Project 6 Articles

  • This summer, Project 6 was delighted to welcome home Paul Luckey, after 42 years of incarceration. Paul was one of Project 6’s very first cases and we were able to match him with an outstanding team of pro bono attorneys who won his release. Paul......

  • Hosea did not know what to expect when he applied to Project 6 in early 2022. He had been incarcerated for 25 years and had an exemplary prison record. Despite this, he had been denied parole several times. To add to his frustration, he had......

  • In 2002, Michael Farmer pled guilty to two counts of first-degree murder. He was 17 at the time, and was subsequently sentenced to two consecutive life sentences with the possibility of parole. He was thus classified as a “juvenile lifer.” Now, 20 years later, he......

  • Chris Brown was one of Project 6’s earliest supporters and he will be greatly missed. Here is his life story as told by his family. Charles Christopher Brown was born in Dover, Delaware, the oldest of three children. His father was a surveyor and his......

  • In 1984, Lloyd Hall was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for a burglary that he did not commit. Lloyd received this sentence under Maryland’s “three strikes” law. This law permits the State to seek a mandatory life sentence against a......

  • In December 1865, Georgia became the 27th state to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment and thus enumerated the abolition of slavery into the United States Constitution. However, the Thirteenth Amendment contains a lesser-known exemption clause that allows slavery as a “punishment for crime whereof the party......

  • During the height of the “tough on crime” era of the 1990’s, Gov. Parris Glendening, declared that “life means life” and therefore he would not grant parole to any prisoner who was serving a life sentence. Since then, both Republican and Democratic governors have followed......