It’s very likely that the first time most of you heard about Genarlow Wislon’s extraordinary 2-year legal nightmare was during a 20-second report on TV last night. But some of us have been monitoring (and agitating in support of) the fight to free Genarlow that has been raging in the Blogosphere and on talk radio almost from the day he was arrested in 2003.
The facts of the latest development in this story are so outrageous, however, that instead of offering my usual commentary, I shall suffice to republish the story as it was reported on CNN.com yesterday.
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ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) — A judge on Monday threw out the 10-year sentence against a 21-year-old for a consensual sex encounter he had as a teenager. But the state attorney general quickly filed a notice of appeal, keeping Genarlow Wilson in prison for the time being.
The prosecutor’s move brought an abrupt halt to the jubilation Wilson’s mother, Juannessa Bennett, and his attorney, B.J. Bernstein, were feeling, and the plans they were making for Bennett to be reunited with her son.
“It is extremely, extremely disturbing that the attorney general would take this action now,” Bernstein said, adding that she did not know what message “he’s trying to send” or “who he’s representing.”
In a written statement, Georgia Attorney General Thurbert Baker said he filed the appeal to resolve “clearly erroneous legal issues,” saying that while the judge did have the authority to grant habeas relief, he did not have the authority “to reduce or modify the judgment of the trial court.”
Separately, Baker noted that Douglas County recently had offered a plea deal “that would have allowed Genarlow Wilson to plead to First Offender Treatment, which would mean that he would not have a criminal record nor would he be subject to registering on the sex offender registry once his sentence had been completed.”
“The plea deal, if accepted by Genarlow Wilson’s lawyers, could also result in Genarlow Wilson receiving a sentence substantially shorter than the 10-year mandatory minimum sentence for which he was originally sentenced, possibly leading to his release based upon time already served,” Baker wrote.
“Genarlow Wilson, through his attorneys, rejected all of those offers. The district attorney’s office has indicated that the plea offer will remain available to Genarlow Wilson notwithstanding the appeals process,” according to Baker’s statement.
Wilson has drawn support from throughout the country, including the editorial board of the New York Times and former President Jimmy Carter.
When he was 17 years old, he had a consensual sexual encounter with a 15-year-old girl, which was consensually videotaped. Georgia law at the time made such an action a felony punishable by 10 years in prison and listing on the sex offender registry.
The state legislature later changed the law, partly in response to Wilson’s case. But the change was not made retroactive, leaving Wilson in jail. He has already served more than two years.
Superior Court Judge Thomas H. Wilson of Monroe County, Georgia, voided the sentence Monday, agreeing with Bernstein that the punishment was cruel and unusual, and therefore unconstitutional, Bernstein said.
The judge ruled Wilson should serve one year, less than he has already served, and that he would not be listed as a sex offender.
Upon reading his ruling, which was faxed to her office in Atlanta, Bernstein cheered, screamed with delight, and hugged Wilson’s mother. Watch Wilson’s mom, lawyer’s tearful reaction to the judge’s ruling
“I just feel like a miracle happened,” Bennett told CNN.
“He didn’t deserve to have the sexual predator status,” she said.
When Bernstein — a frequent guest on CNN — spoke to reporters before the attorney general’s announcement, she pleaded with prosecutors to give up the fight.
“This has been a really long 28 months,” Bernstein said tearfully. “It’s a very long fight. And right now we have an order of release. And I beg the attorney general of the state of Georgia: please, enough. Do not file an appeal, please. Because we have an order of release right now for a young man that I think most everybody in the community believes should not be in prison.”
She added, “Please, please, enough.”
Bennett called the decision “a dream come true. It’s definitely a dream come true.” Of the judge she said, “He got a lot of heart, and God bless him.”
Bernstein said she could not believe how long it took to get to this point.
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Now, if you’re half as outraged about Genarlow’s prolonged detention as so many people were about Paris’ early release last week, then I encourage you click here to contact the office of this attorney general to let him know how you feel – especially if you are registered to vote in the peachy state of Georgia….
Meanwhile, in case you’re wondering why civil-rights hellraisers Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson are not marching down in Georgia shouting “no justice, no peace”, it might have something to do with the fact that even though this attorney general is an unconscionable bastard, he’s an unconscionable black bastard….
Genarlow Wilson
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