Many deserve clemency. Few get it!
What’s it
going to take to improve chances of clemency in Michigan?
Just before
Christmas, then Governor Rick Snyder announced the names of 61 prisoners to be
freed. To many observers, this number was far too low.
James Hicks,
good friend of ours, was among the 61. But here’s the deal: If the bar stays
that high for clemency consideration, very few will ever get out!
James was
sentenced to 50-200 years for alleged involvement in an armed robbery in 1986.
Then the
story gets interesting.
Just 3 years
after going to prison, he made a conscious decision to turn his life around. He
was hearing and seeing too many things that were pricking his conscience. So,
he began working with authorities to help solve cases. I personally know of at
least 8 cases where he helped state and federal agencies in making numerous
arrests for bribery, auto theft, stolen property, telephone fraud, narcotics
and murder.
Prisoners
don’t like snitches, and James didn’t get adequate protection. He was stabbed
on at least 4 different occasions. A corrections officer shoved him down a
flight of stairs, he was beaten, and he was poisoned. In addition, someone firebombed
the home of his mother in Detroit. Still her persisted in doing what was right.
In an earlier
attempt to free him, we put together a strongly persuasive application for
clemency. We even included a 4-page letter from Les Bowen, Chief Trial Attorney
for the Muskegon County Prosecutor’s Office in 1986. Bowen, now retired, stated
that for the first time in his career he was recommending commutation! There were additional letters of support
from federal and state officers.
A quick
review of this application, and one might think that Mr. Hicks should get an
award, let alone having his sentence commuted! But nope. A routine
rejection. We were flabbergasted. By all appearances, our documents weren’t
even read by the Parole Board and the Governor’s Office.
In a last-ditch
effort, Hicks’ frustrated legal counsel made a Hail Mary pass, going directly to a
personal friend on the Governor’s legal staff. Finally, someone in authority
got to see all of this evidence and the rest is history.
But back to
my original question, if that’s what it takes, is that fair? There won’t be
many cases as extreme as that of Jimmy Hicks. But there are hundreds of
Michigan prisoners deserving of clemency whose applications never got to see
the light of day. Too many didn’t get the review they deserved. And that’s not
right.
We beg our
new Governor to adjust the system.
It can’t
come down to who you know.
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