RICHMOND(AP) -- Virginia legislators have approved a one-word change in state law aimed at making it a little easier for wrongly convicted inmates to win exoneration.
The Senate voted 37-2 Thursday to pass the revision, which the House of Delegates approved earlier in the session.
Under the state's current law, an inmate can be exonerated based on new evidence upon a finding that no rational judge or jury could have found sufficient evidence beyond a reasonable doubt supporting a conviction. Critics say the standard is so strict that it's nearly impossible to meet.
The legislation approved Thursday changes the word "could" to the less-stringent "would."
Democratic Sen. Don McEachin of Henrico County voted for the bill, but said the legislature could have done more.









