@clipcollectionsss: Jaycinco and Duke rizzing girls 😭👀 #amp #kai #shark #fyp #jaycincoo #duke

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Sunday 08 June 2025 01:10:35 GMT
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diceverdon
Dice 🎲 verdon :
See the hand shake
2025-06-08 14:02:06
0
crunchberrys
CrunchBerrys :
shark audio way to much 💯💯💯
2025-06-08 01:44:29
0
__g4el.17
__g4el.17 :
❤️
2025-06-11 03:16:56
0
fatomi379
Abdallah379 zabewa :
🙏
2025-06-10 16:47:37
0
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Farah Jama's life was turned upside down when in 2008 he was falsely accused and convicted of rape and sentenced to six years in jail. Despite having no witnesses, and an alibi for being no where near the alleged crime, the prosecution relied on contaminated DNA evidence to secure a conviction. Jama, a young Somali-Australian, was left feeling hopeless and lost until his mother decided to search for a new lawyer who could help her son. That's when Kimani Boden, a Congolese-Australian lawyer stepped in. Boden took up the challenge to investigate Jama's case and, to everyone's surprise, found that neither Jama's previous lawyers nor the prosecutors had examined a crucial file on the initial complaint against Jama. Boden's investigation proved Jama's innocence, and after 16 months behind bars, he was finally exonerated. He went on to sue the state of Victoria for the wrongful conviction that had robbed him of his freedom. Jama's story is a tragic example of the vulnerability of people from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds to miscarriages of justice, especially when financial resources are an issue. Prejudice and stereotyping can play a role, and there is no room for laziness in the criminal justice system when someone's future is at stake. The Jama case has become a beacon of hope for those who have lost faith in the criminal justice system. It highlights the limitations and potential for human error in DNA evidence, which is often viewed as infallible. The case shows that new processes are needed in the way we handle scientific or medical evidence, and that the current trial by jury system is not capable of evaluating certain types of evidence. Farah Jama's experience is a wake-up call for all of us to demand more transparency, fairness, and equality in the criminal justice system. His life was forever changed by a wrongful conviction, but thanks to the courage and dedication of his lawyer, Kimani Boden, he was able to regain his freedom and his life. #africanaustralian  . . . #innocent #dna #law #exonerated  #wrongfulconviction #humanrights #court #melbourne #victoria #tiktoklaw
Farah Jama's life was turned upside down when in 2008 he was falsely accused and convicted of rape and sentenced to six years in jail. Despite having no witnesses, and an alibi for being no where near the alleged crime, the prosecution relied on contaminated DNA evidence to secure a conviction. Jama, a young Somali-Australian, was left feeling hopeless and lost until his mother decided to search for a new lawyer who could help her son. That's when Kimani Boden, a Congolese-Australian lawyer stepped in. Boden took up the challenge to investigate Jama's case and, to everyone's surprise, found that neither Jama's previous lawyers nor the prosecutors had examined a crucial file on the initial complaint against Jama. Boden's investigation proved Jama's innocence, and after 16 months behind bars, he was finally exonerated. He went on to sue the state of Victoria for the wrongful conviction that had robbed him of his freedom. Jama's story is a tragic example of the vulnerability of people from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds to miscarriages of justice, especially when financial resources are an issue. Prejudice and stereotyping can play a role, and there is no room for laziness in the criminal justice system when someone's future is at stake. The Jama case has become a beacon of hope for those who have lost faith in the criminal justice system. It highlights the limitations and potential for human error in DNA evidence, which is often viewed as infallible. The case shows that new processes are needed in the way we handle scientific or medical evidence, and that the current trial by jury system is not capable of evaluating certain types of evidence. Farah Jama's experience is a wake-up call for all of us to demand more transparency, fairness, and equality in the criminal justice system. His life was forever changed by a wrongful conviction, but thanks to the courage and dedication of his lawyer, Kimani Boden, he was able to regain his freedom and his life. #africanaustralian . . . #innocent #dna #law #exonerated #wrongfulconviction #humanrights #court #melbourne #victoria #tiktoklaw

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