“Just Mercy,” film by Destin Cretton, 2019
Unlike so
many typical films about the special oppression of people with darker skin, Just Mercy is not set during slavery or
Jim Crow. It is set in the late 1980s,
early 1990s in Alabama,
which makes it especially relevant to today.
The film shows how institutional racism continues in the legal system,
especially in murder cases. Shoddy and
incompetent defense counsel, lazy and racist police work, ignored evidence, bad
eyewitnesses and forensics and biased judges, district attorneys, prosecutors,
sheriffs and cops all play their role. This film is set in Alabama
but this happens even in the North as the 2002 Myon Burrell conviction
involving Minnesota
prosecutor Amy Klobuchar showed.
The Murderous State on Death Row |
This is the
true story of Bryan Stevenson, that rare Harvard law school grad who decided to
take up unjust convictions on death row, not a sinecure at an investment
bank. He starts the Equal Justice
Initiative (EJI) with federal funds and his first big case is that of Walter McMillan,
who was unjustly convicted of the murder of a young white girl at a dry-cleaner
in Monroeville, Alabama.
There was no evidence except a jail-house snitch who was forced to
change his testimony and a young black man, who it is later learned was nowhere
near the murder scene. Witnesses who
knew McMillan was at a picnic all day were ignored. The ironic joke is that while he’s in
Monroeville the prosecutor tells Stevenson to visit the Monroeville
courthouse where To Kill a Mockingbird
was set, even while denying that this ‘conviction’ might be bogus. It is clear many in Monroeville do not understand the
meaning of the film or book to this day.
Stevenson and his coworkers at the EJI are sort of modern Atticus Finches. This is further proof why Harper Lee got away
from Monroeville as fast as she could – and
still would!
The
laziness displayed by the local Baldwin County,
Alabama Sheriff and prosecutor made we wonder how many murder cases actually
get solved or are erroneous. 1 of every
9 people on death row are exonerated according to the film, so the error rate
is very high. 1 in 25 are exonerated after their execution. If you had that kind of error rate on your
job, you’d be fired.
The solid South has the highest incarceration rates for states, with Louisiana leading the list. From 1965
to 2018, the national ‘murder clearance rate’ was 66.25%, which means an arrest was made,
even if it was mistaken. This is the
best rate for all crimes with vehicle theft the worst - 13.8%. According to the U.S. government in 2018 62.3% of
murder cases ended in arrest. 38.7% went
unsolved and of those arrests, more than 1 in 9 were erroneous from the death
row stat. The National Registry of Exonerations lists 68 murder and manslaughter
convictions in 2018 overturned, with “official misconduct” the chief
reason. Because of the high rate of erroneous
convictions as shown by the various Innocence
Projects, local bodies are setting up special investigative groups to look
at the issue.
This film
is based on the inaccurate, cruel and racist nature of death row and the death
penalty, not just faulty police work. It
steals part or all of an inmate’s life, damages his family and community and
impacts him for life even if he is released.
The solid South, the
inter-mountain West, some prairie states, along with northern states Indiana and Ohio
still have the death penalty – 25 states in all.
While the
film is a roller-coaster eventually ending in the exoneration of McMillan and
‘hopeful’ testimony by Stevenson before Congress, (doing his best Obama
impersonation) the reality is that the whole incarceration and bail system
remains for the most part intact. While
this heroic legal work puts a dent in the situation, racist capitalism
remains. The death penalty, over-policing
and legal discrimination are based on the police playing a continuing role in labor
discipline of the population, especially the darker-skinned and more exploited. This has
been inherent in U.S. capitalism since the beginning of the country. It will not end until the
financial and political structures behind it are removed and remade into forms of actual proletarian justice.
Other prior
reviews on this issue, use blog search box, upper left: “Are Prisons Obsolete?”(Davis);
“Klobuchar a Hot Dish Neo-Liberal,”
“Slavery by Another Name,” “Prison Strike Against Modern Slavery,” “The New Jim
Crow,” (Alexander) “Loaded,” (Dunbar-Ortiz) “Southern Cultural Nationalism and Southern
Liberals,” “Monroeville, Alabama,” “Got Set a Watchman.” (Lee)
The Cranky
Yankee
Lucky
Friday the 13th! (Coronavirus and Wall Street exempted…)
March 13,
2020
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