![Nancy Smith, OIP exoneree, sits in an empty room](https://www.uc.edu/news/articles/2024/02/n21227846/jcr:content/image.img.cq5dam.thumbnail.500.500.jpg/1708112958453.jpg)
The New York Times: Using opera to shine a light on wrongful imprisonment
UC Law’s Ohio Innocence Project and signature opera highlighted in national article
“Blind Injustice,” an innovative opera based on the stories of six people freed through the work of the Ohio Innocence Project at the University of Cincinnati College of Law, has been featured in a February 15, 2024, New York Times article.
Wrote the author Javier Hernández, “Questions of prejudice, guilt and resilience run throughout “Blind Injustice,” composed by Scott Davenport Richards to a libretto by David Cote, which has its East Coast premiere on Friday (Feb. 16) at Peak Performances at Montclair State University.”
The opera, which was originally commissioned by the world-renowned Cincinnati Opera, premiered to national acclaim in 2019. It explores the effects of wrongful convictions on the prisoners and their families, and the help they received to overturn their convictions. The opera is based on the book “Blind Injustice,” authored by OIP co-founder and director, Professor Mark Godsey.
The opera “Blind Injustice” tells the story of Rickey Jackson, who spent 39 years in prison for a crime he did not commit; Nancy Smith, a Head Start bus driver falsely accused of molesting children and who spent more than 14 years in prison; Clarence Elkins, convicted of the murder of his mother-in-law and rape of her young granddaughter; and the East Cleveland 3: Laurese Glover, Eugene Johnson, and Derrick Wheatt, witnesses in a shooting who, despite tainted evidence, were convicted.
The Times article reported: “'Blind Injustice' offers a spirited call for reforms to the American criminal justice system, which is portrayed as callous, capricious and unrelenting. It is an opera about stories a society tells itself to justify routine dehumanization of its most vulnerable citizens.”
Exonerees Rickey Jackson and Nancy Smith, along with Professor Godsey will be in attendance at the New York premiere. In addition to experiencing the opera, the three will participate in a conversation with Godsey following the performances.
Read the New York Times article (Story exists behind a paywall).
Featured image at top of Nancy Smith. Photo/Lisa Ventre/UC Marketing + Brand
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