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- <text id=94TT1012>
- <title>
- Aug. 01, 1994: Justice:Race and the O.J. Case
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 01, 1994 This is the beginning...:Rwanda/Zaire
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- JUSTICE, Page 24
- Race and the O.J. Case
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The issue bubbles to the surface, highlighting black distrust
- of the criminal-justice system
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Ann Blackman/Washington, Wendy Cole/Chicago, Sylvester
- Monroe and Jeffrey Ressner/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> First came the explosive charge. The defense team in the O.J.
- Simpson murder case, it was leaked, was planning to accuse one
- of the police investigators, Mark Fuhrman, of being a "racist"
- cop who may have planted the bloody glove found in the area
- behind Simpson's guest house the day after the brutal slayings
- of Nicole Simpson and Ronald Goldman. Then came the disclaimer.
- "Race is not and will not be an issue in this defense," said
- Robert Shapiro, Simpson's lead attorney. "The only thing we
- are looking at is credibility of witnesses."
- </p>
- <p> Maybe for Shapiro. But for nearly everyone else last week, the
- race issue emerged front and center in the Simpson case. After
- first focusing Americans' attention on the issue of domestic
- violence, the Simpson drama is being transformed into a national
- teach-in on the gulf that exists between black and white attitudes
- toward America's criminal-justice system. The shift came in
- a flurry of news leaks and public announcements. In raising
- questions about Fuhrman, the defense team unearthed a 1983 lawsuit,
- brought by the Los Angeles detective seeking disability benefits,
- in which he admitted to harboring hostile feelings about blacks
- and other minorities. While Fuhrman denied charges that he planted
- evidence, Los Angeles County District Attorney Gil Garcetti
- spent nearly two hours with black city leaders, trying to assure
- them that Simpson will get a fair trial. The civic leaders,
- in turn, urged Garcetti to integrate the all-white, all-male,
- eight-member panel that in coming weeks will recommend whether
- or not the prosecution should seek the death penalty for Simpson.
- </p>
- <p> The defense team, meanwhile, was doing some integrating of its
- own. Just before Simpson was formally arraigned on Friday (asserting
- confidently that he was "absolutely, 100% not guilty"), the
- previously all-white team was joined by Johnnie Cochran, the
- prominent African-American trial lawyer who represented Michael
- Jackson against charges of child molestation. Cochran's arrival
- was regarded by some in the district attorney's office as a
- defense coup. "Johnnie Cochran is a better trial lawyer than
- the entire defense team put together," asserts one prosecution
- source. "Now add the race card. With Cochran in, you're going
- to have a hell of a time trying to find a black juror who will
- convict. All you need is a holdout."
- </p>
- <p> The disparity between the races on the Simpson case is stark.
- In a TIME/ CNN poll, 63% of whites said they believe Simpson
- will get a fair trial; only 31% of blacks felt the same way.
- While 66% of whites think Simpson received a fair preliminary
- hearing, just 31% of blacks found the proceeding fair. And 77%
- of whites called the case against Simpson "very strong" or "fairly
- strong"; 45% of blacks judged it the same way.
- </p>
- <p> Poll results like that mystify most white Americans. Yet blacks
- see little news in the numbers. "I don't know how we can be
- surprised about a poll that shows African Americans are suspicious
- of our system of jurisprudence," says the Rev. Cecil Murray,
- the influential pastor of the First A.M.E. Church, Los Angeles'
- oldest black congregation. Indeed, such poll results probably
- indicate less about how blacks view the evidence against Simpson
- than about how they regard the way blacks are treated generally
- by the criminal justice system. "For many blacks, every black
- man is on trial," says District of Columbia delegate Eleanor
- Holmes Norton. "O.J. Simpson has become the proxy not because
- the black man is a criminal but because the black man is increasingly
- seen as a criminal by virtue of his sex and color."
- </p>
- <p> The perception among blacks that the criminal-justice system
- discriminates against them is pervasive and deep. Why, many
- African Americans ask, does justice tend to be swifter when
- the murder victim is white? (While Simpson's trial is expected
- to start within 60 days, the suspected killers of Michael Jordan's
- father, who was slain a year ago, have yet to be arraigned.)
- Why are blacks so disproportionately represented on death row,
- and why, since 1977, have 63 blacks been executed for murdering
- whites while only one white has been executed for murdering
- a black? Not surprisingly, in the TIME/CNN poll, 59% of black
- respondents favored overturning death sentences in capital cases
- where statistical evidence points to a pattern of unfair treatment
- of minorities. Only 28% of whites felt the same way.
- </p>
- <p> "Most black people feel they are considered guilty until they
- are proved innocent," says psychologist Richard Majors of the
- National Council of African American Men in Washington. Asserts
- Laura Washington, editor of the monthly Chicago Reporter, which
- focuses on race issues: "There is a long-held assumption, dating
- back to the days of lynching, that blacks on trial won't get
- a fair shake." Such attitudes make it easy for blacks to believe
- charges like those of racist behavior against police investigator
- Fuhrman.
- </p>
- <p> Still, when news of the murders first broke, blacks, like whites,
- seemed disinclined to cast the case in racial terms. Most African
- Americans felt hard-pressed to identify completely with a man
- who was so rich, so celebrated--and so unconnected to the
- black community. "Simpson did not function within our race,"
- says Conrad Worrill, chairman of the grass-roots National Black
- United Front in Chicago. "His wife, lawyers and housekeepers
- were white." Many blacks faulted Simpson for not using his celebrity
- status to promote African-American causes. Says the Rev. Fletcher
- Bryant of the United Methodist Church in Englewood, New Jersey:
- "O.J. is a rich dude who runs with whites."
- </p>
- <p> But as the Simpson case has grown into a national obsession,
- many of those same blacks have begun to perceive Simpson as
- one more victim of the white power system. There is talk of
- a "white-media conspiracy" to embarrass African Americans by
- toppling yet another black icon--as happened to Clarence Thomas,
- Michael Jackson and Mike Tyson. The saturation of TV coverage
- appalls many blacks. "It's suspect when all networks on television
- turn into Court TV," says the Rev. Al Sharpton, a New York political
- activist. The proliferation of black talking heads called upon
- to comment on racial aspects of the case is even seen by some
- as racist. "Why don't they use black experts to talk about the
- legality of mergers and acquisitions, or matters unrelated to
- race?" asks Philip Eure, a civil rights lawyer in the Justice
- Department.
- </p>
- <p> Now the race controversy is vying with the issue of spousal
- abuse for attention. As in the Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill showdown
- over sexual harassment, many black women feel caught between
- the pressure to stand loyally by a black man perceived to be
- under attack by the white establishment and the need to assert
- their rights as women. Last week, after black male leaders urged
- Garcetti not to pursue the death penalty against Simpson, Los
- Angeles attorney Gloria Allred wrote to the district attorney
- on behalf of the Women's Equal Rights Legal Defense and Education
- Fund: "Since you have chosen to meet publicly with a group expressing
- support for Mr. Simpson's rights, I respectfully request that
- you now meet with those of us who are concerned about the rights
- of battered women and who are urging you to consider asking
- for the death penalty."
- </p>
- <p> America's racial attitudes will continue to affect a case that
- stubbornly refuses to remain what it is--a murder charge against
- a famous former football player. That is disturbing to some
- blacks, who are worried that the Simpson case is not the best
- vehicle for pursuing the struggle for equal rights.
- </p>
- <p> "When people yell racism when in fact there is no racism," says
- Tavis Smiley, a black commentator for KABC in Los Angeles, "they
- become like the boy who cried `Wolf!' Ultimately, it comes back
- to haunt you."
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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