Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

KEITH C. BURRIS IMAGINES REAL ACTION ON A REAL ISSUE

- Keith C. Burris is executive editor of the Post-Gazette, and vice president and editorial director of Block Newspapers (kburris@postgazett­e.com). An earlier version of this essay appeared Nov. 10, 2019.

Ihave a “what if?” to place on the table. What if, as a part of the great American conversati­on, maybe even the 2020 presidenti­al conversati­on, we decided to talk about something real. Something not wholly solvable but incredibly important and improvable. Like our criminal justice and prison systems.

What if, instead of fearing to discuss race honestly or posturing for each other on the subject, we tried, in a coalition of forces and visions, to address something that is terribly broken?

The United States has the highest rate of incarcerat­ion in the world.

We have all heard and read that fact. But think about it. Higher than Cuba, China, Iraq or Syria?

We are the only country in the world that sentences minors to life in prison without parole.

One in 3 African American boys will likely be imprisoned in their lifetimes.

Whether you think ours is a racist nation or one of the least racist nations in the world today (my own view); whether you favor reparation­s or think the idea madness, you can agree that our justice system is not just and our prison system utterly irrational, inhumane, and out of fiscal and managerial control.

Conservati­ves and liberals ought to be able to find common ground on this matter.

At where I go to church these days, a group of us recently read and studied a book called “Just Mercy,” by a brave and brilliant lawyer and writer named Bryan Stevenson. The book is a story, partly about his growing up and partly about his founding of a law firm devoted to the most desperate people in the justice system.

It is also a book about Mr. Stevenson’s defense of a man on death row who was falsely accused, and wrongly, in every sense of the word, tried, and eventually exonerated. His name was Walter McMillian. No doubt he could be railroaded because his skin was black and the victim was white. It happened also because he was a convenient foil.

Finally, “Just Mercy” is a book about our prison system and a trial system that often depends on deep pockets. What happens to African American men, especially the young ones, who find themselves in these systems isn’t pretty, isn’t justice, and should not be America in 2020.

We all know all of this.

And because we know all of this, it ought to be possible to get something done.

The Walter McMillian case was compelling. He was not only framed, but sloppily, carelessly framed. And the frame was refuted by the defense. He was convicted anyway.

And then a judge decided, on his own, that McMillian should get the death penalty.

All this happened in the Southern town where Harper Lee grew up. And, as with the fictional but all too real “To Kill a Mockingbir­d,” the McMillian case should have shamed a town, a system and a nation.

When I was writing a metro column at The Blade, in Toledo, Ohio, some years ago, I became fascinated with the Danny Brown case — a case in a way even more incredible than McMillian’s.

It was really the Bobbie Russell case. She was brutally raped and murdered in Toledo in 1981. And Danny Brown was convicted based on the eyewitness account of a frightened and traumatize­d child: Bobbie’s son. Actually it was never clear, nor was he consistent about, what he saw. It may have been very little. The boy was also, almost certainly, coached by police.

Danny did almost 20 years in prison, until DNA showed he was not the rapist (and the prosecutio­n had always maintained the rapist and the killer were one). Danny was released from prison but given no official exoneratio­n and no compensati­on for his loss of freedom and income — a recompense that is customary.

The state convenient­ly changed its theory of the murder: Maybe there were two men. But it did not pursue the theory. There was no new grand jury, no reopening of a very cold case, and no real official curiosity or remorse on the part of police and prosecutor­s.

The Bobbie Russell murder is unsolved to this day. No one seems to know how much of the original physical evidence exists or where.

Another major suspect, whose M.O. in other crimes matched this one, and who is now in prison, has not been pursued in any meaningful way. And everyone in the system seems to want to forget this whole travesty.

Also forgotten is that in our country if it cannot be proven beyond a reasonable doubt that you are guilty, you are not guilty.

So, no justice for Bobbie Russell. No justice for Danny Brown. One life snuffed out. One ruined.

In this case, both the victim and the accused were African American. But Danny, like McMillian, was also convenient. And everything about how this case was resolved, botched, and then left to smolder and die, indicts the system.

Yet no one in the system cared enough to clean up the mess they made.

Mr. Stevenson writes: “The opposite of poverty is not wealth; the opposite of poverty is justice” — an interestin­g propositio­n. And he writes of the thousands of wrongful conviction­s uncovered by the Innocence Project and others over the past 25 years.

We have to fix this.

And an essential, if not total, fix is within our power.

Some years ago, I interviewe­d Ronald Cotton and Jennifer Thompson-Cannino, two people who had written a book about the flaws in eyewitness testimony. What was unusual is that they were accused and accuser.

Ms. Thompson-Cannino had identified Mr. Cotton as her rapist — picked him out of a lineup. Unlike the frightened little boy who identified Danny Brown, Ms. ThompsonCa­nnino was not coached.

Well, DNA proved her wrong. And after 10 years in prison, Mr. Cotton was set free. He and Ms. Thompson-Cannino then, incredibly, formed a friendship, wrote a book together called “Picking Cotton” and went on a national tour talking about what they had learned: The justice system is deeply flawed, with respect to eyewitness accounts, and deeply biased, on multiple levels, against the poor and people of color.

They took their pain and did something with it.

What if our nation did that? Who is championin­g this issue today? Kanye West, the fresh Christian, and Donald Trump, the great disrupter.

What if Barack Obama joined Donald Trump and Colin Kaepernick joined Kanye West in the cause of prison reform?

OK, not gonna happen. But suppose Al Sharpton and Rand Paul joined hands?

Suppose the Democratic candidates for president and vice president, who will advocate in their party platform that college kids should get tuition-free degrees and that all should have the pronouns of their choice, made time for a third of young Black America behind bars?

If justice delayed is justice denied, then surely justice deferred indefinite­ly is the ultimate injustice.

If the opposite of poverty is not wealth, but justice, we are a nation impoverish­ed.

 ?? Maura Losch/Post-Gazette ??
Maura Losch/Post-Gazette

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States