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When Justice Is Skin-DeepPosted on Apr 26, 2007By Marie Cocco WASHINGTON—It is safe to assume that Jerry Miller will not become an international media sensation. His exoneration for a rape he did not commit does not have the makings of a cultural psychodrama on the order of the Duke University lacrosse team saga. For one thing, Miller is black and working-class, not white and upper-middle class, as were the Duke men who were falsely accused. Miller is—or was, before he spent 24 years in prison as an alleged rapist—a young man who’d left high school at 17 to join the Army. He’d just turned 22 and was working as a cook in 1981 when the police picked him up. He’d never before been arrested. Miller’s arrest for a brutal sexual assault and kidnapping in a Chicago parking garage was based on one officer’s reaction to a composite sketch. The likeness seemed to resemble a man the cop had questioned days earlier because he supposedly was looking too closely at some parked cars. The rape victim couldn’t initially identify Miller; the garage attendants claimed they could. “The composite sketch wasn’t me,” Miller told me in an interview from New York, where he’d flown to celebrate his good fortune with his lawyers. “You didn’t even have to have good vision to show that. This composite was of a man without a goatee. I had a four-inch goatee. How could you decide it was me?” On Monday, when a Cook County judge officially cleared him of all charges, Miller became the 200th person to be exonerated based on the work of the Innocence Project, a New York-based network of lawyers who, through the use of DNA evidence, seek to clear those who have been wrongly convicted. If the howls of indignation that rose up from the Duke case are to be more than an outpouring of national hypocrisy, then it is to cases such as Miller’s that the country and the media must turn their attention. The improprieties that collided to ensnare the Duke students—false or inconsistent identification by the victim, prosecutorial misconduct, the withholding of potentially exculpatory evidence from the defense, a racially incendiary atmosphere—are common in wrongful convictions. The difference is that the 200 people exonerated through the work of the Innocence Project served an average of 12 years in prison. Fourteen were on death row at the time they were cleared. Earl Washington, a developmentally disabled man from Virginia who was cleared of rape and murder in 2000, was nine days from his scheduled execution. “We found that in 50 percent of our cases there was serious police or prosecutorial misconduct—that’s what you had in the Duke case,” says Peter Neufeld, co-founder of the project and one of Miller’s lawyers. “Hopefully more people will now want to try to prevent that kind of prosecutorial arrogance and indifference to truth.” It is the enduring hope—that the country will fix the systemic failings within the criminal justice system. Yet the discussion is largely absent from our tough-on-crime political conversation, because the failings harm African-Americans and other minorities most. For example, though interracial rapes are rare, constituting about 12 percent of reported sexual assaults, 66 percent of blacks who’ve been exonerated through DNA evidence had been wrongly convicted of raping white people, according to the Innocence Project. About half had been misidentified by white rape victims. Sloppy or slanted identification procedures, interrogations that elicit false confessions, faulty—even fraudulent—presentations of scientific evidence in court all play a role. A 2004 law guarantees federal convicts the right to petition for DNA testing to support a claim of innocence, but the crimes that typically involve such evidence are overwhelmingly state prosecutions. The law encourages states to seek federal funds to improve their evidence handling and post-conviction testing but, according to Neufeld, few have pursued the money. “There are plenty of prosecutors’ offices in the North, South, East and West who say, ‘Once that conviction is affirmed on appeal, that’s it,’ ” he says. That was not enough for Miller, who began writing to the Innocence Project in 2000 from the penitentiary where he’d spent most of his adult life. This week, he’s been sipping champagne and sightseeing in New York. “I hope that I don’t have to suffer no more,” he says. The man who committed the rape for which Miller was wrongly convicted was found through the same DNA evidence that cleared Miller, Neufeld says. He is now serving time on other charges. Marie Cocco’s e-mail address is mariecocco(at symbol)washpost.com. © 2007, Washington Post Writers Group Previous item: No One Should Be Above the Law Next item: Supremes Know Best Elsewhere: . CommentsAre you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig. Add Your Comment
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By Elizabeth, April 28, 2007 at 10:44 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
The “Are you human” query below is rather a nasty affront to a vision-impaired person reading your site with the aid of an electronic screen-reader. First off, you question whether such a person is human. Secondly, you set up a device that the screen reader cannot read, which blocks that person from joining in discussion. I’m sure it was unintentional, but really…we all need to be aware of and sensitive to such matters.
Report thisBy FrostedFlakes, April 27, 2007 at 9:51 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
This is surprising to whom? Lynchings, mob rule, Jim Crowism, segregation, and slavery are as American as apple pie. Justice = Just Us. This is no new beginning it just leads to the same end. The criminalization and the militarization of America is in it’s fullest throes. Fascism is steadily moving forward. It’s time to recapture America for the benefit of all, not just the wealthy. Question your leaders and remove those at fault, that is true patriotism. God bless America!!
Report thisBy RAE, April 27, 2007 at 9:13 am #
I wonder how many years it’s going to take before societies - American society included - realize that the cost/benefit of today’s justice system just isn’t there!
BILLIONS are spent each year keeping MILLIONS in prisons. Are your streets safer? Is there less crime? Is the “system” WORKING?
In my view, the answer is NO. So why continue? Because the “authorities” just don’t know (or want to know) any other way.
It never dawns on them that perhaps if they spent the BILLIONS on HABILITATION they’d find they wouldn’t need to spend BILLIONS on RE-HABILITATION.
YOU CAN’T “RE-HABILITATE” THOSE WHO HAVEN’T BEEN HABILITATED IN THE FIRST PLACE!
The answer is clear. Right from the beginning attend to the wellness needs of ALL PEOPLE - educational, psychological, medical, clean food and water, safety, a basic level of comfort, and ensure employment/involvement opportunities for ALL - and it’s my opinion most of the “system” and prisons would no longer be needed. Not all - but most.
But then what would all the millions of workers in the present day “justice” system do for employment? We’d need far fewer police, court workers, social workers, judges, guards, etc…. and there’s just NO WAY these folk will allow their jobs to “go south.”
Nope fellow citizens… the justice system is BIG BUSINESS and just as with all other business, those involved somehow think IT MUST GROW TO SURVIVE! Remember this the next time you read about how your town council has voted to INCREASE YOUR TAXES so they can hire more police or build a new jail. HUGE amounts of YOUR money put where it does the LEAST AMOUNT OF GOOD. Brilliant!
Makes you sick, doesn’t it?
Report thisBy Margaret Currey, April 27, 2007 at 1:47 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
This is not about justice, what it is about is putting poor people in jail, if you cannot give people jobs (or will not) then the powers that be will certainly put people in jail, maybe there is a consparicy to hold back jobs, so than the next best thing is to put people in jail, then when they do get out their prospects to getting a good job is next to nill, the next thing is to have a dead end job, like mopping floors, maintenance jobs, etc.
When I was young I tried to get some job training, the man told me I could get a job as a Receptionist, I said with training I could get a higher paying job, the answer was you can get a job as a receptionist, like that is all we want you to be. I finally through determiniation got a job paying better than a receptionist, the fact is that was 20 years later.
M.Currey
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