dinsdag 23 februari 2010

You have been found guilty of wearing black and listening to heavy metal, you are hereby sentenced to death by lethal injection

I would have never heard the tragic tale of The West Memphis Three where it not for Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky’s jaw dropping documentaries ‘Paradise Lost: The Childhood Murders at Robin Hood Hills’ and its sequel ‘Paradise Lost 2: Revelations’, which show that in fact sometimes truth is stranger than fiction. These films bring a blow by blow chronicle of a modern day witch-hunt where the basic tenet of the American legal system, the presumption of innocence, was discredited in order to satisfy a community’s call for revenge of the dreadful murders of three innocent children. It blew my mind. It broke my heart.


vrijdag 19 februari 2010

Free The West Memphis Three









Shortly after three eight-year-old boys were found mutilated and murdered in West Memphis, Arkansas, local newspapers stated the killers had been caught. The police assured the public that the three teenagers in custody were definitely responsible for these horrible crimes. Evidence?
The same police officers coerced an error-filled "confession" from Jessie Misskelley Jr., who is mentally handicapped. They subjected him to hours of questioning without counsel or parental consent, audio-taping only two fragments totaling 46 minutes. Jessie recanted it that evening, but it was too late— Misskelley, Jason Baldwin and Damien Echols were all arrested on June 3, 1993, and convicted of murder in early 1994.

Although there was no physical evidence, murder weapon, motive, or connection to the victims, the prosecution pathetically resorted to presenting black hair and clothing, heavy metal t-shirts, and Stephen King novels as proof that the boys were sacrificed in a satanic cult ritual. Unfathomably, Echols was sentenced to death, Baldwin received life without parole, and Misskelley got life plus 40.


In the years since the convictions of Damien Echols, Jason Baldwin and Jessie Misskelley for a crime they did not commit, their cause has gained support from all over the world, and these men have become known as the West Memphis Three. The story of the injustice they have endured at the hands of the state of Arkansas has never lost momentum, and in recent months, the evidence in their favor has grown to the point where it's nearly impossible to view this case as anything other than a miscarriage of justice.