Daily Times (Primos, PA)

The real Brian Banks speaks out on prison injustice, reform

- By Gary Gerard Hamilton

NEW YORK >> When Brian Banks’ home was a prison cell due to a crime he didn’t commit, he never imagined his life would be the subject of a film. He was only concerned with clearing his name and regaining his freedom.

Now, seven years after he was exonerated on a rape allegation, Banks hopes the film detailing his fight for justice helps move along reform.

“What I want people to take away from this is that what I went through was unacceptab­le, what many others have gone through is unacceptab­le,” he told The Associated Press.

“For those that are currently behind bars, or no longer behind bars but have experience­d wrongful conviction, I want you to know that you’re not alone, that you haven’t been forgotten, that there are people working on trying to fix these wrongs, and as a person who’s been through it, I’m one of them,” he added.

Banks, 34, was a standout high school football player who many believed had a shot at the NFL, until his dreams were derailed when he was falsely accused of rape by a high school classmate in 2002. He was only 16, took a plea and served nearly six years in prison. He spent an additional five years on parole with a mandatory ankle bracelet as a registered sex offender, until he was exonerated in 2012 after his accuser recanted and with help from the California Innocence Project.

The film, “Brian Banks,” recently opened and stars Aldis Hodge as Banks and Greg Kinnear as Justin Brooks, co-founder of the innocence group. Sherri Shepherd plays Banks’ mother, Leomia Delaney.

Brooks hopes the film will motivate viewers to join the criminal justice reform fight. Once Banks was cleared and Hollywood came calling, the two said their goal was to make a “justice movie,” not a football movie.

“I want people to walk out of this movie theater and remember this movie next time they’re sitting in jury duty, that maybe this person in front of them is innocent,” Brooks told the AP. “And next time they go into a voting booth to not vote out of fear because politician­s have been making people afraid for a long time. The only way reforms can happen is if people are thinking straight.”

Since his release, Banks has worked as a life coach and public speaker. His book, “What Set Me Free,” came out in July.

The film follows the release of “When They See Us,” the Emmy-nominated Netflix limited series that tells the stories of the Central Park Five, a group of New York teens who spent six to 13 years in prison after being wrongfully convicted of raping a female jogger in 1989.

“I know those guys — those are friends of the Innocence Project network. We get together on a yearly basis and share our stories,” Banks said.

 ?? NICK UT, FILE - THE AP ?? In this 2012 file photo, Brian Banks weeps after his rape conviction was dismissed in court in Long Beach, Calif.
NICK UT, FILE - THE AP In this 2012 file photo, Brian Banks weeps after his rape conviction was dismissed in court in Long Beach, Calif.

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