Why this wrongful conviction story is so important to all of us
God spoke to
me last night. Actually, I didn’t realize it until this morning.
I was
watching Nightly News with Lester Holt, and saw the beautiful feature about a
wrongly convicted inmate who was later exonerated, then became an attorney for
an Innocence Project, and then was able to free another wrongly convicted prisoner.
Tears welled up in my eyes. The hero of the story was Keith Findley,
co-founder and co-director of the Wisconsin Innocence Project.
That
immediately sent my mind back to the 1990s when Professor Keith Findley and his
fledgling Innocence Project took on, as one of their very early cases, the
wrongful conviction of Maurice Carter, right here in Michigan.
That
courageous decision by Keith and his co-founder and co-director John Pray, brought
about a dramatic change in my life. From that day forward I worked
shoulder-to-shoulder with Keith to put together a “Carter Dream Team” to aid
him and his students, including
-Rubin Hurricane Carter, from the Association in
Defence of the Wrongly Convicted in Toronto;
-Professor David Protess, of the Medill Innocence
Project in Chicago;
-Rob Warden, Executive Director of NWU Law School’s
Center on Wrongful Convictions;
-Gary Giguere, Kalamazoo attorney now a circuit
court judge;
-Alex Kotlowitz, renowned author of THE OTHER SIDE
OF THE RIVER;
-Steve Mills and Eric Zorn of the Chicago Tribune;
-And Pat Shellenbarger, Ed Golder and Charley
Honey of the Grand Rapids Press.
Even with
that all-star line-up, and even with evidence that revealed the name of the real
criminal, we were not able to achieve victory against the stubborn and, yes,
evil Berrien County machine called the justice system. Those wheels of justice,
which Maurice always contended “ground to a halt” when his case came along,
remained stalled.
I’ll never
forget the look on Keith Findley’s face when Judge John Hammond gave his final
answer, in a circuit court setting that the Trib’s Eric Zorn told me was one of
the most bizarre he had ever covered.
Now back to
my contention, and I really hadn’t meant for this to turn into a sermon.
I have been
distraught about all that’s happening in our country, and some days I cringe
when I hear and read the news. But we must take heart. Last night’s feature on
NBC proved a lot more than just the fact that sometimes the good guys win. It
was the message of Easter! Evil has not, will not and cannot win!
I’m feeling
better today, convinced that the Judge John Hammonds of the world cannot become
victorious, because God has given us the Keith Findleys of the world!
Now back to
work. There are more battles to fight.
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