Partners + Supporters

Joining in our mission to bring reliable, highly skilled assistance to every person released from prison after wrongful conviction.

Partners

To maximize the support we can make available, we partner with lawyers and law firms, university law clinics, accountants, therapists, and others, who provide free services to our many clients. Here are a few examples of our collaborations:


Harvard Law School – Federal Tax Clinic

“Our collaboration with After Innocence has provided excellent opportunities for our law students to learn about wrongful conviction, and represent these individuals in disputes with the IRS.”

Keith Fogg
Clinical Professor of Law; Director, Federal Tax Clinic
Harvard Law School

Our partnership with Harvard Law School’s Federal Tax Clinic has helped 34 After Innocence clients resolve tax problems. 

 
Harvard Law Legal Services Logo

Pacific Dental Services

“Through this unique collaboration, dozens of Smile Generation trusted offices nationwide provide After Innocence clients with the significant dental work many of them need in order to restore healthy smiles and put them back on the road to many years of good oral health.”

Carli Kingsley
Manager for Corporate Social Responsibility
Pacific Dental Services

Since 2018, our partnership with Pacific Dental Services and more than 60 of their Smile Generation trusted offices has delivered more than $750,000 in donated dental services to 187 After Innocence clients across 22 states.

 
Pacific Dental Services Logo

Kravis Lab for Social Impact

“After Innocence Director Jon Eldan was an exceptional mentor for our students. By sharing his encyclopedic knowledge of our systemic failures to provide effective transitional services to exonerees, and his detailed awareness of each client's personal challenges, our students were able to understand the depth of the injustices that continue even after release, and developed tools to become more impactful leaders with a deeper sense of purpose. Overall, it was a transformative experience for us all.”

Gemma Bulos
Director, Kravis Lab for Social Impact
Claremont McKenna College

Since 2020, students at the Kravis Lab for Social Impact at Claremont McKenna College in California have had paid internships with After Innocence.

 
Kravis Lab for Social Impact Logo

Partner with Us!

We’re always looking for collaborations that bring additional resources and support to our clients.

Supporters

Our work is made possible through the generous support of many individual donors, foundations and grantors, including:

  • Jason Flom

  • The Peter & Mary Levin Family Foundation

  • Jonathan Logan Family Foundation

  • The Reva & David Logan Foundation

  • The Sparkjoy Foundation

  • Loevy & Loevy

  • Denise & Frank Quattrone Foundation

  • California Board of State & Community Corrections

  • Silicon Valley Community Foundation

  • The Henry Bull Foundation

  • The Chichester duPont Foundation

  • Charles K. Edmondson, Jr. Family Foundation

  • John Isidor & Sandy Kaltman Charitable Foundation

  • The Ittleson Foundation


Charles K. Edmondson, Jr. Family Foundation

“Over many years, we have been gratified to work with After Innocence as it contributes meaningfully to the well-being of those who have been exonerated after wrongful imprisonment. My wife Eleanor and I look forward to continuing our support for this invaluable work.”

Charles K. Edmondson, Jr.

 

Jonathan Logan Family Foundation

“We have great respect for After Innocence and their work in advocating for people reentering their communities after exoneration.”

Jonathan Logan

Jonathan Logan Family Foundation Logo

Join Us in Supporting America’s Wrongfully Convicted

After Innocence is the nation’s only non-profit ready and able to provide assistance to anyone released after wrongful incarceration, anywhere in the nation, no matter how long they’ve been out of prison.

Join our community of supporters and together we’ll do more for our current clients, scale our operation to reach nearly every exoneree in the country, and promote greater government accountability for what exonerees have been through.