The work, described plainly.
Three pillars. Each one is a separate conversation, a separate kind of room, a separate set of hands shaking at the start. I take engagements one at a time.
Case awareness campaigns
For the families searching for answers, and the voices fighting to be heard.
Most of this work starts with attention. Cases that may involve wrongful convictions are often overlooked, underreported, or forgotten over time. These campaigns are designed to help bring public visibility back to the people still fighting for justice.
Each awareness campaign runs across a focused 30-day rollout that combines community petitions, case reporting, video storytelling, and outreach efforts aimed at building support around the case. Some videos break down the details of the conviction; others allow the accused to speak directly through recorded phone calls or personal testimony proclaiming their innocence.
We also reach out to innocence organizations, attorneys, advocates, and media platforms to encourage further review and possible pro bono consideration. The goal is simple: create enough awareness that the case can no longer be ignored.
If you believe someone's story deserves a larger platform, this campaign helps bring visibility, support, and momentum to their fight for justice.
Reentry & life coaching
For people walking back out into the world, and the young men trying to build a life from the ground up.
Reentry is procedural before it is anything else. Week 1 we do paperwork. Week 2 we do the bank. Week 3 we do the conversation with the family member who's been holding on too long, or not long enough. I don't sell hope; I help you build a record.
I also coach young men who weren't incarcerated but who are trying to put together a stable financial life — savings, credit, a household that holds. We meet weekly. I show up; you show up.
Legal & judicial insight
Guest lectures and case reviews for law students, professors, and counsel doing the work.
I'm not a lawyer. What I am is the documented record of how a case can go wrong from inside the case. Law students at UNC, Campbell, and Rutgers have invited me back because the seminar conversation gets honest in a way it can't otherwise.
Case review work is case-by-case. I read the file. I tell you what I see — what the defendant likely knew, what they didn't, what the system missed. Always with you, never instead of you.
Send a note describing the brief. Five business days for a personal response.
30 minutes. I want to understand the room before I walk into it.
We agree on shape, cadence, and — where relevant — rate, by email.
Always documented. Always confidential. We begin.