Third Quarter Bar Flyer 2021

Page 17

PROFESSIONALISM COMMITTEE THE ARC..(OF) THE MORAL UNIVERSE...BENDS TOWARDS JUSTICE BUT WE HAVE TO WORK FOR IT BY DEBORRAH L. NEWTON | NEWTON LAW | BOARD CERTIFIED SPECIALIST, FEDERAL & STATE CRIMINAL LAW

TAKE A MOMENT ... think about what life is like for the innocent wrongfully convicted:

satisfied with the first, and aggrieved collectively with the latter.

Imagine going to bed tonight, but instead of petting the kitten and getting the dog settled on his corner of your bed before you snuggle in to watch tv, relax and hug your wife or husband before you drift off to sleep, you close your eyes to the sound of metal bars clanging shut and lights going out down the block. Now ... imagine being there, night after night, for a crime you did not commit. No pet, no warm bed, no peace. Innocent. Not guilty. Wrongful conviction. Failed appeals. Justice denied. When Justice eludes our efforts, it is an affront to morality, requiring response. “The Arc of the Moral Universe ... Bends Towards Justice”1 is an abbreviation derived from a sermon delivered in 1853 by abolitionist Theodore Parker. Minister Parker studied at Harvard Divinity School in 1810, and was a transcendentalist and minister in the Unitarian church. In that sermon giving birth to the abbreviated quote, he actually said: “I do not pretend to understand the moral universe. The arc is a long one. My eye reaches but little ways. I cannot calculate the curve and complete the figure by experience of sight. I can divine it by conscience. And from what I see I am sure it bends toward justice.” We do Minister Parker an injustice to abbreviate his modest thoughtfulness. That is because, by doing so, we run the risk of insouciance. If we believe Justice (depending on your definition of that will inevitably win out, we may not be as vigilant in its pursuit.

When we do fail in our all too human endeavor at justice, the moral compass leads us forward down yet another road to the Truth. Sometimes DNA provides the relief; sometimes uncovered evidence sheds light; sometimes it is a long awaited confession; and sometimes it is too late. During this unintended circumstance, personal suffering by the innocent convicted - and the family who should have enjoyed their company - is a daily burden. Compensation can never soothe that kind of horror. Fortunately, in North Carolina we offer remedy. Recognizing the inevitable frailty of a human justice system, in North Carolina in 1999 Chief Justice I. Beverly Lake, Jr., urged by his Law Clerk Chris Mumma, realized that justice may require more than our legal precedents and statutes provided for. It requires a safety valve as insurance against wrongful imprisonment or execution. Since 1999, North Carolina has seen multiple fine organizations step up who participate in providing a “safety valve” to the wrongfully convicted. While some are advocacy agencies who pursue Justice from a purely defense perspective, like the “North Carolina Center On Actual Innocence” whose work follows in the lauded footsteps of the “Innocence Project” formed in 1992 by Barry Scheck and Peter Neufeld2 in New York, Justice Lake envisioned a different remedy. The commission Justice Lake convened, the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission (NCIIC), is an unbiased coalition representing all parties involved in a criminal case. The NCIIC is comprised of two parts: staff who investigate claims of actual innocence by prisoners who come to the NCIIC, and Commissioners from each represented segment of the justice process who hear the case the staff presents and decide whether the claim proceeds to a hearing before a three judge panel. This unique, and rigorous, vetting process seeks to give due respect to the prior jury proceeding, while it also offers opportunity for a second review by the uniquely qualified professionals seated. Short of appealing to the Governor of North Carolina, who wields the power of Executive Pardons,

I raise this issue by way of lauding all those who do pursue justice actively, cautioning complacency. No matter your inclinations towards prosecution, or defense, it is an undeniable truth that no moral person will agree that the imprisonment, or death, of an innocent convicted meets the at times elusive demands of justice. In unison with that concept, all battles, personal or political, must submit to the effort to seek truth for that innocent in jeopardy. In the often tortured path to the truth, many anonymous actors perform their part in selfless dedication. Let me explain:

2

In the halls of justice, the moral arc begins with an act, by someone, offending decency and our human moral contract with each other. It often ends with anguish, whether the criminal actor is rightly pursued or whether an innocent is wrongfully convicted. We are as a society 1 In 1964 Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered the Baccalaureate sermon at the commencement exercises for Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut, and in closing said, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.”

WAKE BAR FLYER

In between, those who choose to devote their lives to the stability of this moral contract proceed well intentioned. At every stage - investigation, prosecution, grand jury, defense, jury, judgment, incarceration, and appeal - hours, effort, intellect and sacrifice of personal time are devoted. And we struggle to seek Justice, always with the ghost of mistakes past riding on our shoulders.

17

Quoting The Innocence Project: A Short History Since 1983 March, 18, 2018, Rory O’Sullivan: “Gary Dotson [wrongfully convicted of rape] became the first person exonerated based on DNA evidence. In 1992, [Barry] Scheck and [Peter] Neufeld founded the Innocence Project so that they could work on wrongful convictions in a more systematic manner. Initially, the Innocence Project was a clinic at the Cardozo School of Law in New York City. In 2004, after 12 years and approximately 150 exonerations, the Innocence Project became an independent nonprofit although it remains affiliated with Cardozo School of Law. Other innocence projects have sprung up around the country and around the world. In 1997, Professor Jacqueline McMurtrie founded the Innocence Project Northwest at the University of Washington School of Law which has been responsible for the exoneration of 14 wrongly convicted individuals in Washington State. The Innocence Project Northwest is a member of the Innocence Network, an organization that connects the nearly 70 innocence project organizations worldwide.”

THIRD QUARTER 2021


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Third Quarter Bar Flyer 2021 by Wake County Bar Association - Issuu