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July 23, 2020 - Issue 828
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Guaranteeing Equal Protection
Under the Law
The donald  flaunts his lawlessness


 

"The National Registry of Exonerations reports
that there have been 2,644 exonerations since 1989
when it started tracking the injustices. There are
thousands more languishing in U.S. prisons while
trying to prove their innocence. That’s a total of
23,500 years lost by victims and their families due
to a racist, unjust system. The time and missed
life experiences can never be recovered."


The man in the White House masquerading as a president flaunted his blatant disrespect of the law when he pardoned another one of his felon friends. At the same time, people like Lamar Johnson have been rotting for 25 years in a Missouri cage for a crime he didn’t commit. trump had the audacity to criticize the efforts of St. Louis’s first African American prosecutor from his presidential perch. It’s this kind of racist corruption that brought people in the streets demanding transformative change.

Roger Stone was about to see how his fake gangsterism was going to hold up in federal prison until trump came to his rescue. Stone was convicted of seven felonies including witness tampering, lying to federal investigations and obstruction of justice. There was no presumption of guilt; Stone was stone, cold guilty of all the charges. Now, we’ll have to watch him strut around in the public square touting his victory.

Stone is the sixth trump crony to be convicted or who pled guilty of charges coming out of the investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller. However, at least 14 of trump’s aides and allies have been indicted or sent to prison--all busted doing the dirty work of the president. These were the ones who got caught. The biggest crook of them all is still in 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. For now.

The case of Lamar Johnson is tragic because of the corruption by St. Louis prosecutors who framed an innocent man and sent him away from his family and community 25 years ago. A double tragedy is occurring because there’s no good damn reason for Johnson to still be incarcerated other than he’s a Black man and a Black, female prosecutor is trying to right the wrong.

Johnson’s case was taken up by the Conviction Integrity Unit (CIU) set up by Circuit Attorney Gardner when she was elected. These offices are set up to investigate claims of innocence. Cases are reviewed for troubling legal issues at the time of conviction and the emergence of new evidence. Gardner’s office did a thorough investigation and found several unjust atrocities committed by police and prosecutors.

Gardner’s conclusion led her to file for a new trial on behalf of Johnson but last year Circuit Judge Elizabeth Hogan ruled that such a motion should’ve been filed with 15 days of Johnson’s conviction. Yes, Hogan basically said Gardner’s motion was 24 years too late. News of the ruling went national and prosecutors around the country urged Hogan not to use a procedure to block justice. It fell on deaf ears.

State Attorney General Eric Schmitt heaped his racist views on top of the circuit court’s injustice. He echoed that Kim Gardner did not follow the process. Never mind that neither police nor prosecutors followed their respective processes in 1994. In fact, they broke the law. They have conspired to do this in many cases over many years.

The National Registry of Exonerations reports that there have been 2,644 exonerations since 1989 when it started tracking the injustices. There are thousands more languishing in U.S. prisons while trying to prove their innocence. That’s a total of 23,500 years lost by victims and their families due to a racist, unjust system. The time and missed life experiences can never be recovered.

Lamar Johnson and others whose cases have made their way to the CIU office sit in limbo as white folks in power try to keep the first African American prosecutor in St. Louis her place. It is reminiscent of the Dred Scott decision that Black people have no rights that white people have to respect whether you’re a prosecutor or the prosecuted.

Elections matter. A wave of new prosecutors are working to bring judicial relief to communities who’ve been made fodder for mass incarceration over decades. In Missouri and in St. Louis, voters must send a resounding message on August 4 to the white, power structure that we demand fairness and justice. After all, this is the Show-Me State.


BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member and Columnist, Jamala Rogers, founder and Chair Emeritus of the Organization for Black Struggle in St. Louis. She is an organizer, trainer and speaker. She is the author of The Best of the Way I See It – A Chronicle of Struggle.  Other writings by Ms. Rogers can be found on her blog jamalarogers.comContact Ms. Rogers and BC.
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is published every Thursday
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David A. Love, JD
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