The Guardian Australia

Alice Sebold apologizes to man cleared of 1981 rape featured in her memoir

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The author Alice Sebold apologized on Tuesday to the man who was exonerated last week of the 1981 rape that was the basis for her memoir Lucky.

Sebold said she was struggling with the role she played “within a system that sent an innocent man to jail”.

Anthony Broadwater, 61, was convicted in 1982 of raping Sebold when she was a student at Syracuse University. He served 16 years in prison. His conviction was overturned on 22 November after prosecutor­s re-examined the case and determined there were serious flaws in his arrest and trial.

In a statement released to the Associated Press, Sebold, the author of the novels The Lovely Bones and The Almost Moon, said that as a “traumatize­d 18-year-old rape victim” she chose to put her faith in the US legal system.

“My goal in 1982 was justice – not to perpetuate injustice,” she said. “And certainly not to forever, and irreparabl­y, alter a young man’s life by the very crime that had altered mine.”

Melissa Swartz, an attorney for Broadwater, said he had no comment.

In 1999, Sebold wrote in Lucky of being raped and then spotting a Black man in the street several months later who she believed was her attacker.

Sebold, who is white, went to police. An officer said the man in the street must have been Broadwater, who had supposedly been seen in the area.

After Broadwater was arrested, Sebold failed to identify him in a police lineup, picking a different man as her attacker because she was frightened of “the expression in his eyes”.

Prosecutor­s put Broadwater on trial anyway. He was convicted based largely on Sebold identifyin­g him as her rapist on the witness stand and testimony that microscopi­c hair analysis had tied him to the crime. That type of analysis has since been deemed junk science by the US Department of Justice.

Broadwater, who was released from prison in 1998, told the AP last week he was crying “tears of joy and relief” after his conviction was overturned by a judge in Syracuse.

Sebold, who has not previously commented on Broadwater’s exoneratio­n, said in her statement: “I am grateful that Mr Broadwater has finally been vindicated, but the fact remains that 40 years ago, he became another young Black man brutalized by our flawed legal system. I will forever be sorry for what was done to him.”

Broadwater remained on New York’s sex offender registry after he was released from prison and has worked as a trash hauler and a handyman.

“It has taken me these past eight days to comprehend how this could have happened,” said Sebold, now 58.

“I will continue to struggle with the role that I unwittingl­y played within a system that sent an innocent man to jail. I will also grapple with the fact that my rapist will, in all likelihood, never be known, may have gone on to rape other women, and certainly will never serve the time in prison that Mr Broadwater did.”

 ?? Photograph: Andrea Sabbadini/Alamy ?? Alice Sebold: ‘My goal in 1982 was justice – not to perpetuate injustice. And certainly not to forever, and irreparabl­y, alter a young man’s life.’
Photograph: Andrea Sabbadini/Alamy Alice Sebold: ‘My goal in 1982 was justice – not to perpetuate injustice. And certainly not to forever, and irreparabl­y, alter a young man’s life.’

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