Exoneration in a sentence as a noun

News of your exoneration was buried on page 10.

When I was working there, our exoneration rate for cases that made it to DNA testing was 50%.

> You were well aware that if I had gone to trial I would have gotten full exoneration.

Charges against Michael Schwern were dropped and not pursued by the DA, but this is not the same as an exoneration.

Prosecutors declining to charge isn't the same as exoneration, as much as a defense lawyer might want to convince you of such.

Trump doesn’t need Mueller’s exoneration, and a statement like that speaks volumes, to me anyway, about the mindset of the person making it.

If it succeeds, we could potentially see even better exoneration numbers for the innocent, and I'm not certain how to weight that against my privacy.

I think you would find very few life sentence inmates willing to convert themselves to death row inmates for the chance at an Innocence Project exoneration.

The results are an even more kafka-esque nightmare for the innocent accused, who must wait in holding cells for court dockets to open up to make time for their exoneration.

Read the letter:----Dear Gurbaksh,You have come across to the public as nothing but an utter... jerk -- if you want to say "You were well aware that if I had gone to trial I would have gotten full exoneration.

Hey, maybe Joe was acting out because of a traumatic event in his past?Look, I can sympathize with her because of what she's been through, but that doesn't earn her exoneration or excuses for her "bad decisions".

I suppose you could assume that a conviction means that the accusation is true, and that exoneration means that accusation is false, but there are a lot of cases where it's not known one way or another.

Exoneration definitions

noun

the condition of being relieved from blame or obligation

noun

the act of vindicating or defending against criticism or censure etc.; "friends provided a vindication of his position"

See also: vindication