Justice Delayed
A travesty of justice
Four years ago, I wrote a column about two young
women who were murdered in Georgia. Their names were Lori Brown
and Cyndi Williams. Cyndi Williams was my nephew’s wife.
Both young women were shot and killed while working in a model
home sales office. The details of the crime point to the fact
that the killer was after money. The details of the shootings
would just plain boil your blood.
The suspect eluded police when they tried to question him at
a relative’s home, but he was captured several days later
after a high-speed chase across two counties in the state of Wisconsin.
Some published reports as regards the evidence against the suspect:
The empty shell casings found at the scene were matched to the
9mm semi-automatic pistol found in the suspect’s car when
he was arrested in Wisconsin.
Blood found on the pistol in the suspect’s car was matched
via DNA to the blood of one of the victims.
The suspect’s truck matched the description of a truck
seen outside of the sales office prior to the murders.
A truck matching the same description was visible in photographs
taken by a security camera at an ATM where the killer tried to
use the bank cards taken from the women.
A drop of blood found on the carpet of the suspect’s truck
matched the blood of the other victim.
And, following his arrest, the suspect made the following statement
during a police interview: "I will plead guilty to the death
penalty or life without parole. I just don’t want to face
those girls’ families or my family."
All of this, as noted, occurred almost four years ago and the
delays in this case have been frustrating beyond words for the
families of both victims. Added to this is the fact that the trial
was moved to a location more than 300 miles from where the crime
took place due to the publicity surrounding the case and in the
interest of "fairness" to the accused.
Pardon me while I mutter (in terms not fit for publication) an
opinion regarding that notion. You see, most of the people I’ve
met in my lifetime are intelligent and fair-minded individuals
capable of making informed decisions. For that reason, finding
a jury capable of honestly evaluating the facts of a case in a
city or county wherein a crime has been committed isn’t
(and, in my mind, never will be) impossible.
As regards the time it’s taken to bring this case to trial,
there’s an old saying that justice delayed is justice denied.
In any society worthy of the name, victims and their families
need to know that the rules they’ve abided by are part of
a system that can be trusted to work - fairly and expeditiously
- when they’re harmed. They need to believe that such a
system will consider their hurt and their rights every bit as
much as it considers the rights of the perpetrator.
It took four years to bring this case to trial. Four years of
motions and hearings. Four years of pain and frustration. Four
years of the victims’ families knowing that, while the alleged
killer had all of that time to consider what would become of his
life, those two young women had bare – and utterly terrifying
- moments to contemplate the end of theirs.
To my way of thinking, such a delay does not equate to anything
reasonable. Rather, it much more readily confirms an ever-growing
notion I have that parts of our justice system have become much
more "system" rather than having anything to do with
the idea of justice.
In short, whatever those years may have been, nothing that falls
under the title of justice fits. In point of fact, I’d offer
that what they’ve been is a time for obfuscation by the
defense rather than a search for justice.
Jury selection, however, is now over and the trial is underway.
If the accused is convicted, there will be appeals, motions, and
more years of waiting for an appropriate (and sure to be elusive)
punishment - all while my nephew’s wife and her friend lie
quietly in their graves.
Something’s gone terribly wrong in a system that allows
such delays to occur and that "something" needs to be
fixed. Unfortunately, given the direction in which we seem to
be moving in our efforts to ensure the "rights of the accused,"
I won’t be holding my breath while waiting for that fix
to occur.
Four damned years.
Jesus wept.
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