SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neocon who wrote (527908)1/22/2004 3:14:01 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
well...you have the KING in power for that!
CC



To: Neocon who wrote (527908)1/22/2004 3:17:18 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
and here is a classic example of the MISUSE OF THE JUDICIAL SYSTEM....BUSH WOULD BE PROUD
he LOVES MANDITORY SENTENCING....BECAUSE THEN IT'S HE THAT GETS TO ISSUE JUSTICE FROM THE PULPIT...not judges who have the community in mind....MORE ASHCROFTIAN FASCISM
Old South Lingers in a Legal Lynching
By Marian Wright Edelman
There is a boy in Georgia who almost beat the odds.
An African American born to a 15-year-old,
drug-addicted mother and an absent father, Marcus
Dixon nonetheless went on to become an honor student
and all-state football star. His football skills, 3.96 grade
point average and 1,200 score on his SAT won him a
full scholarship to Vanderbilt University.

Marcus, 19, was supposed to enter Vanderbilt last fall.
Instead, he is serving a 10-year prison sentence with no
chance of parole for having consensual sex when he
was 18 years old with a white girl who was three
months shy of 16. He is the only person in Georgia
history this close in age to his victim to be convicted of
"aggravated child molestation," a charge that was
intended to protect children from predatory adults, not
imprison teenagers for having sex with other teenagers.

That such a promising young man could be sucked into
the prison pipeline and become another African
American statistic speaks volumes about blacks' vulnerability and about their
disparate treatment in the justice system. From 1999 to 2000, there were
791,600 black men in jail or prison, compared with just 603,000 black men in
higher education.

And even though nearly 50 years have passed since Emmett Till was murdered in
Mississippi for whistling at a white woman, Dixon's case raises eerie echoes of
the old Southern obsession with miscegenation.

Marcus was raised in Rome, Ga., by his partly disabled grandmother. With her
blessing, a local white Little League coach, Ken Jones, and his wife, Peri, became
Marcus' legal guardians when he was 11, and he became part of their family,
which includes a teenage son and daughter. Marcus did not drink, smoke, use
drugs or get in trouble. He sang in the high school chorus and worked and
volunteered at the YMCA. Universities came calling; two boxes full of recruiting
letters still rest beside his bed at home.

Then, in February 2003, Marcus had sex with a girl who was almost 16, a virgin.
Two days later, she accused him of rape. Investigators didn't give either of them a
lie detector test or look for the condom Marcus said he used and threw away.

"I didn't believe him," the investigator explained.

But the charge didn't stand up. In May, a jury of nine whites and three blacks
took just 20 minutes to acquit Marcus of rape. There was no forced sex, they
concluded. They then were obliged to consider a lesser charge of "aggravated
child molestation" — a charge that was applicable even if the sex was consensual.
This statute had never before been used to prosecute consensual sex between
teens with less than a three-year age difference, and a majority of states have
passed "Romeo and Juliet" statutes — which deal with teen sex when both
partners are close in age — for exactly these types of cases. Later, several jurors
said they thought the charge was minor and were shocked when the judge
announced the mandatory 10-year sentence.

The case has been appealed to the Georgia Supreme Court, and arguments were
heard Wednesday. Marcus has already missed his high school graduation and lost
his scholarship. If the conviction is not overturned, you can almost hear the death
knell ringing for this young man's future. Once out of prison, he would have a
felony record and be required to register as a sex offender wherever he lives,
effectively killing his aspiration to be a teacher and coach.

The racism and disparate treatment that underlie this case are widespread. In
1997, although they made up only 34% of U.S. teens, minorities represented
67% of youths in detention. For those charged with violent offenses, blacks are
jailed nine times more often than whites. Marcus' case brings back memories of
all the black men who were lynched, executed or imprisoned for having
relationships with white women, and it recalls the way black males are perceived
to this day.

Almost 50 years may have passed since Emmett Till was lynched, but the unjust
treatment of African American males goes on. No example could be more
egregious or heartbreaking than that of Marcus Dixon.

Marian Wright Edelman is president and founder of the Children's Defense
Fund.