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Jarrett Adams
Jarrett Adams
01:13

Jarrett Adams

The Innocence Project

New York, NY USA

"Close your eyes and picture something you want, no matter what is in front of it, that you would do anything humanly possible to get to...all you have to do is keep fighting until you figure out a way to get to that other side."

Career Roadmap

Jarrett's work combines: Law, Non-Profit Organizations, and Helping People

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Day In The Life

Attorney

I am an attorney with the Innocence Project, Co-Founder of Life After Justice, and advocate for criminal justice reform.

My Day to Day

I spend most days as an attorney working on a variety of cases including trials, arrests & arraignments, sentencing, and sentence modification. It involves reading and researching the case I am working on, getting to know my client, and then developing a defense or prosecution depending on the case. I also work with the Innocence Project to review potential false imprisonment cases and bring those back to trial to get them overturned.

Skills & Education

Advice for getting started

I don't forgive them. I'm still very angry, but I use that anger constructively and use it to motivate me forward. I want to use my experiences to positively effect others and ensure this doesn't happen to anyone else.

Here's the path I took:

  • High School

  • Associate's Degree

    Liberal Arts and Sciences/Liberal Studies

    South Suburban College

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Criminal Justice/Law Enforcement Administration

    Roosevelt University

  • Doctorate

    Law

    Loyola University-Chicago

Life & Career Milestones

My path in life took a while to figure out

  • 1.

    Born and raised on the South Side of Chicago by a single mother.

  • 2.

    When he was 17 years old, he was falsely accused of a rape while attending a college party with some friends.

  • 3.

    He couldn’t afford to hire a lawyer, so the court appointed him one—the lawyer failed to call some key witnesses or enter a defense, which resulted in him receiving a 28-year prison sentence.

  • 4.

    He had served almost 10 years of his sentence before the Innocence Project took his case, got his conviction reversed, and had his record expunged.

  • 5.

    He was released in February of 2007 and was back in school by April of that year—says that he knew getting an education was the key to getting himself reacclimated into society.

  • 6.

    Started at community college and eventually went on to graduate with his law degree from Loyola University Chicago’s School of Law.

  • 7.

    His first job out of law school was working as a clerk in the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago—the same court that overturned his conviction.

  • 8.

    He now works closely with the Innocence Project, in addition to running his own law office and continuing to act as an advocate for criminal justice reform.

Defining Moments

How I responded to discouragement

  • THE NOISE

    Messages from Society in general:

    You have to forgive the people that did you wrong and move on.

  • How I responded:

    I don't forgive them. I'm still very angry, but I use that anger constructively and use it to motivate me forward. I want to use my experiences to positively effect others and ensure this doesn't happen to anyone else.

Experiences and challenges that shaped me

Click to expand

  • I was in prison for 10 years for something I didn't do. Once I was released, I struggled to acclimate myself to society and the shadow of being in prison followed me wherever I went.

  • At the time I was accused, I couldn't afford a good lawyer so the court appointed one for me (a bad one), which ultimately led to me going to prison in the first place.

  • I was raised by a single mother.