We've already looked at the issue of lethal injection being argued as cruel and unusual punishment, but now let's look at the issue of the death penalty in relation to this story. If we are going to have the death penalty, how can we be 100% sure that we are killing the right individual? If we can't be 100% sure...then what should we do with the death penalty?
On Thursday, after spending 27 years in prison for a crime that he did not commit, Charles Chatman walked free. The world — or the world outside of jail, that is — was a different place than that he had left nearly three decades ago. After only using spoons in prison, he had to relearn how to use a knife to cut his steak. The judge for his case even had to teach him how to use a cell phone — a newfangled technology, for 47-year-old Chatman — so he could call his family.
Chatman is the 15th wrongfully convicted prisoner in Dallas County who has been exonerated by DNA evidence since 2001.Chatman’s story is one of those tug-on-your-heartstrings tales of a man whose life spun out of his control. When he was 20, he was convicted of raping a young women who lived five houses down the street. The women, who was in her 20s, picked Chatman from a police lineup. Serology tests further validated her claim, showing that Chatman’s blood type matched that found at the crime scene, despite the fact that the blood type also matched that of 40% of black males.
Chatman was convicted of aggravated sexual assault and sentenced to 99 years in prison based on a police lineup, unreliable blood evidence, and a jury that had only one black member. “I was convicted because a black man committed a crime against a white woman,” Chatman said, as quoted in the Associated Press. “And I was available.” Chatman had been working at the time of the crime — a claim supported by his sister, who was his then-employer — but the alibi didn’t seem to matter.
During those 27 long years in prison, Chatman did have three chances at parole. The parole board always pressed him to confess, and when Chatman refused fabricate a story of his crime, the board refused to let him out. “Every time I’d go to parole, they’d want a description of the crime or my version of the crime,” said Chatman. “I don’t have a version of the crime. I never committed the crime. I never will admit to doing this crime that I know I didn’t do.”
Last year, when Chatman applied for DNA testing, he was told it would be risky. There was only one DNA sample available from the crime — a small amount of DNA on a vaginal swab from the victim. Despite the fact that the single test would use all available DNA evidence and rule out the possibility of further tests, said his lawyer, Dallas County public defender Michelle Moore, Chatman decided to go ahead with the procedure. The DNA test showed that the rape had been committed by another man, and Chatman joyfully left the cell that had been his home for nearly three decades.
Now that Chatman’s been exonerated, he’ll disappear from the news (not that he got much coverage anyway, having been freed on the day of the Iowa caucuses). But Chatman’s struggle is far from over. If he wants any kind of financial compensation for his decades spent in prison, he’ll have to fight a system that makes it anything but easy for wrongly convicted people to obtain compensation for their time in jail. “The majority of people exonerated after proving their innocence have not been compensated for the injustice they suffered and the time they spent incarcerated,” says the Innocence Project. And that doesn’t even take into account other services that innocent ex-convicts desperately need for re-entry into society, like job training, health and legal services, and education. After all, if you’ve spent the majority of your adult life in prison (from age 20 to 47, anyway), how could you possibly have any employable skills or the abilities to procure health or legal services on your own?
The current system for compensation is pretty much a political morass. In some states, former inmates must file civil lawsuits to receive compensation. Currently, only 22 states plus D.C. have compensation statutes. In Texas, for example, “A wrongfully convicted person is entitled to $50,000 per year of wrongful incarceration (and $100,000 per year if that person was sentenced to death), compensation for child support payments, and one year of counseling,” according to the Innocence Project. But other states have less clear cut policies. In New York, for example, according to the Innocence Project, “If the wrongfully convicted person ‘did not by his own conduct cause or bring about his conviction’ and files a claim within two years of his pardon of innocence, he shall receive ‘damages in such sum of money as the court determines will fairly and reasonably compensate him.’” That means that if innocent people plead guilty so as to get parole (like Chatman could have done) they can never receive any kind of compensation.
And then there are those 28 states that have no compensation policies at all, where many ex-inmates, after leaving jail, actually receive less of a safety net than that offered to actual guilty prisoners. In August of 2007, the Times researched the compensation claims of 206 people that have been exonerated by DNA evidence. They concluded,“At least 79 — nearly 40 percent — got no money for their years in prison. Half of those have federal lawsuits or state claims pending. More than half of those who did receive compensation waited two years or longer after exoneration for the first payment. Few of those who were interviewed received any government services after their release. Indeed, despite being imprisoned for an average of 12 years, they typically left prison with less help — prerelease counseling, job training, substance-abuse treatment, housing assistance and other services — than some states offer to paroled prisoners.”
The efforts of DA Watkins, the Innocence Project, and others who have worked to get more than 200 innocent people out of jail are nothing short of amazing. But, in creating this new population of innocent ex-convicts, they have generated a need not only for fair, equitable, and nationally consistent compensation laws, but for a guaranteed social safety net that will help wrongfully incarcerated to reintegrate into society. After all, if people like Chatman need to learn how to use cell phones and knives, might we expect they’ll need job training, health insurance, and counseling, too?
Now out of jail, Chatman says he plans to help other innocent prisoners who are currently incarcerated. “I believe that there are hundreds, and I know of two or three personally that very well could be sitting in this seat if they had the support and they had the backing that I have,” Chatman said. “My number one interest is trying to help people who have been in the situation I am in.”
13 comments:
THATS SOO WRONG!!! Why wasn't the DNA testing done right away? I can't even begin to imagine how hard it would be to spend the majority of your life in prison, knowing you were innocent. He better get all the money he's supposed to get.
Celesta Nave
10th grade
HuGeo 4
DNA testing did not exist when the individual was convicted.
huy nguyen-2nd period
genetic fingerprinting was first announced in 1985 so they couldn't.
Since many innocent convicts do not receive financial compensation, and those that do may not be satisfied, perhaps it is best to compensate with reforms. With the discovered flaws, the courts should patch up the system. I don't think a random selection of american citizens in a jury is a consistent/reliable/unbiased jury; maybe they should be voted or appointed based on merit and experience. That or get nathaniel watson to write a program that determines innocence.
It is very unfortunate to have something to this degree happen. If I were the victim of this, I would file a class action law suit against every person involved in my conviction, all witnesses - character, eyewitness or expert - the prosecutor and their offices, and the parole board. I would demand a million dollars per year spent in jail, per person involved, excluding the jury, and fight to have charges pressed on the rape victim for perjury and falsely reporting a crime.
Alex Wheeler
2nd
thats terrible, sounds like a whole lot of racism to me, i think the individuals who had a hand in convicting him should be investigated
Wow this is so unbelieveably sad. But like he said, he is a black man and she is a white woman and this was the early eighties so it's not all that surprising. Besides having to spend 27 years in prison, at least he is going to spend the rest of his life by helping people in similar situations.
People are too quick to judge! This poor guy spent 27 years of his life in jail. It kind of makes me think what could i be doing in the next 27 years. Well at least he's out and doing something for others.
Sarah Lambert
Human Geography(4)
9th grade
Luke D'Cunha
Period 6, government.
I think that, first of all, a huge compensation ought to be paid to the man.
Then, I believe that it would be best to implement very large reforms. For instance, psychologists could be involved in the legal process, especially during questioning the victim and convict(s). Also, I think that only people with a good understanding of human behavior should serve as jurors--not just random people who, many times, have no or very little understanding of human psychology.
Finally, I find it awkward that the courts place such a large emphasis on eye-witnesses, since many times the person's memory gets distorted, leading to tragic outcome, as in this case.
Gillian Welch
3rd
Wasn't it in the paper that David's dad (Kevin Glasheen) might be assisting Chatman in a civil law suit?
I read that.
I think that although states with Innocence laws have good in mind when it comes to trying to compensate years wasted in imprisonment, nothing can really make up for the time lost. You can't just pay someone and say, "Here, this should make up for the 27 years of our wrongdoing."
Yeah right.
I mean, I do think that he should pursue a civil law suit and be fully compensated materialistically but nothing can ever really make up for it.
I'm glad he's free though.
I'm sure there are many more innocent people that are locked away.
David Glasheen-3rd
Chatman was convicted because of overly zealous Dallas prosecutors. Those DA's are gone now.
What the news story doesn't mention is that the compensation is capped at one million dollars, or twenty years. That leaves 7 years of uncompensated time.
Fortunately, the City of Dallas, and the DA's who prosecuted Chatman can still be sued for their role in the case.
I have read a story recently in English about wrongful imprisonment, too. There was a man in Russia was accused for murdering a merchant. He was sent to Siberia for 26 years and died there. It's sad. But there is nothing more we can do besides doing more DNA tests and making better policies for those people who are wrongly imprisoned.
By Liulinbo Yang, 6th Peroid.
Being locked up for 27 years for a crime that you did not commit is so unjust. He repeatedly told the parole board that he did not commit the crime. Yet because like he said, he was black and she was white they needed someone to convict and he was the lucky someone. They need to change the laws, be more like Texas people, and like the article said they need to provide services that help them to adjust to the "outside" world. How are you going to let an innocent man just released from prison with no skills to get through everyday life? How do you expect him to make a living? If you do not at least provide him with the moohlah for his financial stability,then provide him with the necessary skills he needs for the work force to make a living. Also i guess good does come out of everything, he could become bitter and just yell at the system but yet he is helping others like himself.
Kayleigh Robertson
6th
It's so horrible that this guy was sitting in jail for 27 years for a wrongly accused crime. They should have done a lot more at the time than to just take the white ladies word. It's not right to send someone away just because of their color - making you think that they did it just because they're black.
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