How prosecutorial misconduct plays into public trust in evidence for murder exonerations
According to one of the studies shared in today's free Crime Research Update.
Hello! I'm Aaron Jacklin, and this is The Art of Explaining Crime, an independent newsletter that helps you think and write about crime.
Use this tip sheet to help you integrate the latest research into your work. It's an experimental directory of new crime research published by the academic journals that I monitor.

The journals must be taking a little while to ramp up their publishing because this is the second day this week that there were fewer than five new studies. As a result, we’re going to forgo the usual directory format and just provide the links to the two studies published online since yesterday’s Crime Research Update:
Journal: Journal of Experimental Criminology
Keywords: murder, digital, police, conviction
First author: John C. Navarro [+1 other author]
Journal: Victims & Offenders
Keywords: sex trafficking, offender, victim, prosecution
First author: Vanessa Bouche (LBJ School of Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA) [+2 other authors]
Crime Research Update tip sheets are usually early-access for paid subscribers, but today’s will be free due to there only being two studies.
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Crime Research Update and Five Studies About are the output of my research discovery system.