Deandra Bieneman

DIRECTOR of development

EMAIL: dbieneman@gn-ip.org

Deandra Bieneman, excitedly joined the Great North Innocence Project in April 2022 as the Director of Development. Along with a deep passion for justice and helping people positively impact their communities, Deandra brings a decade of nonprofit experience in fundraising, donor relations, corporate engagement, community outreach, volunteer management, and program management.

Deandra is a Certified Fund Raising Executive (CFRE) and earned a bachelor’s degree in International Studies from the University of Wisconsin - Madison. Prior to joining GNIP, Deandra held roles at Minnesota nonprofit organizations with missions that deeply resonated with her, including Open Arms of Minnesota, Twin Cities Food Justice, The Link, and Free Arts Minnesota.

 

Hayley Poxleitner

DIRECTOR of Communications & Community Outreach

EMAIL: hdrozdowski-poxleitner@gn-ip.org

Hayley Poxleitner joined the Great North Innocence Project in April 2022 as the Director of Communications & Community Outreach. She is passionate about advancing human rights and improving the criminal legal system by leveraging strategic communications, meaningful stakeholder engagement, and policy advocacy.

Prior to joining GNIP, Hayley worked at the Women's Foundation of Minnesota as research & communications manager. Before that, she contributed to research and developed policy recommendations in partnership with Refugees International as a research fellow advocating for increased refugee participation in United Nations convenings, alternatives to immigrant detention in the United States, and the abolition of family separation at the U.S.-Mexico border. She is also co-author of an article published in the Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies examining social support interventions for refugees and new immigrants.

Hayley holds a master's degree in Human Rights from the University of Minnesota and a bachelor’s degree in Comparative Cultures & French from Michigan State University.

 
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Sara H. Jones

Executive director

Email: sjones@gn-ip.org

Sara Jones received her law degree from the University of Minnesota, and her B.S. from Northwestern University. She began her legal career as an Assistant Attorney General under Hubert H. (“Skip”) Humphrey, III, practicing in the Solicitor General section. Following that, she practiced commercial litigation at Popham Haik and Nilan Johnson & Lewis.

Her commitment to public service evolved into a career shift to the nonprofit sector, including working in advancement at William Mitchell College of Law (now Mitchell Hamline) and the University of Minnesota Law School. Sara is a Past-President of Minnesota Women Lawyers and serves on its Advisory Board. She also is a member of the board of We Are All Criminals and served on the board of the Council on Crime and Justice.

The roots of Sara’s commitment to the cause of justice were planted by her father, C. Paul Jones, who served as Minnesota’s (first) State Public Defender for nearly 25 years and taught criminal and constitutional law at William Mitchell throughout his career. She grew up learning from him about justice, mercy, opportunity, and seeing the humanity in everyone. She gained the understanding that, for our justice system to work as it should, all participants (law enforcement, prosecutors, defenders, the courts, and lawmakers) have to work cooperatively and be equally committed to upholding the law, seeking justice, using best practices, and serving with integrity.

As Executive Director of the Great North Innocence Project, Sara leads the organization’s vision and strategy, financial management and fund development, events, community outreach and public relations, criminal justice policy initiatives, and staff supervision.

 
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James (Jim) Mayer

Managing Attorney

Email: jmayer@gn-ip.org

James (Jim) Mayer is a managing attorney at GNIP where he screens, investigates, and litigates cases involving claims of actual innocence. He leads GNIP’s policy advocacy in North Dakota, and teaches courses on wrongful convictions and leads innocence clinics at North Dakota and Minnesota law schools.

Before joining the Great North Innocence Project, Jim spent more than a decade as a private practice litigator. During his time in private practice, he was involved in innocence work as a pro bono attorney, including death penalty cases in Louisiana. Jim was co-lead counsel in the post-conviction case of Michael Wearry, whose capital conviction was vacated by the United States Supreme Court in 2016. 

He also played a key role in the creation and development of the Minnesota Conviction Review Unit, one of just a handful of state-wide conviction review units in the United States, part of a groundbreaking partnership between the Great North Innocence Project and the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office.

 

Andrew Markquart

Managing attorney

Email: amarkquart@gn-ip.org

Andrew is a managing attorney at Great North Innocence Project where he investigates cases of wrongful convictions and represents individuals in connection with post-conviction litigation in state and federal court. In addition to work in Minnesota, Andrew leads Great North Innocence Project's South Dakota practice. Andrew also advocates in Minnesota and South Dakota for public policies directed toward preventing wrongful convictions.

Prior to joining Great North Innocence Project, Andrew worked as a litigation associate at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP in New York where he did extensive pro bono work on criminal and immigration matters. As a student at Columbia Law School, Andrew co-authored with Professor James Liebman and others an extended law review piece examining the wrongful conviction and execution of Carlos DeLuna that was subsequently released in book form as The Wrong Carlos (2014). The book formed the basis for the 2021 documentary The Phantom.

Andrew oversees Great North Innocence Project's clinics at the University of Minnesota and University of South Dakota. He also teaches a course on wrongful convictions at Mitchell Hamline School of Law.

 

Anna McGinn

bank of america fellow

Email: amcginn@gn-ip.org


Anna joined GNIP in August 2022 as a Bank of America Fellow. In her role, she investigates and litigates claims of actual innocence alongside GN-IP’s staff attorneys Jim Mayer and Andrew Markquart. She graduated from Notre Dame Law School in Spring 2022.

During law school, Anna served on the executive editorial board of her school’s Journal on Emerging Technologies. After training to become a registered family mediator in the state of Indiana, she practiced mediation at the Notre Dame Applied Mediation Clinic.  Anna also worked in the expungement clinic at Notre Dame, where she completed expungement petitions on behalf of persons with criminal records for submission to local state courts.

Prior to attending law school, Anna served as an AmeriCorps member in the Minneapolis Public Schools’ truancy and credit retention and recovery program. She received her bachelor’s degree from Carleton College in 2018.

 

Yariet Montes Huerta

Advancement & Operations coordinator

Email: ymonteshuerta@gn-ip.org

Yariet joined the Great North Innocence Project team in June 2023 as the Advancement & Operations Coordinator. She comes from a family of activists, community leaders, and rebeldes (rebels). In this position, Yariet plays a key role in advancing the mission of GN-IP by supporting a broad array of nonprofit organization matters including daily development, communications, and administrative activities. She also supports in the areas of community outreach and client intake.

While her career first took off in finance, she always found her way back into social justice and undocumented immigrants rights work. In 2019, she returned to school to obtain her Bachelors degree in Technical Management with a minor in Criminal Justice. During that time, she shifted her career focus, and worked within racial equity, community outreach, donor relations, and as a Spanish translator. Her passion has always been within the social justice and human rights movement.