Norris Henderson
Louisiana
Norris Henderson, Founder and Executive Director of VOTE and Voters Organized to Educate, leverages his 27 years of wrongful incarceration to advocate for public policy reform in areas like police accountability and public defense, while actively working to uplift communities of color across Louisiana through various leadership roles and community outreach.
Kerry Myers
Louisiana
Kerry Myers is the Deputy Director of the Louisiana Parole Project and an award-winning journalist dedicated to aiding individuals who were sentenced to life as children and others with extreme sentences. He spent 27 years fighting for his own exoneration after being wrongfully convicted of murder. He now advocates for justice reform through his writing and public speaking.
Herman Lindsey
Florida
Herman, the 135th person exonerated from death row in the U.S. and the 23rd from Florida, views his wrongful conviction as a lesson that fuels his advocacy for criminal justice reform, trauma awareness, and the abolition of the death penalty, as he now works with at-risk youth and speaks internationally on these crucial issues.
Fernando Bermudez
New York
Fernando, wrongfully convicted of murder and imprisoned for over 18 years, was exonerated in 2009, becoming the first Latin-American male in New York to be cleared on actual innocence grounds, and has since transformed his life into a powerful advocacy and public speaking career while pursuing his creative passions.