The overarching legal theory of "in the interests of justice" would dictate the answer is no. It is never too late legally right a legal wrong.MouthBQ98 said:
If someone falsely confesses to a murder for whatever reason, and gets to sentencing, and then it comes out they were pressured to confess for some reason, so they then receive the sentence for the murder they didn't commit, or the only possible crimes they actually did commit, which is false reporting and maybe perjury?
Is it justice to complete sentence on someone for a crime they didn't commit simply because the 'process' is at a certain point, when it is clear that the process has been abused?
As Justice Gorsuch said in his confirmation hearings, "If a judge personally agrees with every ruling he makes, he's a bad judge," comes into play.