At 17, Jarrett Adams was just a boy when the gavel fell. Wrongfully convicted, silenced, and sentenced to 28 years—for a crime he didn’t commit.
But prison did not swallow him.
In a cell meant to break him, he built himself instead—book by book, law by law. He studied case law in the prison library. He helped other inmates fight for justice. He became the advocate no one had been for him.
Eventually, his voice grew loud enough to reach the Wisconsin Innocence Project. And after nearly a decade behind bars, the courts admitted what he already knew: he was innocent.
He walked out at 26, not as a victim, but as a warrior. He earned his law degree. He returned to courtrooms—this time, on the other side of the bench. And he now fights for those left behind, running a nonprofit called Life After Justice.
Jarrett Adams didn’t just survive injustice. He transformed it.
He turned a stolen childhood into a career of defending the voiceless. He became the kind of man who helps others find the light—even if he had to learn to walk through darkness first.
His story is not just about a broken system. It’s about what’s possible when one man refuses to let it break him.