual Assault | 1993 | 1999 |
Leon Brown | North Carolina | Murder | 1984 | 2014 |
Marcel Brown | Illinois | Murder | 2011 | 2018 |
Timothy Brown | Florida | Murder | 1993 | 2003 |
David Bryant | New York | Murder | 1976 | 2019 |
Wayne Burgess | Tennessee | Murder | 1999 | 2023 |
Les Burns | Fed-VA | Drug Possession or Sale | 2014 | 2016 |
Huwe Burton | New York | Murder | 1991 | 2019 |
Keith Bush | New York | Murder | 1976 | 2019 |
Sabrina Butler | Mississippi | Murder | 1990 | 1995 |
Gerardo Cabanillas | California | Sexual Assault | 1995 | 2023 |
Jeremiah Cain | Illinois | Murder | 2001 | 2022 |
Eric Caine | Illinois | Murder | 1989 | 2011 |
Terance Calhoun | Michigan | Child Sex Abuse | 2007 | 2022 |
George Jr. Calicut | Michigan | Murder | 1999 | 2026 |
Reginald Cameron | New York | Robbery | 1996 | 2023 |
Robert Cantu | Texas | Drug Possession or Sale | 2009 | 2015 |
Anthony Caravella | Florida | Murder | 1984 | 2010 |
Gregorio Cardona | Illinois | Murder | 1989 | 2025 |
Robert Cardona | Illinois | Murder | 1989 | 2025 |
Delbert Carrillo | California | Drug Possession or Sale | 1998 | 2000 |
Miguel Castillo | Illinois | Murder | 1991 | 2001 |
Allen Causey | Texas | Murder | 1992 | 2025 |
Edwin Chandler | Kentucky | Manslaughter | 1995 | 2009 |
Lambert Charles | New York | Manslaughter | 1993 | 1998 |
Louis Charriez | New York | Murder | 1997 | 2023 |
Carl Chatman | Illinois | Sexual Assault | 2004 | 2013 |
Emmanuel Chavez | California | Weapon Possession or Sale | 1996 | 2000 |
Frances Choy | Massachusetts | Murder | 2011 | 2020 |
Dayna Christoph | Washington | Child Sex Abuse | 1995 | 2000 |
Tom Edwin Chumley | Georgia | Murder | 2005 | 2009 |
Prakash Churaman | New York | Murder | 2018 | 2022 |
Nevest Coleman | Illinois | Murder | 1997 | 2017 |
Charles Collins | New York | Murder | 1995 | 2025 |
Edgardo Colon | Illinois | Murder | 2017 | 2023 |
Robert Carroll Coney | Texas | Robbery | 1966 | 2004 |
Michael Cox | California | Drug Possession or Sale | 1999 | 2001 |
Mark Craighead | Michigan | Manslaughter | 2002 | 2022 |
Rolando Cruz | Illinois | Murder | 1985 | 1995 |
Ricky Cullipher | Virginia | Assault | 1997 | 2001 |
Henry Cunningham | Washington | Child Sex Abuse | 1994 | 1999 |
Connie Dahl | California | Manslaughter | 2003 | 2024 |
Peter Dallas | Florida | Murder | 1991 | 1992 |
Alphonso Davis | New York | Murder | 2003 | 2024 |
Danny Davis | Illinois | Murder | 1992 | 2025 |
Robert Davis | Virginia | Murder | 2004 | 2016 |
Kelly Daws | Texas | Conspiracy | 2019 | 2022 |
Arnold Day | Illinois | Murder | 1994 | 2018 |
Selwyn Days | New York | Murder | 2004 | 2017 |
James Dean | Nebraska | Accessory to Murder | 1989 | 2009 |
Arturo DeLeon-Reyes | Illinois | Murder | 2000 | 2017 |
Jeffrey Deskovic | New York | Murder | 1990 | 2006 |
Why False Confessions Happen
Innocent people confess more often than most assume — especially juveniles, people with intellectual disabilities, and anyone subjected to long, high-pressure interrogations. Coercive tactics, implied promises, and feeding non-public case details can all produce a confession that feels airtight in court but is simply false. The cases in this database show the pattern repeating across decades and jurisdictions. The remedy isn't softer questioning — it's disciplined, evidence-based interviewing.
Before the False Confession: The Failures That Set It Up
A false confession is the last domino, not the first. By the time someone admits to something they didn't do, the investigation has usually already failed in three quieter ways.
Investigative failure and tunnel vision. Once an investigator settles on a suspect early, the goal quietly shifts from finding out what happened to confirming what they already believe. Alternative explanations stop being tested. The interview stops being a search for information and becomes a search for agreement.
Contaminated case information. Non-public details — how, where, what was used — get fed to the subject through leading questions or careless disclosure. When those details reappear in the "confession," it looks airtight. It isn't. The information came from the investigator, not the person.
Confirmation bias. After that, everything gets read as proof: nervousness becomes guilt, an inconsistency becomes a lie, a denial becomes "resistance." The case builds itself around a conclusion instead of the evidence.
Underneath all three is a systemic gap: legacy processes don't treat statements like evidence. Physical evidence gets collected, documented, preserved, and protected from contamination. What people say — the most fragile and most influential evidence of all — is too often generated on the fly, unrecorded, and shaped by the very person collecting it. Fix that discipline, and most false confessions never get made.
This Happens in Workplace Investigations, Too
The same dynamics play out in HR, corporate security, compliance, and internal investigations. An accusation lands, a subject is presumed responsible, questions get leading, and pressure builds—and an "admission" resolves the matter cleanly. Clean isn't the same as true. The cost shows up as wrongful discipline, ruined careers, reversed findings, and liability. Whether the setting is a precinct or a conference room, the fix is identical: interview to learn, not to confirm — and treat every statement as evidence to be collected carefully, not manufactured.