Theo Shaw had already spent a month in the Lasalle Parish Jail when Friends of Justice first arrived in Jena. Seven months would pass before he returned to the free world. Last week, I sat down with Theo across the street from the University of Louisiana, Monroe campus. He had been a bewildered High School kid the last time we had spoken; he is now a confident young man. Theo politely answered my questions about the Jena 6 experience; but his eyes didn’t sparkle until the conversation shifted to the future. Theo Shaw is a man on a mission.(more…)
(This post is part of a series concerning Curtis Flowers, an innocent man convicted of a horrific crime that has divided a small Mississippi town. Information on the Flowers case can be found here.)
Here’s the big news: Patricia Hallmon’s fraudulent behavior is perfectly consistent with the theory that she and her brother Odell perjured themselves in 1996 so they could get their hands on the $30,000 reward on offer from DA Doug Evans and his investigator, John Johnson.
Initially, brother Odell admitted to the scam, testifying to that effect at Mr. Flowers’ second trial. Released from prison, Odell had to live with his irate sister, Patricia. After a month of free-world misery he went to Doug Evans and told him he was recanting his recantation.
And this guy is being sponsored as a credible witness by the State of Mississippi. (more…)
My post on Bishop Eddie Long has been raising eyebrows. Many readers agree with my critique of the “prosperity gospel”; others find it offensive. One reader, who asked to be taken off my distribution list, was horrified by my perceived willingness to throw Bishop Eddie to the wolves before he has his day in court.
A few words of clarification are in order.
Eddie Long’s guilt or innocence is not my primary concern. The state of Georgia has filed no charges against the Bishop; this is a civil case. When the weak find themselves on a collision course with the strong, my sympathies are with the weak (the strong can take care of themselves). Eddie Long has always been the man with all the power. Having transformed himself into an authority figure of superhuman stature, the pastor assumed the mantle of responsibility.
Pastor Long has compared to himself as David up against Goliath. That image should be reversed. Yesterday, thirty-two pastors came to Long’s church to commiserate with him and show their support. Goliath received that kind of encouragement from the Philistines; David was on his own. (more…)
Jeffrey Miron’s op-ed in the Los Angeles Times argues that the drug war is just another big government boondoggle. If you aren’t familiar with the libertarian critique of the war on drugs, Miron’s column will give you the basic outline of the argument.
Libertarians are consistent conservatives. They aren’t fussy about wars of any kind (domestic or foreign) because they are obscenely expensive and never produce the desired results.
American conservatives are successful because they don’t worry about consistentency. Conservatives are a fearless lot. They aren’t afraid of poverty or unemployment because they have secure jobs; they aren’t afraid of sickness because they have great health care; they aren’t afraid of bigotry or discrimination because they are normal (white) Americans; they aren’t afraid of civil rights violations because their civil rights are rarely infringed. (more…)
The Cameron Todd Willingham case is an embarrassment to Texas governor Rick Perry and to death penalty proponents everywhere.
Willingham was convicted of intentionally setting the fire that killed his three young daughters in 1991. Willingham was convicted on the strength of forensic expert testimony that the fire was intentionally set. He was executed in 2004 still professing his innocence.
The Texas Forensic Science Commission has been conducting an inquiry into the Willingham case since 2006. When Craig Beyler, a leading fire expert engaged by the Commission, released a report highly critical of the forensic methodology used by Corsicana officials, the Willingham case became a national phenomenon. Beyler concluded his 64-page report with a slashing indictment of the “junk science” on display in Willingham’s trial:
The investigations of the Willis and Willingham fires did not comport with either the modern standard of care expressed by NFPA 921, or the standard of care expressed by fire investigation texts and papers in the period 1980–1992. The investigators had poor understandings of fire science and failed to acknowledge or apply the contemporaneous understanding of the limitations of fire indicators. Their methodologies did not comport with the scientific method or the process of elimination. (more…)
Bishop Eddie Long of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Lithonia, Georgia has been accused of using a mentoring program to lure gifted young male congregants into sexual relationships. Long, an adherent of the “prosperity gospel”, told his congregation this past Sunday that, although he has never advertised himself as “a perfect man”, he intends to fight the allegations in court.
Significantly, the bishop never claimed to be innocent. (more…)
I write this from Lola Flowers’ dining room table. Yesterday I travelled to the Mississippi State prison in Parchman, Mississippi to visit Curtis Flowers. The last time I saw Curtis he was pronounced guilty of murder and sentenced to death by lethal injection. Then they ushered the defendant out of the courtroom.
Curtis didn’t react to the verdict–it was the fourth time it had been pronounced over the past fourteen years. Two other trials ended in juries divided along racial lines.
Lola and Archie Flowers didn’t show much emotion either. They quietly went to the car to unload the special transparent television Curtis used the last time he was a Parchman resident.
But just beneath the surface, the emotion runs deep. I have been corresponding with Curtis since the June, 2010 trial. His faith is strong. Sooner or later, he fully expects to be exonerated. But life on Mississippi’s death row is a struggle at the best of times.
I didn’t see Curtis yesterday. After driving nine hours from Arlington, Texas, I was informed that my name had not been placed on his visiting list. Curtis had been told to send out visitation forms to everyone he wanted to be on his list. I got my form and returned it. But someone at Parchman decided to leave me off the visitation list. So, while Lola Flowers hopped on the visitation bus, I remained in the waiting room. (more…)
Sheriff Greg Champagne of St. Charles Parish reported yesterday that 70 narcotics cases made by a single undercover officer are being dismissed. Elijah Gary, the officer responsible for making almost 100 cases in the Parish, was on loan from a neighboring Parish (see Times-Picayune article below for the details). When it was discovered that Mr. Gary had been convicted of domestic abuse and violating a restraining order, he was taken in for questioning. Beating up a girlfriend and violating a restraining order doesn’t disqualify an undercover cop–lying about it does.
Several attorney friends sent me this story yesterday because of the obvious parallels between Elijah Gary and Tom Coleman, the Texas “officer of the year” who implicated 47 residents of Tulia, Texas in 1999. According to the Times-Picayune story, “[Sheriff] Champagne’s office received the Crimestoppers Law Enforcement Award at the 25th annual Crimestoppers luncheon in March in New Orleans” on the strength of Elijah Gary’s work. (more…)
Bobby Ray Dixon (pictured to the left) and Phillip Bivens are free. Thirty years ago, the two men confessed to the brutal rape and murder of Eva Gail Patterson in Mississippi. A third man, Larry Ruffin, was also wrongfully convicted in this case, but died in prison eight years ago.
Sophisticated DNA tests, unavailable when Dixon, Bivens and Ruffin were arrested three decades ago, prove conclusively that these three men are innocent of wrongdoing.
At trial, prosecutors had little evidence to offer apart from the confessions the three men made to investigators. The confessions were later recanted. But jurors found it impossible to believe that innocent suspects would cop to a crime they didn’t commit–even for a brief moment.
Why did the three men implicate themselves? (more…)
Michelle Alexander says the criminal justice reform movement should shed its fixation with innocence. In her groundbreaking book, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, Alexander suggests that reformers start focusing on normal defendants. Since most criminal defendants done the deed, that means going to bat for guilty people. Why would we want to do that? (more…)