WBAI Arts Magazine
Reel Deal Movie Report
By Kam Williams
"Leading the Fight Against Mediocrity in Movies"
Though attorneys Barry Scheck and Peter Neufeld will always be associated
with the O.J. Simpson case, the two co-founded the Innocence Project way
before they joined the so-called Dream Team. Since the advent of
incontrovertible DNA evidence, their non-profit legal clinic has dedicated
itself to freeing unfairly convicted felons, like Eddie Joe Floyd, a man
exonerated after spending 17 years behind bars for a murder he did not
commit.
Unfortunately, Eddie Joe, who is among the people profiled in After
Innocence, died of heart disease in 2004, just two years after his release
at the age of 56. One of the most memorable scenes of the movie features Mr.
Floyd shortly before his death, lobbying for the widespread use of DNA,
suggesting emphatically that, ?God?s signature is never a forgery. And his
checks don?t bounce.?
After Innocence is essentially 10 different stories, each a tragic case of
mistaken identity. Every single one of these men can thank their lucky stars
that evidence was preserved, otherwise they?d still be in jail. Herman
Atkins had been sentenced to 45 years for rape and robbery despite having an
alibi and no previous criminal record. In the film, his father, a cop,
admits that he now regrets never visiting his son even once during his 11
year incarceration, explaining that, as an officer of the law, he had
believed in the justice system. Today, Herman is in college, pursuing a
graduate degree in psychology.
Scott Hornoff was a police officer when he found himself arrested for
murder. Although he sat on Death Row for over six years till his conviction
was overturned, the State of Rhode Island refuses to pay him any damages or
back pay. A common theme running through each of the frightening tales told
here is that none of the victims have been compensated for the ordeals they
had to endure.
Without money to get back on their feet, they find themselves ill-equipped
to cope in a world which has moved on without them. We also see the toll
that the time in jail has taken on their families, with wives having to work
and raise children alone, kids feeling alienated, and some parents not
living long enough to see a son?s name cleared before they passed on.
One mother wonders why the jury had so callously dismissed her passionate
testimony, under oath, that her boy had been with her at the time that the
crime had been committed. Meanwhile, one contrite victim tries to explain
away her regrettable mistake by placing, side-by-side, pictures of the man
she had misidentified and of her recently-apprehended actual rapist.
By shining a scientific spotlight on the criminal justice system?s dirty
little secret, After Innocence leaves no doubt that thousands of other
wrongly-imprisoned persons are currently rotting away behind bars, with only
the money to afford a Dream Team and a DNA test standing between them and
their freedom.
Excellent (4 stars)
After Innocence is available on DVD from New Yorker Films. For more information, visit:
http://www.newyorkerfilms.com/nyf/theatrical/nr_t.htm
http://www.afterinnocence.com
Kam Williams is a nationally syndicated film critic whose outlets include Blackfilm.com and Eurweb.com.
WBAI Arts Magazine
Reel Deal Movie Report
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