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A jury decided they were not guilty. A judge sentenced them to life in prison anyway
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:33 pm
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:33 pm
In 2001, Richardson and Claiborne went to trial. A jury found them not guilty of officer Gibson’s murder, but guilty of selling crack.
But in an unusual move, District Judge Robert E. Payne sentenced Richardson and Claiborne to life in prison using “acquitted conduct sentencing,” a legal mechanism approved by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1996. In that case, known as Watts, the court ruled that a jury’s acquittal does not prevent a judge from using the conduct the defendant was acquitted of against them when sentencing them for another charge.
“The Court’s decision to sentence Terrence and Ferrone to life in prison despite being found not guilty robbed due process of its very meaning,” said Jarrett Adams, Richardson and Claiborne’s attorney and co-founder of Life After Justice. “The U.S. Supreme Court must do away with its ruling in U.S. v Watts, which gives a judge the discretion to make a jury’s finding meaningless, and prevent further miscarriages of justice from occurring like the one we see in this case.”
LINK /
But in an unusual move, District Judge Robert E. Payne sentenced Richardson and Claiborne to life in prison using “acquitted conduct sentencing,” a legal mechanism approved by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1996. In that case, known as Watts, the court ruled that a jury’s acquittal does not prevent a judge from using the conduct the defendant was acquitted of against them when sentencing them for another charge.
“The Court’s decision to sentence Terrence and Ferrone to life in prison despite being found not guilty robbed due process of its very meaning,” said Jarrett Adams, Richardson and Claiborne’s attorney and co-founder of Life After Justice. “The U.S. Supreme Court must do away with its ruling in U.S. v Watts, which gives a judge the discretion to make a jury’s finding meaningless, and prevent further miscarriages of justice from occurring like the one we see in this case.”
LINK /
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:41 pm to Eurocat
Alright.
What is the real story?
What is the real story?
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:41 pm to Eurocat
Sounds just like our fricked up legal system
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:44 pm to Eurocat
They’re guilty of something, lock em up
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:44 pm to Eurocat
quote:
Richardson and Claiborne insisted they had nothing to do with Gibson’s death. But their attorneys at the time told them that they could be sentenced to death if they went to trial and lost. Richardson and Claiborne were poor Black men accused of killing a white police officer in the South. Out of fear for their lives, they took guilty pleas.
“He said if you go to trial and you mess around and you lose, you could get the death penalty,” Richardson told local news.
Richardson pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter and was sentenced to ten years in state prison with five years suspended. Claiborne pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge, as an accessory to Richardson’s crime. The county attorney at the time, David Chappell, said he made those plea bargains with Richardson and Claiborne because the case was too compromised: One of the first officers to arrive on the scene was Waverly Police Chief Warren Sturrup, who picked up Gibson’s gun with his bare hands and, in doing so, tainted any fingerprints that may have been on the gun.
Gibson’s family was outraged by what they saw as a lenient sentence for Richardson and Claiborne, who, in their view, had pleaded guilty to being involved in Gibson’s death. Following public outcry, federal prosecutors brought additional charges against the pair accusing them of selling crack cocaine and murdering a police officer during a drug deal gone wrong.
In 2001, Richardson and Claiborne went to trial. A jury found them not guilty of officer Gibson’s murder, but guilty of selling crack.
Land of the free

Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:45 pm to Eurocat
quote:
The Appeal is a nonprofit news organization that envisions a world in which systems of support and care, not punishment, create public safety.
The Appeal’s journalism exposes the harms of a criminal legal system entrenched in centuries of systemic racism. We equip people with the information necessary to make change, and we elevate solutions that emerge from the communities most affected by policing, jails, and prisons in the U.S.
This is that website's About Us section.
I feel reasonably confident that they're leaving out some important information about this story.
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:45 pm to Eurocat
quote:
Robert E
That’s problematic.
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:46 pm to Eurocat
Sounds like the judge in the Trump indictments.
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:46 pm to 4cubbies
Reading about it, it certainly seems really fricked up.
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:47 pm to VADawg
quote:
I feel reasonably confident that they're leaving out some important information about this story.
I'm trying to find any alternative view and haven't found much.
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:49 pm to 4cubbies
The dudes were selling crack and shot a cop and the jury let them off
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:50 pm to VADawg
quote:
I feel reasonably confident that they're leaving out some important information about this story.
Is it really that hard to believe that two black guys were railroaded for killing a white cop?
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:52 pm to Eurocat
Well our legal system is a fricking joke. Have you seen who goes to law school these days. A pothead, C student can become a Supreme Court justice, law is not a profession.
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:54 pm to 4cubbies
quote:
Is it really that hard to believe that two black guys were railroaded for killing a white cop?
You mean to tell me the entire story is that a jury found two black guys innocent of all counts.. everything… and the judge just said, “whatever… I’ll just do what I want and sentence them to life in prison!”
Yea. I find that a little hard to believe.
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:55 pm to 4cubbies
quote:
Is it really that hard to believe that two black guys were railroaded for killing a white cop?
They killed a police officer. How did they get railroaded due tell?
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:57 pm to Eurocat
This is not the same as Trump's trials. Nice try though.
Posted on 11/28/23 at 3:58 pm to CleverUserName
The jury did find them guilty of 1 drug count as far as I can tell.
They had previously pled guilty in state court under advice of counsel but were still allowed to maintain innocence on the record despite pleading guilty, and got incredibly light sentences.
They had previously pled guilty in state court under advice of counsel but were still allowed to maintain innocence on the record despite pleading guilty, and got incredibly light sentences.
Posted on 11/28/23 at 4:00 pm to Warboo
quote:
They killed a police officer.
The federal jury did find them not guilty of this.
It doesn't appear that a single eye witness identified them as the people at the scene. They identified a man with dreadlocks and neither had them at any time.
I'd really like to get the Prosecutions perspective and the Judge's reasoning to get a better view of the "real" story.
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