Monday, July 26, 2010

Authors explore stories of Texas exonerees

This press release (pdf) notifies us of the upcoming publication of a new book telling the stories of a dozen Texas exonerees.
 Reverend Dorothy Budd rejoiced at the recent announcement that deaf inmate Stephen Brodie may become the latest Texas prisoner to win his freedom after being wrongfully convicted.

Budd, a former child-sex-crimes prosecutor for the Dallas County District Attorney’s office, wants the voice of Brodie, along with men who have already been exonerated in Dallas County, to be heard. She and her daughter Peyton share the men’s experiences in the upcoming book Tested: How Twelve Wrongfully Imprisoned Men Held onto Hope, to be published this October by Brown Books Publishing Group.

In 2009, the Budds became interested in the plight of these wrongly convicted men and requested a meeting with Dallas County DA Craig Watkins where they learned that of the cases his office selected with DNA viable for testing, about half of the tests went on to prove the men’s innocence. Dorothy and Peyton became convinced that their stories must be told. With DA Watkins’ assistance, the Budds interviewed the men and from these conversations Peyton wrote their stories and the book Tested was born.

“Every one of these men has lost something that can never be restored,” said Dorothy Budd. “We hope that the powerful stories in Tested cause readers to reexamine and reevaluate prejudices and preconceptions.”

By allowing each of the men to tell his story in his own words, Tested runs the emotional gamut from deep despair to final vindication. Along the way, the authors discovered how the men kept their faith and hope during their years of incarceration.

“When you get convicted for something you didn’t do, and hear that gavel hit along with the words ‘we find this man guilty,’ and you do time,” says exoneree Billy Smith. “Whether it’s a day, a week, a year, or twenty years…that takes something. It takes a bite out of you.”

Dallas leads the nation in exonerations of wrongfully convicted men. To date, more than twenty men have been released. These men were not just “released” but freed from prison with their convictions expunged, with a pardon from the governor and an apology from the DA.

For more information and to schedule an interview with the authors, please contact Cathy Williams, Brown Books Publishing Group at 972.381.0009 or via email cathy(dot)williams(at)brownbooks(dot)com. Additional information can be found at www.testedthebook.com
Relatedly, the Lubbock Avalanche Journal brings word of a new book on Timothy Cole's posthumous exoneration: Fred McKinley's “A Plea For Justice: The Timothy Cole Story.” From the Avalanche Journal:
Cole's brother Cory Session said the book should be required reading for law officials to prevent similar situations from occurring in the future.

"This book was put out because it's a blueprint for wrongful convictions," he said.

Ruby Session, Cole's mother, said the book is an accurate portrayal of the situation that occurred to her son and provides readers with an opportunity to see how all of the events unfolded from the beginning.

"I hope the average person knows it could happen to them," Ruby Session said. "We don't want this to happen anymore."
One should never underestimate the impact of storytelling, and these stories supply a powerful counternarrative to the typical Law & Order-style portrayal of prosecutors in white hats and criminal defendants as scum seeking to somehow wiggle out of justice. The Kafkaesque nightmare endured by Cole and the other exonerees can't be adequately described using the terms and means of the policy wonk, so these stories fill an important gap in the debate. It's impossible to fix a problem if one never examines in detail what went wrong.

5 comments:

  1. I think somewhere, someone has to look in greater detail at judges and evidence in the criminal courts. Not just the same old "this is what happened" approach, but a serious study into the causal relationships involved in the courts. Prosecutors learn certain things, and use science that wouldn't be permitted in a civil courtroom. That's usually because at some point a plaintiff tried it against a corporation or insurance company that had the funds to test it in a way that no criminal defendant with a court appointed attorney ever could. So the prosecutors get a free pass when we know there are better ways to do things from line up procedures (Tim Cole, Ricardo Rachal, et al, ad nauseum) to fire science (Todd Willingham, et al), to things like crime lab shenanigans (HPD DNA lab, HPD fingerprint lab, HPD forensics, Harris County crime lab...) To absurd things like scent line ups or bite mark analysis, etc. We have to look at why these things are occurring on a regular basis, and try to change them. Prosecutors then become judges, who learned the wrong way and keep the ball rolling, because it was good years ago when they used it, so it's good now. The defense bar has got to organize its assets and target a case or two in order to fight junk science and end its use in the courts where it matters the most.

    Rage

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  2. Rage - very well put my friend. Your comment points out problems with the system and points out some areas of concern that need to be addressed as well. The criminal justice system reform movement currently under way in Texas should cover each and every single aspect. See GFB Archives for some good reading and detailed reform suggestions that Grits offers.-

    IMHO It should include but not be limited to; *the police academy to cover the moment of arrest, interrogations / interviews / identifications, seeking charges & accountability. *Law schools to cover attorneys, prosecutors & judges individual roles in wrongful convictions regardless if via a jury or plea-bargaining. *City counsels & county commissioners to cover the taxpayers’ role and responsibilities. *Last but not least, reforms should cover addressing 'all' claims of innocence (Closed, Cleared & Open Cases) regardless of the proof one possesses. Thanks.
    -

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  3. Hey Grits. After you've read it consider posting a review.

    Did you get a chance to read Ordinary Injustice by Amy Bach yet? Thanks.

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  4. Tim Cole's family has no shame, they weren't there for their son, he was the "black sheep" of their prestigious household now the poster family of do-gooders for wrongfully convicted, they should have cared for Tim all those years behind bars, everythng happens for a reason though his death has brought them fame and a pretty shiny penny. I did time with Tim Cole, I know and I remember.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Tim Cole's family has no shame, they weren't there for their son, he was the "black sheep" of their prestigious household now the poster family of do-gooders for wrongfully convicted, they should have cared for Tim all those years behind bars, everythng happens for a reason though his death has brought them fame and a pretty shiny penny. I did time with Tim Cole, I know and I remember.

    ReplyDelete