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GrandeDavid
01-24-2007, 08:28 PM
http://espn-ak.starwave.com/i/eticket/20070124/photos/genarlow_etick_skirm.jpg

DOUGLASVILLE, Ga. -- There is a cardboard box in Genarlow Wilson's old bedroom.

The Bernstein FirmDespite lacking size, overachieving Genarlow Wilson was being recruited by several college football programs.

It rests on the floor of his empty closet, near the deflated football and basketball. It's filled with things he needed in his old life. Mostly, it's overflowing with recruiting letters, from schools big and small. A "Good luck on the SAT" wish from the coaches at Columbia. From another Ivy League college, Brown, a note from the football coach: "You have been recommended to me as one of the top scholar-athletes in your area."

There's a questionnaire from the Citadel. A brochure from Elon. An envelope from Sewanee. College after college, all wanting the undersized but overachieving Genarlow Wilson to consider their football programs. One open letter, dated three months before everything in this box became a reminder of a life derailed, invites him to take a campus visit. It begins:

Dear Genarlow,

Here you stand, on the threshold of four of the most influential, challenging, and rewarding years of your life.

Being Inmate No. 1187055 Genarlow Wilson is standing on a threshold all right, at the end of the last hall of Burruss Correctional Training Center, an hour and a half south of Atlanta. He's just a few feet from the mechanical door that closes with a goosebump-raising whurr and clang. Three and a half years after he received that letter, he's wearing a blue jacket with big, white block letters. They read: STATE PRISONER.

He's 20 now. Just two years into a 10-year sentence without possibility of parole, he peers through the thick glass and bars, trying to catch a glimpse of freedom. Outside, guard towers and rolls of coiled barbed wire remind him of who he is.

http://espn.go.com/i/eticket/20070124/photos/genarlow12.jpg

Once, he was the homecoming king at Douglas County High. Now he's Georgia inmate No. 1187055, convicted of aggravated child molestation.

When he was a senior in high school, he received oral sex from a 10th grader. He was 17. She was 15. Everyone, including the girl and the prosecution, agreed that she initiated the act. But because of an archaic Georgia law, it was a misdemeanor for teenagers less than three years apart to have sexual intercourse ... but a felony for the same kids to have oral sex. Afterward, the state legislature changed the law to include an oral sex clause, but that doesn't help Wilson. In yet another baffling twist, the law was written to not apply to cases retroactively, though another legislative solution might be in the works. The case has drawn national condemnation, from the "Free Genarlow Wilson Now" editorial in the New York Times to a feature on Mark Cuban's HDNet. "It's disgusting," Cuban wrote to ESPN in an e-mail. "I can not see any way, shape or form that the interests of the state of Georgia are served by throwing away Genarlow's youth and opportunity to become a vibrant contributor to the state. All his situation does is reinforce some unfortunate stereotypes that the state is backward and misgoverned. No one with a conscience can look at this case and conclude that justice has been served."

Tracy Smith/Special to ESPN.com "It was like I had everything one day, and the next day I didn't have anything," Wilson says.

Wilson's mother, Juanessa Bennett, certainly doesn't understand. She has just bought a new house the next county over, hoping that a change of scenery might do her good. The past few years have been hard on her. "You think, what in the world could I have done to God to make him punish me like this?" she says. "Am I that terrible a person?" Her home feels empty without her son in it. He's not there to enjoy the five burgers for five bucks on Tuesday at the Sonic Drive-In, or chatting away on his telephone late at night. Now, she can only think about the past three years of their lives, and how everything is so different from before. She points to a picture above her fireplace. There's a grinning 3-year-old boy in the frame, posing with big alphabet blocks. "He was cute, huh?" she says, quietly. She looks at the picture, but doesn't cry. There aren't many tears left. After it first happened, she says she cried so much she got an eye infection. Bumps broke out on her face, brought on by worry and grief. "You need to stop stressing," the doctor told her. She asked him how exactly she might do that. "He didn't have an answer," Bennett says. Now, she's numb. Now, she can only remember the boy he was and pray that when his ordeal is finally over, some of that boy will remain. The image of a bright future dimming with each passing day is what infuriates so many people. Wilson should be held up as an example of a kid who was making it. His life should be protected by society, not destroyed. He was a good student, with a 3.2 grade point average. He was popular, the school's homecoming king, liked by students and teachers. He never got into any trouble with the law. He was a track and football star. His last two years, he was the defensive back assigned to cover Calvin Johnson, the former Sandy Creek High star who went on to Georgia Tech and is now projected as a top pick in the NFL draft. Wilson studied film, trying to figure out how to outsmart a better and taller athlete. He did well, coaches remember, limiting Johnson to four catches in two games. Three years later, sitting in their office overlooking the field, finishing up another workday, Wilson's old coaches also remember a good but not great high school player who would have played college ball. They remember his last game, in the playoffs, way down in south Georgia. He got hit so hard on a kickoff return that he ended up spitting up blood on the sideline. The trainer shined a flashlight in his eye, figuring he had a concussion. Wilson grabbed his helmet, determined to go back in the game. He went to the hospital instead.

The Bernstein FirmFrom drinking to smoking pot to acting like a cocky star athlete, Wilson now cringes at some of the mistakes he made in high school.

He admits he wasn't perfect. Far from it. He drank. He smoked pot. He'd been sexually active since he was 13. And a month or so after that final playoff game, he and some buddies were plotting a New Year's Eve bash. His mama heard them whispering in his bedroom that afternoon. She knew kids whispering usually meant trouble, so she went in and looked those boys up and down. "Don't do anything stupid," she warned. Something Stupid Genarlow Wilson and his friends checked into the Days Inn right off Interstate 20. At some point in the night, according to court documents and evidence presented at trial, some girls came over to party with them. Bourbon and marijuana were consumed. One of the young men turned on a video camera.

Later in the evening, a 17-year-old girl began to have sex with the young men, first in the bathroom, then on the bed. Genarlow is captured on tape appearing to have sex with the girl from behind. Her hand is clearly visible on the floor supporting herself. Witnesses said she was a willing participant. The next morning, the girl awoke in a stupor, wearing nothing but her socks. She called her mother and said she had been raped. Police came to the room after sunrise and took the revelers in for questioning. Genarlow had already gone home -- he didn't want to miss curfew -- but the video camera remained.

On tape, the cops saw a 15-year-old girl, a 10th-grader, performing oral sex on a partygoer and, after finishing with him, turning and performing the act on Genarlow. She was the instigator. Problem was, she was a year under the age of consent. Local prosecutors called the act aggravated child molestation, following the letter and not the spirit of the law, which was designed to prosecute pedophiles. A week later, on the first day of the second semester of his senior year, the police went to the school and arrested the boys. Wilson was charged with four felonies and taken from the building in handcuffs. Not long before, he'd been in the newspaper for being all-conference in football. Now, he was on the front page, branded a rapist and child molester.

"It was like I had everything one day," he says, "and the next day I didn't have anything."

For the next eight months, Douglas County District Attorney David McDade, who likes to wear an American flag in his lapel and play to his law-and-order-loving base, dangled plea bargains. The other boys didn't want to risk a jury, and one by one each took an offer and went to prison, including the other football player arrested, Narada Williams, who accepted five years with the possibility of parole.

In Douglas County, according to law professors following about the case, admitting sins and begging forgiveness -- not insisting on your innocence -- is the road to mercy. Williams is already out of jail, in part because McDade wrote a letter to the parole board, praising Williams for being the first to plead guilty and "take his medicine." As for Wilson, McDade called him a "martyr" in the media.

The Bernstein FirmIf he had accepted the plea bargain, Wilson would've had to register as a sex offender and wouldn't have been permitted to live in the same house as his younger sister.

Wilson refused to admit to being a child molester. If he pled to or was convicted of any charge that put him on the sex offender registry, he couldn't live at home with his younger sister. He wouldn't accept that, so he waited for his trial.

The Saturday before it began, his last weekend as a free man, Wilson tried out for a local semi-pro football team. He wanted to be that other person once more, the one who could outrun all of life's problems. For two glorious hours, he sprinted and jumped and dove. When it was over, the coaches were impressed. They traded cell phone numbers, just another opportunity that would soon pass him by.

Two days later, in February 2005, Genarlow Wilson walked into a courtroom. Two charges already had been dropped, and it was clear from the first witness that the rape charge wouldn't stick either. The aggravated child molestation, though, was on tape. Genarlow tried to defend himself against the assigned prosecutor, Eddie Barker.

"Sir," Wilson told him, "you don't even know me. I understand you're just doing your job, sure, but I mean, how would you feel if you were my age and you were put on the stand with these serious charges at this young age? I have a little sister. Why would I molest anyone, sir?"

"I'm not on trial here, Mr. Wilson," Barker said. "You're the one who did these acts, not me."

The day before the trial was expected to end, in the last night he'd ever spend at his home, Wilson went to a church down the street and asked the preacher to pray with him. He awoke early the next morning. He knotted his tie carefully and went to the courthouse. The trial finished that afternoon, and the jury came back with "not guilty" on the rape but "guilty" on the aggravated child molestation.

He looked at the forewoman. She was crying, seeming to understand they'd just undone a promising future. Indeed, when the jurors found out there was a 10-year mandatory minimum sentence, several were incensed. The prosecution told them to write a letter, then moved on to the next case.

Genarlow Wilson put his head in his hands and wept.

Tracy Smith/Special to ESPN.comOnce identified as a promising football prospect, Wilson is now just known as inmate No. 1187055.

Deputies yanked him from his seat. Not long after, Prisoner 1187055 found himself in the predawn darkness, riding in a bus, surrounded not by his teammates but by murderers, thieves and rapists. Some were headed to the penitentiary for the second or third time.

A scared kid looked out the window as the bus chewed up pavement. He didn't know what it was going to be like, only that he didn't want to go.

Doing Hard Time Wilson moves to the rhythm of the prison now, up early with the shift change, tidying his cell, sitting down to rest before chow, wearing white pants with a blue stripe. It has been 23 months.

These walls and bars haven't taken his youth, though. Not yet. When he smiles, it's the same one from that old photo on his mom's mantel. Bennett wonders how her son has managed to keep that light in such a dark place and how much longer he can hold out.

With nothing but time, he has taken stock of his old life. He doesn't like the person he was back then, the cocky star athlete with the world as his yo-yo. When he thinks about the kid on that videotape, with a Pittsburgh Pirates hat cocked just so, he cringes.

"It's embarrassing to me," he says. "You see yourself. ... 'Man, I acted like that?' "

He has followed his appeals from behind bars. He watched as the state legislature changed the law that put him there, then declined to make it retroactive, for reasons that still boggle the mind. That was a dark day.

He watched as B.J. Bernstein, his new attorney, filed a petition for writ of certiorari, asking the Georgia Supreme Court to review the case. The petition was denied, then set aside, then denied again, then appealed, then denied again. Those were darker days.

The first time the Supreme Court voted on Genarlow's case, it was 4-3. The four judges who voted against the black teen were white. The three judges who voted for him were black.

"I don't understand the Supreme Court," Bennett says. "Do these people not have hearts? Can they not look and see this isn't right?"

Tracy Smith/Special to ESPN.com Wilson's attorney, B.J. Bernstein, is working pro bono to try to get her client out of prison.

In its decision, the Supreme Court called Wilson a "promising young man," a paragraph that he has read a thousand times. All the e-mails Bernstein gets in support of him, he has those, too. He reads them over and over, reminding himself that he once had a future and, one day, might have it again. It's not easy.

Other people's lives have moved on.

He has corresponded with Williams, his co-defendant and old high school teammate. Williams is enrolled in college now.

Wilson sat in prison and watched Calvin Johnson, the guy he once covered, become the best college receiver in the country and a soon-to-be millionaire.

"That has made my ambitions higher," Wilson says. "That makes me want to succeed even more because I don't want to be left behind."

The Halls of Power In Atlanta, Bernstein makes her rounds at the state capitol. It's the first day of the legislative session and men in power ties click their wingtips over marble floors, lobbyists back-slapping each other in their little groups.

"He's sitting in jail," she says. "He's in jail every day they're sitting around chatting."

Tracy Smith/Special to ESPN.com Instead of an Ivy League school, Wilson went straight from Douglas County High to Burruss Correctional Training Center.

When Bernstein met Wilson, who had a different attorney for the trial, she saw that light in his eyes and didn't want prison to extinguish it. Truth is, she's a rescuer. One of her cats she found on the interstate. She stopped her car in the rain on a six-lane highway to save it. In her heart, she wants to save the world, starting with Genarlow Wilson. That means working pro bono, even as every small check the firm earns goes straight into the operating account. That means figuring out this strange power-brokers' dance.

It's frustrating work. No one involved believes Wilson should be in jail for 10 years.

The prosecutors don't.

The Supreme Court doesn't.

The legislature doesn't.

The 15-year-old "victim" doesn't.

The forewoman of the jury doesn't.

Privately, even prison officials don't.

Yet no one will do anything to free him, passing responsibility around like a hot potato. The prosecutors say they were just doing their job. The Supreme Court says it couldn't free him because the state legislature decreed the new law didn't apply to old cases, even though this case was the entire reason the new law was passed. One possible explanation is that Bernstein, an admitted neophyte at backroom dealing, simply didn't know enough politics to insist on the provision. That haunts her.

Tracy Smith/Special to ESPN.comAs an honor student, football star and homecoming king, Wilson conquered challenges in high school ... but he now faces an uncertain future.

The legislature still could pass a new law that would secure Wilson's freedom, so Bernstein is pushing hard for that. One such bipartisan bill was introduced this week, pushed by state Sens. Emanuel Jones, Dan Weber and Kasim Reed. This is Wilson's best shot. "I understand the injustice in the justice system," Jones says, "and when I heard about Genarlow and started studying what had happened, I said, 'This is a wrong that must be righted.' Everyone agrees that justice is not being served."

Afterward, Bernstein can file a writ of habeas corpus, which could get him out of jail, but those are legal Hail Marys. She's a true believer, but if the legislature denies this latest attempt, she knows she might not be able to save Genarlow Wilson. Until it's over, nothing's off the table. Not even simple positive thinking. Sitting at a midtown-Atlanta Chinese restaurant on a lunch break from all the political wrangling, she picked up her fortune cookie, smiled thinly and said, "Gimme a good one: Genarlow will be free." She's still working every angle, from the capital to cookies, riding up an elevator to the 53rd floor of an Atlanta high-rise to see David Balser, the attorney who got Marcus Dixon out of jail. The Dixon case was similar: As an 18-year-old, he had sex with a 15-year-old girl and was sentenced to 10 years before the conviction was overturned.

Sitting in a conference room overlooking Stone Mountain, Balser listens. The light shines off his gold cufflinks, the high-thread-count shirt hanging perfectly off his shoulders. He's got a little salt in his pepper and a Virgin Islands tan. They talk media strategy. They talk last-ditch plans, including a constitutional amendment returning pardon power to the governor. When they're done, Balser walks Bernstein to the elevator.

"I think less is more, B.J.," he says. "You've got to get him out and solve the world's problems after that. Just get him out."

"I'm trying," she says.

"I have faith in you," he says. Letter of the Law Every story needs a villain, and in this one, the villain's hat has been placed squarely on the head of Barker, the prosecutor and a former college baseball player. Barker doesn't write the laws in the books to the left of his desk. He simply punishes those who break them. "We didn't want him to get the 10 years," he says. "We understand there's an element out there scratching their heads, saying, 'How does a kid get 10 years under these facts?' " In Barker's eyes, Wilson should have taken the same plea agreement as the others. Maintaining innocence in the face of the crushing wheels of justice is the ultimate act of vanity, he believes. "I understand what he's saying," Barker says. "I think he's making a bad decision in the long run. Being branded a sex offender is not good; but at the same time, if it made the difference between spending 10 years as opposed to two? Is it worth sitting in prison for eight more years, and you're still gonna be a sex offender when you get out?" Barker is quick to point out that he offered Wilson a plea after he'd been found guilty -- the first time he has ever done that. Of course, the plea was the same five years he'd offered before the trial -- not taking into account the rape acquittal. Barker thinks five years is fair for receiving oral sex from a schoolmate. None of the other defendants insisted on a jury trial. Wilson did. He rolled the dice, and he lost. The others, he says, "took their medicine."

While Bernstein works on every possible legal solution, the Douglas County District Attorney's Office has the power to get Wilson out of prison. If the prosecution wanted, this could all end tomorrow. The D.A.'s office says Bernstein hasn't asked. Bernstein says she has. Not that any legal he said/she said matters. Only the prosecutors' opinion does, and according to at least one legal expert, prosecutorial ego is more of a factor in this case than race. The folks in Douglas County are playing god with Genarlow Wilson's life. "We can set aside his sentence," Barker says. "Legally, it's still possible for us to set aside his sentence and give him a new sentence to a lesser charge. But it's up to us. He has no control over it."

The position of Barker and the district attorney, McDade, who refused to comment, is that Wilson is guilty under the law and there is no room for mercy, though the facts seem to say they simply chose not to give it to Wilson. At the same time this trial was under way, a local high school teacher, a white female, was found guilty of having a sexual relationship with a student -- a true case of child molestation. The teacher received 90 days. Wilson received 3,650 days.

Now, if Wilson wants a shot at getting out, he must throw himself at the prosecutors' feet and ask for mercy, which he might or might not receive. Joseph Heller would love this. If Wilson would only admit to being a child molester, he could stop receiving the punishment of one. Maybe.

"Well," Barker says, "the one person who can change things at this point is Genarlow. The ball's in his court."

Hanging On To Hope Back at Burruss, Genarlow Wilson is standing against the wall, looking out through the glass of the control room, peering between the bars, watching his attorney and another visitor leave. He has had plenty of people who want to talk to him, including a group of concerned legislators who plan on visiting this week, which finally feels like a real step toward freedom. Problem is, they always go home after an hour or two. He stays behind.

The worst is when his mom comes. She visited on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, bringing him news of the outside world and a smile. She told him about the new house she bought, just over the Cobb County line, finally out of Douglas. She doesn't want him moving back there when he's released. Saying goodbye, though, kills him. He watches her go and is taken back to his cell, where he can just imagine her in her car, imagining him in this prison.

Tracy Smith/Special to ESPN.comWilson is facing another eight years behind bars if his sentence is upheld.

"When she leaves, a part of me leaves," he says. "I just have to get myself back together, because we've got a long way to go. I try not to think about doing the whole 10. I'm putting claims on going home this year."

Hope is all he has left. He believes in a system that has failed him. He believes in those powerful men down in Atlanta. He believes in the kindness of others, and in the skills of Bernstein. He lets her work, spending most of his days in the prison library, reading all the books he can. Sometimes, he pretends he's a character, living in a fantasy world, not in a cellblock.

When the weather's nice, he can run laps around the yard, as if he's still on a football field, chasing down future first-round picks. The burn in his lungs feels like a time long past. It feels like freedom.

He looks through the windows just a moment more, sadness in his eyes, then turns around. Wilson stares down the hall of his prison, waiting on a day when he can go home.

"I've got a real good feeling about what's going on," he says. "I feel like 2007 is it. This is my year."

His mom has the house ready for him, because any day now, her baby's coming back. She just knows it. Over past the dryer, that's his new bedroom. She picked it because it's close to the garage, so he could come and go as he pleases. She thought he deserved that.

Everything's set, in case it's tomorrow. She left the rapper posters rolled up, figuring a man would be coming home. She set out his football trophies and his high school diploma, to remind him what he used to be. She hooked up a television and a stereo. An alarm clock is on the nightstand, so he can get himself up for school. Even the bed is made.

The only thing missing is her son.

http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/eticket/story?page=wilson

GrandeDavid
01-24-2007, 08:32 PM
I am at a lack of words to describe my outrage at the disgraceful 'justice system' in the state of Georgia. But for my conscience, I am going to express my displeasure to the proper authorities.

boutons_
01-24-2007, 08:54 PM
He's black.
Who makes the laws in Georgia?

johngateswhiteley
01-24-2007, 08:55 PM
saw this on ESPN...a total outrage, no doubt.

midgetonadonkey
01-24-2007, 08:56 PM
He broke the law now has to pay the price.

Marklar MM
01-24-2007, 10:55 PM
But because of an archaic Georgia law, it was a misdemeanor for teenagers less than three years apart to have sexual intercourse ... but a felony for the same kids to have oral sex

What I find stupid with that law is that oral sex brings a harsher penalty than actual sex.

LaMarcus Bryant
01-24-2007, 11:05 PM
Yet people like Tpark insist that racism is long gone. Has there ever been one of these technical-archaeic law-system glitches applied to a non minority?

desflood
01-24-2007, 11:09 PM
What I find stupid with that law is that oral sex brings a harsher penalty than actual sex.
In some places oral sex is considered "sodomy" rather than "normal sex." That would explain it. Not that that makes it (the law) any less wrong or archaic.

Marklar MM
01-24-2007, 11:17 PM
In some places oral sex is considered "sodomy" rather than "normal sex." That would explain it. Not that that makes it (the law) any less wrong or archaic.

Shit. It is still stupid.

Kori Ellis
01-25-2007, 06:18 AM
Sad story. I know he fucked up, but he didn't fuck up 10-years worth.


"We didn't want him to get the 10 years," he says. "We understand there's an element out there scratching their heads, saying, 'How does a kid get 10 years under these facts?' "


Indeed, when the jurors found out there was a 10-year mandatory minimum sentence, several were incensed.

I don't get how neither the prosecutor nor the jury knew they were convicting him of a crime that would give him a mandatory 10 years. You'd think they would know.

timvp
01-25-2007, 06:26 AM
It's bad that it has come this far. The kid has already served way to much time for the "crime".


He did screw up.

How did he screw up? What 17 year old male in the country would have pushed the girl away?

Getting 10 years in this case is about as bad as getting 10 years for eating apple pie at a baseball game while waving an American flag.




P.S.

Where is the rioting when it's called for? :madrun

ponky
01-25-2007, 06:45 AM
i was just reading this, i remember that other atlanta case as well which involved a black teen and a white girl although i think the girls were black in this case. i know lots of people hate mark cuban here but at least he came out and made some comments about it and is having that documentary aired.

ponky
01-25-2007, 06:47 AM
He did screw up. He used drugs. He had sex from an early age. But anyone of us could name 10 people we know who did the same exact thing and didn't serve any time.

Shit, I have done worse things than him, and I rarely screw around.

There is clearly a problem with our justice system. It is bullshit that something like this happens in the US.

he didn't screw up, the system screwed up. it's just like the sodomy law here in texas, archaic and allows idiots to point the finger just because they disagree about teenagers, homosexuals and anyone not belonging to the christian coalition having sex...who doesn't like blowjobs?!?!?!?!?! i've never met that man!

Marklar MM
01-25-2007, 09:00 AM
So what are you in here for Genarlow?

I got a blowjob in high school.

samikeyp
01-25-2007, 10:20 AM
Sad story. I know he fucked up, but he didn't fuck up 10-years worth.

Agreed.

DarkReign
01-25-2007, 11:00 AM
Yet people like Tpark insist that racism is long gone. Has there ever been one of these technical-archaeic law-system glitches applied to a non minority?

What a bunch of bullshit.

Without getting specific, being a minority has nothing to do with this. I know a person personally who had the exact same thing happen to them. 4th degree CSC.

He was 17, she was 15. He is white.

Only difference is that he wasnt an athlete with ESPN to cover the tragic story.

Whiners.

Kori Ellis
01-25-2007, 11:06 AM
What a bunch of bullshit.

Without getting specific, being a minority has nothing to do with this. I know a person personally who had the exact same thing happen to them. 4th degree CSC.

He was 17, she was 15. He is white.

Only difference is that he wasnt an athlete with ESPN to cover the tragic story.

Whiners.

He went to jail 10 years?

DarkReign
01-25-2007, 11:08 AM
He went to jail 10 years?

Still in Ionia Prison....6 years. Maybe Michigan is a little more lenient.

Kori Ellis
01-25-2007, 11:13 AM
But because of an archaic Georgia law, it was a misdemeanor for teenagers less than three years apart to have sexual intercourse ... but a felony for the same kids to have oral sex ...


Still in Ionia Prison....6 years. Maybe Michigan is a little more lenient.

So they have the same archaic law in Michigan? Is he appealing it?

I just don't see how a 15 and 17 year old can fuck and it's a misdemeanor, but if the 17 year old gets a blow job, they go away for 6 to 10 years.

ShoogarBear
01-25-2007, 11:23 AM
I just don't see how a 15 and 17 year old can fuck and it's a misdemeanor, but if the 17 year old gets a blow job, they go away for 6 to 10 years.http://www.georgia-map.org/georgia-highway-map.gif

GrandeDavid
01-25-2007, 11:47 AM
He's black.
Who makes the laws in Georgia?

That was the first thing I thought, honestly. Old, southern, bible-beating, ultra-conservative laws which are enforced with fire against the poorer people, often minorites, in society.

DarkReign
01-25-2007, 11:50 AM
So they have the same archaic law in Michigan? Is he appealing it?

I just don't see how a 15 and 17 year old can fuck and it's a misdemeanor, but if the 17 year old gets a blow job, they go away for 6 to 10 years.

As with any case, there are alot of details, so I will spare them. Point is, he was 17, she was 15. It was consensual sex (was there a BJ? no idea).

After he didnt call her again, she cried foul. Police, charged, notified, turned himself in, bond, trial. Prosecution sought 2nd degree CSC (punishable up to 25, if I remember). Its a typical "my word against yours"....shes a girl, hes a guy. She can turn on the tears at will....you know the story. Father was all fire and brimstone in the deposition stage, yadayada.

Maybe it was his lawyer, but I agreed as well. He was going to lose, whether he was guilty or not. Take the plea. Plead down to 4th degree (which doesnt put you on the sex offender list, thank God), but got maximum sentence. 6 years. Terms of plea were without appealing.

In reality, he probably wont serve all 6. He is into his 2nd year and will probably be parolled very soon (overpopulation is a bitch). He is in the "minimum security" equivalent of the prison, so its pretty lax (as far as prison goes).

She laughed. I will see her in hell.

GrandeDavid
01-25-2007, 11:51 AM
Sad story. I know he fucked up, but he didn't fuck up 10-years worth.

And just being honest, had I been in his shoes I prolly would be in prison as well. I'm not saying I would've done some group thing, especially with a bunch of guys, but the oral sex, i.e. "the crime" he committed, I would've easily committed at 17 years of age. I guess I should be out of jail by now, though, since I'm in my early thirties.

On the other hand, I wouldn't have been with a girl two years younger than me at 17, though! Still, I find that outrageous. Sickening.

DarkReign
01-25-2007, 11:52 AM
Now only if he were a) a member of the Duke lacrosse team and rich beyond measure, or b) a minority stand-out athlete, ESPN or the equivalent would have covered the story.

Alas, hes just Joe Blow, in prison.

GrandeDavid
01-25-2007, 11:54 AM
It's bad that it has come this far. The kid has already served way to much time for the "crime".



How did he screw up? What 17 year old male in the country would have pushed the girl away?

Getting 10 years in this case is about as bad as getting 10 years for eating apple pie at a baseball game while waving an American flag.




P.S.

Where is the rioting when it's called for? :madrun

I COMPLETELY agree with you, LJ. In fact, I'm so fvcking embarrassed and put to shame by this for sharing citizenship with that DA in Georgia and all those racist, ignorant pig ancestors. This kid should not only be out of jail, but I think the state of Georgia owes him millions of dollars for an assortment of damages.

GrandeDavid
01-25-2007, 11:56 AM
Still in Ionia Prison....6 years. Maybe Michigan is a little more lenient.

In Michigan, too!!! My freaking lord! :pctoss

Kori Ellis
01-25-2007, 11:56 AM
Now only if he were a) a member of the Duke lacrosse team and rich beyond measure, or b) a minority stand-out athlete, ESPN or the equivalent would have covered the story.

Alas, hes just Joe Blow, in prison.

Sorry about your friend (acquaintance?).

But it's not ESPN's job to cover stories like this about every person in the situation. Of course they wrote this article because he's a stand-out athlete - they are a sports network.

Johnny_Blaze_47
01-25-2007, 11:59 AM
This is another of the more infuriating statements in this article.



In Barker's eyes, Wilson should have taken the same plea agreement as the others. Maintaining innocence in the face of the crushing wheels of justice is the ultimate act of vanity, he believes.

Johnny_Blaze_47
01-25-2007, 12:03 PM
Now only if he were a) a member of the Duke lacrosse team and rich beyond measure, or b) a minority stand-out athlete, ESPN or the equivalent would have covered the story.

Alas, hes just Joe Blow, in prison.

Have you tried your local equivalents?

There have got to be others in the same situation as your friend.

But one big difference between your friend's case (from your statement) and the Wilson case is the girl says she was raped. In Wilson's case, there seems to be nobody but the prosecutor (and likely the DA, too) who believes Wilson deserves to be in jail.

Has the girl in your friend's case made statements to the contrary of what she said during her trial?

AlamoSpursFan
01-25-2007, 12:04 PM
I'm surprised nobody's posted this yet.

http://www.wilsonappeal.com/index.php

What happened to this young man is a VERY disturbing miscarriage of justice.

ShoogarBear
01-25-2007, 12:06 PM
As with any case, there are alot of details, so I will spare them. Point is, he was 17, she was 15. It was consensual sex (was there a BJ? no idea).

After he didnt call her again, she cried foul. Police, charged, notified, turned himself in, bond, trial. Prosecution sought 2nd degree CSC (punishable up to 25, if I remember). Its a typical "my word against yours"....shes a girl, hes a guy. She can turn on the tears at will....you know the story. Father was all fire and brimstone in the deposition stage, yadayada.

Maybe it was his lawyer, but I agreed as well. He was going to lose, whether he was guilty or not. Take the plea. Plead down to 4th degree (which doesnt put you on the sex offender list, thank God), but got maximum sentence. 6 years. Terms of plea were without appealing.

In reality, he probably wont serve all 6. He is into his 2nd year and will probably be parolled very soon (overpopulation is a bitch). He is in the "minimum security" equivalent of the prison, so its pretty lax (as far as prison goes).

She laughed. I will see her in hell.Well, so then this is not at all comparable. Falsely or not, the woman/girl was bringing charges, which ups the ante tremendously.

In Wilson's case, the female admitted it was consensual.

Johnny_Blaze_47
01-25-2007, 12:07 PM
Without getting specific, being a minority has nothing to do with this. I know a person personally who had the exact same thing happen to them. 4th degree CSC.


Why did she "turn on the tears" if it's the "exact same thing"?

Don't fault the media in its coverage here - there are striking differences in the cases from what you've posted so far.

AlamoSpursFan
01-25-2007, 12:10 PM
http://abcnews.go.com/Primetime/LegalCenter/story?id=1693362&page=1

Kori Ellis
01-25-2007, 12:18 PM
This is another of the more infuriating statements in this article.

Yes, that pisses me off too. It doesn't sound like he didn't accept the plea out of vanity at all.


Five of the boys accepted plea deals, but Wilson — the only one without a police record — held out.



Today Wilson remains as steadfast as ever about not taking the deal that would have reduced his sentence by half.

"It's all about doing what's right," he said. "And what's right is right, and what's wrong is wrong. And I'm just standing up for what I believe in."

AlamoSpursFan
01-25-2007, 12:20 PM
Yes, that pisses me off too. It doesn't sound like he didn't accept the plea out of vanity at all.

If I read the article correctly, had he accepted the plea he would have had to move out of his house because of his little sister.

That's effed up. (Like the rest of the story isn't...)

dougp
01-25-2007, 12:32 PM
This sucks for him - but I find it funny that he went to jail for a BJ and his attorney is named BJ.

TDMVPDPOY
01-25-2007, 12:33 PM
dont alot of hi-schoolers have sex and oral shit....this shit happens every fuckn day, you dont see many clowns gettin caught....

easjer
01-25-2007, 12:53 PM
Kori nailed it. Fucking ridiculous that a boy can receive a consenual blow job from a girl two years his junior and go to jail for ten years, but if he'd fucked her instead, it's no big deal.

Completely outrageous. I'm flabbergasted.

101A
01-25-2007, 12:55 PM
Governor should pardon him.

Looked at who the governor is; oh.

Johnny_Blaze_47
01-25-2007, 12:58 PM
Governor should pardon him.

Looked at who the governor is; oh.



They talk last-ditch plans, including a constitutional amendment returning pardon power to the governor.

Extra Stout
01-25-2007, 03:17 PM
Y'see, down yonder in this here Douglas Coun'ny, ther'r con-see-kwen-sez for that there moral terp-ee-tude. We're a good Christian ker-munity 'round here. Y'git caw-it wit'yer pants 'round yer ankles an' a harlot serv-sen ya, w'gonna lock y'up. Gotta take yer med-sen. 'Spesh-ly them darkies.

Spurminator
01-25-2007, 03:24 PM
Despicable.

Spurminator
01-25-2007, 03:54 PM
http://www.wilsonappeal.com/index.php

And more fun reading, if you want to be pissed off for the rest of the day...

http://forums.go.com/abcnews/Primetime/thread?threadID=321374

1369
01-25-2007, 04:12 PM
Old news (but still just as tragic). HBO "Real Sports" did this story in 2004 or 2005.

Extra Stout
01-25-2007, 04:18 PM
Crackers are crackers. 100 years ago, after singing hymns at the Baptist church on Sunday, the nice folks in Douglas County would have gotten their picnic baskets, headed down to the courthouse lawn, and watched gleefully as some men in white sheets barged into the jail, extracted the black man, strung him up in the air naked, sliced off his genitals, and stuffed them down his throat for receiving oral sex from a 15-year-old white girl.

That is what they really would like to see happen. But, in this day and age they can't get away with that, so the best they can do is have him sent to prison for 10 years.

If the DA's office made a motion to vacate the conviction, Mr. Barker would wake up one evening to find a burning cross on his lawn, and he might be taken for a ride with some folks to explain to him what happens to elected officials who don't respect the order of things.

Crackers are crackers.

Spurminator
01-25-2007, 04:21 PM
Old news

Sad but true. I can't believe it took three years for this to be a headline story.

Maybe if Al Sharpton wasn't so busy blackmailing corporations into giving money to his rich friends, he could have used his clout to draw attention to this TRUE injustice.

But now that it's making news I'm sure he'll find a way to exploit it for camera time.


Also, major props to Wilson's lawyer.

timvp
01-25-2007, 04:38 PM
As with any case, there are alot of details, so I will spare them. Point is, he was 17, she was 15. It was consensual sex (was there a BJ? no idea).

After he didnt call her again, she cried foul. Police, charged, notified, turned himself in, bond, trial. Prosecution sought 2nd degree CSC (punishable up to 25, if I remember). Its a typical "my word against yours"....shes a girl, hes a guy. She can turn on the tears at will....you know the story. Father was all fire and brimstone in the deposition stage, yadayada.

Maybe it was his lawyer, but I agreed as well. He was going to lose, whether he was guilty or not. Take the plea. Plead down to 4th degree (which doesnt put you on the sex offender list, thank God), but got maximum sentence. 6 years. Terms of plea were without appealing.

In reality, he probably wont serve all 6. He is into his 2nd year and will probably be parolled very soon (overpopulation is a bitch). He is in the "minimum security" equivalent of the prison, so its pretty lax (as far as prison goes).

She laughed. I will see her in hell.

Uh, that's nowhere close to the same thing. Getting six years for raping a 15 year old is pretty understandable.

Getting 10 years in this case isn't.

timvp
01-25-2007, 04:38 PM
Old news (but still just as tragic). HBO "Real Sports" did this story in 2004 or 2005.

That was a different case.

Johnny_Blaze_47
01-25-2007, 04:50 PM
Uh, that's nowhere close to the same thing. Getting six years for raping a 15 year old is pretty understandable.

Getting 10 years in this case isn't.

Nope. Media's fault.

1369
01-25-2007, 04:57 PM
That was a different case.

You're right, a look at "Real Sports" site shows it was Marcus Dixon, but it was still in Georgia.

The Georgia Supreme Court recently freed him.

Kori Ellis
01-25-2007, 05:03 PM
You're right, a look at "Real Sports" site shows it was Marcus Dixon, but it was still in Georgia.

The Georgia Supreme Court recently freed him.

That case was in 2003, but I don't get why they didn't get rid of that Georgia law when everyone knew it was outrageous then. Now, Wilson's case is so similar.


The news of Dixon's arrest for rape, statutory rape, aggravated assault, false imprisonment and sexual battery seemed to take those who knew him by surprise. It seemed totally out of character for this near-4.0 student, who scored greater than 1,200 on his SAT and planned to major in education at Vandy. In the end, the jury found no basis for any of the "forcible crimes" charges, and found him not guilty on all of them. They also concluded that, as was Dixon's claim all along, the sex was completely consensual.

However, John McClellan, the Floyd County District Attorney on the case, also brought the charge of Child Molestation against Dixon. This charge was proven through a technicality, as Dixon was two years and seven months older than the girl, and Dixon had just turned 18. Even though the sex was consensual, under Georgia's relatively new Child Protection laws, this conviction carries a mandatory 10-year prison sentence without parole. According to Gumbel via the law firm representing Dixon's appeal, and not disputed by McClellan, this is the first time in Georgia's history that a high school teen was prosecuted for a felony for having consensual sex with a classmate.

Spurminator
01-25-2007, 05:04 PM
Three years wasted already.

I hope when Wilson gets out and gets into a good college, he has enough money left in his defense fund to sue the pants off the DA and the State of Georgia.

DarkReign
01-25-2007, 06:10 PM
Have you tried your local equivalents?

There have got to be others in the same situation as your friend.

But one big difference between your friend's case (from your statement) and the Wilson case is the girl says she was raped. In Wilson's case, there seems to be nobody but the prosecutor (and likely the DA, too) who believes Wilson deserves to be in jail.

Has the girl in your friend's case made statements to the contrary of what she said during her trial?

2nd degree CSC is rape. He plead down so as not to be in Mr Wilsons case. Heres a truth; if a girl says you raped her after consensual sex, what proof do you have you didnt (hypothetical)?

You dont. Railroad starts. You lose, Mr Male.

DarkReign
01-25-2007, 06:14 PM
Uh, that's nowhere close to the same thing. Getting six years for raping a 15 year old is pretty understandable.

Getting 10 years in this case isn't.

I dont think you quite understood.

He didnt rape her. Period. It was consensual. Court documents state as such. But "a-HA!" he was 17, she was 15...age of consent is 16 and at 17 you can be tried as an adult (which he was). Rest is history.

----------------

For the record, I am not trying to equte Mr Wilson's case with my friends. But the similarities are there in the sense of being an injustice with no recourse.

ShoogarBear
01-25-2007, 06:22 PM
After he didnt call her again, she cried foul. Police, charged, notified, turned himself in, bond, trial. Prosecution sought 2nd degree CSC (punishable up to 25, if I remember). Its a typical "my word against yours"....shes a girl, hes a guy. She can turn on the tears at will....you know the story. Okay, what exactly did she say? She went to the police and said she had consensual sex with a 17 year old? Or she said it was something other than that? What was the "my word against yours" part? Because this is why people (me, anyway) don't see how it is the same situation.

Fillmoe
01-25-2007, 06:26 PM
Here are some of the jurors from the trial...



















http://www.seinfeld-fan.net/pictures/kramer/kramer014.jpg
http://i80.photobucket.com/albums/j186/momsquawk/george-bush.gif
http://ccinsider.comedycentral.com/photos/uncategorized/claytonbigsby.jpg
http://www.inthesetimes.com/images/29/07/killen.jpg
http://www.publiceye.org/gallery/kkk/kkkyng_b.jpg

supposedly Clayton Bixby was added so they wouldn't have to answer any questions about an all white jury.

DisgruntledLionFan#54,927
01-25-2007, 06:40 PM
Heres a truth; if a girl says you raped her after consensual sex, what proof do you have you didnt (hypothetical)?




Uh, the video and numerous pics..

Nbadan
01-25-2007, 06:48 PM
Ewww....sloppy seconds.

DarkReign
01-26-2007, 10:40 AM
Okay, what exactly did she say? She went to the police and said she had consensual sex with a 17 year old? Or she said it was something other than that? What was the "my word against yours" part? Because this is why people (me, anyway) don't see how it is the same situation.

I am going to speak in her voice for a moment and paraphrase, makes it easier to tell it accurately....

"My boyfriend pressured me to have sex with him, which I wasnt ready to do until marriage (BS). But I loved him and thought he loved me, so we did. I started to notice all he wanted was sex, so I stopped it. We saw each other at a mutual friend's house soon after and we talked for a long time. He was very sincere and nice so we started to date again.

I got into a big fight with my parents and needed to talk to someone. So I called John. He came over and really listened and helped me through the whole situation. We ended up sleeping together that night.

I realized my mistake (BS) and called him to tell him thank you for your support but that the mistake was not going to be repeated (BS). He got angry and made threats against me (big time BS). On the night in question (which was the next day after he supposedly made threats), he came over my house when my parents werent home under the pretense that he just wanted to apologize and talk (also BS). He forced himself onto me and raped me (thats a sum up)."

Reality is, she was a whore. He had sex with her a couple of times over the course of a month. At the time, he was 16, she was 15. The reality is she was obsessed with him and used to call him all the time (phone records show as much, thus the reason she kept saying they "talked things through" alot in her deposition). Reality is, she didnt like being discarded for the whore that she was, so she wanted revenge (probably, thats my opinion). So she cooked the story up.

So whats your defense in that situation? Do you think you could actually convince your attorney, much less a judge or jury, that this 15 year old suburbanite from a rich family is actually a dirty little whore? Because the "my word against yours" is the only real evidence in the case (she admits to consensual sex multiple times). So your only recourse is to pursue a character assassination to persuade the judge/jury that she was just a flouzy who was scorned.

Honestly, her lawyers/parents/whatever covered their bases brilliantly. They admitted consensual, so there was no need for tests. They admitted a relationship and phone calls, so the phone records couldnt be used for or against, they just were.

The truth is the night in question he was there, they did have sex. They immediately got into a fight some time in the next few days because he told her that the relationship she thought she was in was nothing more than sex, by the end of the week he was turning himself in.

He was 17 when the trial started, he was being tried as an adult for 2nd degree CSC of a minor. He was going to lose. He knew it, his lawyer knew it, everyone knew it. He was a lower middle class Joe Nobody, she was highly upper middle class whose parents were professionals (mom doctor, dad business owner). Her team of lawyers outclassed his in every facet.

The judge was a woman. He stood no chance. He could have fought it under a character assassination calling witnesses to attest to her permiscuous history, but who is going to go into a court and say "Yes, I am 17, and I had sex with her too".

For clarity, she was a sophmore in high school, he was a junior. So this isnt like some guy sleeping with some young chick. They were one grade apart and dont tell me you cared when you were high school.

He did what any smart person would do...plea down to a level where you arent considered a sexual offender and have to register everywhere you live. You take the deal that is only punishable up to 6 years (i think) and hope the judge is lenient based on your testimony. She wasnt lenient. Not even close. He was railroaded.

If you work the math out, youll see that he was 17 in 2004. He will be 21 this year (soon so I am told). He will be released on parole very soon and will free and clear of this sentence after its has run its course (4 years of parole). Then probation. In 11 years, he can have it expunged from his record and it will never be mentioned again.

Thats bullshit.

ShoogarBear
01-26-2007, 02:18 PM
Yes, that's bad situation. The facts you presented show that she took a standard relationship issue and turned it into a criminal case out of vengeance.

However, the court in that case knows only that she accused someone of rape, and that the facts of the matter were in dispute. And rape can occur even if two people have been having consensual sex for a while. The outcome of the process was unfair, but the system was obligated to go through the process.

In the other case, there was no dispute of the facts, and no one was claiming they had been harmed. The court gave criminal punishment to the UNDISPUTED CONSENSUAL act. And the jurors and the prosecutors seemed to be unaware of the consequences of their actions.

DarkReign
01-27-2007, 03:58 PM
In the other case, there was no dispute of the facts, and no one was claiming they had been harmed. The court gave criminal punishment to the UNDISPUTED CONSENSUAL act. And the jurors and the prosecutors seemed to be unaware of the consequences of their actions.

Good point. Very much a different case, then.

But it just sparked the memory, so I shared.

Spurminator
06-12-2007, 09:18 AM
Bump

http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/06/11/teen.sex.case/index.html

BacktoBasics
06-12-2007, 09:34 AM
I love how people turn this into something about race. No wonder we have all the problems we do in society. Its always someone else's fault and its because I'm black, mexican, chinese, jewish.

I think the punishment is too harsh but society makes it much worse by bringing the race card into it. I hope he gets out.

easjer
06-12-2007, 10:12 AM
Thank God someone finally made some sense here. Fuck that AG for appealing it. I don't believe his legal grounds bullshit. I get that laws are written for a reason and that things have to work in certain ways, but when there has been a clear miscarriage of justice - just fix it. FIX it. Stop using the courts and written laws as excuses. Stop hiding behind legal jargon. Own up to the mistake and acknowledge that it didn't work the way it was supposed to here.

MaNuMaNiAc
06-12-2007, 05:52 PM
Shit! If this guy is guilty, then I'm guilty aswell! How the fuck do you give a kid 10 years of jail time for consensual oral sex!?? When he gets out he should sue the system! This kid deserves a free ride the rest of his life for what he's been put through.

EDIT: By the way, I've had sex with a 16 year old when I was 17. Anybody want to call the authorities? Whoever prosecuted this kid should burn

PM5K
06-12-2007, 06:24 PM
What the fuck?