Only they hadn't. The prosecution sent them to prison for something they didn't do.
With four other Harlem boys, all of whom refused plea bargains, he was convicted of attacking the jogger and sent to prison. More than a decade later, the convictions of all five were overturned. Another man — a serial rapist and killer who was unknown to any of the five — had convincingly implicated himself as the sole attacker of the jogger. DNA evidence backed his story.I'm not attacking the prosecution. These five defendants confessed, although their confessions weren't really plausible. (Remember, the cops can lie to you when they interrogate you. They can tell you your confession will get you off with probation.)
Justice is hard. Even mere due process is hard. That's why I'm a skeptic about evidence - not a denier, I just need proof.
That's also one reason I'm against the death penalty.
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