Belated Happy Birthday, Maurice, from the Detroit Police Chief!
Maurice
Carter would have been 73 years old yesterday.
It’s tradition that I put together some kind of a blog on his
birthday.
March 29
came and went, and so did any ideas for the blog page. Then, at a minute before midnight, the
Detroit News published a great story!
The Police Chief of City of Detroit is going to put forth a major effort
to slow down wrongful convictions. It’s
an article worth reading…a story that tells about Chief James Craig, and his
meeting with Innocence Clinic people at the University of Michigan Law
School. He pledged his full
cooperation. This from a county whose
system of justice has seemed seriously flawed over the years.
This is
huge!
I say this
because a lot starts with the cops. Let’s
go back to the Maurice Carter case.
It was
action by crooked cops that got it all started in his case, and that led to
Maurice spending 29 years behind bars for a crime he did not commit.
Maurice and
a buddy were questioned shortly after an incident in Benton Harbor where an
off-duty police officer was shot and injured, while shopping with his wife in a
downtown store. The policeman was white. The shooter was black. They paraded him in front of the store so
that the clerk could try to identify him.
She insisted that Maurice was not the assailant…wasn’t even the same
color black.
Two years
later, it was crooked cops who persuaded Maurice’s buddy---who was facing drug
charges---that if he told some lies about Maurice his charges would be
reduced. He agreed to sign a statement
claiming he saw Maurice running from the scene of the crime. And that led to his arrest and eventual
conviction.
True, there
were other typical factors in this wrongful conviction: faulty eye-witness identification, and the
testimony of a jail-house snitch. But it
all began with some police officers with tunnel vision; officers who (in my
humble opinion) knew who the real perp was, but were determined to put this
outsider in jail. Maurice was from Gary,
Indiana, and had no ties to Benton Harbor or Michigan.
For those
who are not familiar with the story, Carter was never exonerated. I was privileged to lead a fight seeking his
freedom for the final decade of his life.
We ultimately obtained a compassionate release, because of serious
illness. Maurice walked out of the Duane
L. Waters prison hospital in July of 2004.
He died exactly three months later.
But today,
in the aftermath of his birthday, we can celebrate the fact that a prominent Michigan
Police Chief has not only made an important decision, but is doing so in a high
profile manner that may encourage others in law enforcement to take similar
stands.
Maurice
would be pleased.
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