by Dr. Boyce Watkins
Former Black Panther Elmer “Geronimo” Pratt died Thursday in
Tanzania, according to his attorney. Pratt spent 27 years in prison for
a murder he did not commit. He died at the age of 63, and authorities
do not yet know his exact cause of death.
“He could’ve been a great leader. He was very charismatic,” said
Scott Hanlon, Pratt’s attorney. “His legacy is that he never gave up. He
never got despondent or angry.”
Hanlon also describes Pratt to be a true and loyal American, noting
that the former Panther did two tours of duty in Vietnam before joining
the party. He was convicted of the 1968 murder of Caroline Olsen, who
was killed on a tennis court in Santa Monica. His conviction was
overturned in 1997 after prosecutors were found to have concealed
evidence.
Pratt was not identified by the woman’s husband to have been the
killer. The husband had actually identified another man in the police
lineup. The jury was not informed of this information, which would have
obviously hurt the case of the prosecution. Several attorneys,
including both Hanlon and the great Johnny Cochran, played a role in
getting Pratt’s conviction overturned before he died in 2005.
What’s most amazing is that Pratt said that he holds no ill will for his conviction.
“I don’t think bitterness has a place. I’m more understanding,” Pratt
said in a 1999 interview with CNN. “Understanding doesn’t leave any
room for bitterness or anger.”
For eight of his 27 years in prison, Pratt was placed in solitary
confinement. This fact alone would be enough to drive most of us to the
mad house. The idea that a man who put his life on the line for
America would be treated in this way is nothing less than shameful. To
lose 27 years of a 63 year life is devastating, and my psyche fills with
the tears of rage as I think about what was done to this man.
Without question, Geronimo Pratt should be saluted for being the
great American hero that he was. He was driven to stand up on behalf of
the oppressed while living in a nation that had trained its young to be
so evil that they learned to hate an entire group of people without
even knowing them. I’ve often wondered to myself (as I watched an
interesting documentary last night about a known racist by the name of
Walt Disney) how these folks, whose lives hardly seemed to intersect
with African Americans (there was not one black face in the entire
documentary) could find the time to learn to dislike us so much. This
kind of evil must be taught, for it is not natural for anyone to harbor
this kind of innate animosity.
What must be remembered is that Geronimo was not the only African
American to be wrongly accused and sentenced for a crime they did not
commit. There are tens of thousands of other men and women just like
him who were either wrongly convicted or given an excessive sentence
that they would never have received had they not been poor and black.
It’s time that our nation take a serious look at the criminal justice
system and find out how many other lives we’ve destroyed, for I am
convinced that there is another Geronimo in a cell somewhere right now.
1 comment:
Salute!
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