Ronald Sullivan: How I help free innocent people from prison
Ronald Sullivan: Comment je contribue à la libération de prisonniers innocents
Ronald Sullivan is a leading theorist in the areas of criminal law, criminal procedure, trial practice and techniques, legal ethics and race theory. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
a 19-hour, very long drive
pendant 19 heures
a hundred more times, easily,
à cette question au moins 100 fois
wonderful, wonderful trip.
vers votre maison.
were away in Florida.
who will listen,
and Minnie and my kids!"
et mes enfants ! »
I have worked on
de personnes innocentes
in Brooklyn, New York,
à Brooklyn, à New York,
au dossier de la police,
in the prosecutor's file,
au dossier du procureur,
to his public defender.
à son défenseur public.
and we found it,
l'a trouvé,
committed the crime.
individu était coupable.
from the Brooklyn District Attorney.
du procureur de Brookyln.
in designing a program
par la conception d'un programme appelé
a unit in a prosecutor's office
dépend du bureau du procureur.
they made mistakes.
depuis des décennies.
jusqu'à présent.
significant time behind bars.
un temps considérable en prison.
of the men and women
des quelques hommes et femmes
in the course of this program.
à travers le programme,
I've been framed.
On m'a piégé.
like it was open and shut,
à témoin oculaire unique
a little bit closer at those cases.
plus profondément sur cette affaire.
qu'elle avait entendu un coup de feu,
and turned around and looked,
vers l'immeuble voisin,
et vu M. Logan.
and in jail for 17-some-odd years.
so we took a look at it.
nous avons étudié le cas.
and there was an inconsistency.
et quelque chose clochait.
from where she said she was
avoir couru d'un point
son témoignage était faux.
that he didn't do it,
son innocence,
about this witness.
nous cachait quelque chose.
had a number on it.
sur un bout de papier.
that this witness had a record.
que le témoin avait un casier.
of non-digitized papers
de dossiers non-numérisés
deux garçons :
29 years later.
a été annulée 29 ans plus tard.
it looked open and shut.
elle avait l'air vite réglée.
that juvenile confessions
que les aveux des mineurs
were police and prosecutors.
étaient les seuls au courant.
les aveux avaient été forcés,
la criminalistique
different hairstyle,
de taille et coiffures différentes
les sentences sont annulées.
that judges say all the time,
que les juges disent souvent.
elle avait un sens particulier.
et a dit :
ces trois mots magiques :
his codefendant, Mr. Stuckey,
le coaccusé, M. Stuckey,
at counsel table in his place.
qui a pris sa place à l'audience.
the rest of my life.
en disant :
était innocent.
était innocent. »
anything that I've learned,
sur l'intégrité des condamnations,
that just descends from above
wouldn't have died in prison.
M. Stuckey ne serait pas mort en prison.
just an extra minute --
find the receipt,
pour lire le dossier, trouver le reçu,
and say, "That cannot be."
et dire « C'est impossible. »
would be alive today.
serait peut-être vivant aujourd'hui.
would always recite,
par Benjamin Elijah Mays,
je ne peux la refuser
je ne l'ai pas choisie.
give account if I abuse it.
me justifier si je la gâche.
their careers and their lives,
passent leur vie et carrière,
whatever you do,
aidez-le à se relever.
he was released from prison.
le jour de sa sortie de prison.
you want to do?"
que vous voulez faire ? »
to walk on the sidewalk
« Je veux marcher sur le trottoir
about two weeks ago.
il y a environ deux semaines.
et avons pleuré.
when we met with him
is locked up unjustly.
ne soit emprisonné à tort.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Ronald S. Sullivan Jr. - Clinical professor of lawRonald Sullivan is a leading theorist in the areas of criminal law, criminal procedure, trial practice and techniques, legal ethics and race theory.
Why you should listen
Professor Ronald Sullivan is the faculty director of the Harvard Criminal Justice Institute and the Harvard Trial Advocacy Workshop. Sullivan also serves as Faculty Dean of Winthrop House at Harvard College. He is the first African American ever appointed Faculty Dean in Harvard's history. He is a founding member and Senior Fellow of the Jamestown Project.
Sullivan has merged legal theory and practice over the course of his career in unique and cutting-edge ways. In 2014, he was tasked to design and implement a Conviction Review Unit (CRU) for the newly elected Brooklyn District Attorney. The CRU, designed to identify and exonerate wrongfully convicted persons, quickly became regarded as the model conviction integrity program in the nation. In its first year of operation alone, Sullivan discovered over 10 wrongful convictions, which the DA ultimately vacated. Some of the exonerated citizens had served more than 30 years in prison before they were released.
In 2008, Sullivan served as Chair, Criminal Justice Advisory Committee for then-Senator Barack Obama's presidential campaign. In this capacity, his committee made policy recommendations on a range of issues in an effort to put into practice some of the best research in the field. He also served as a member of the National Legal Advisory Group for the Barack Obama Presidential Campaign. Finally, Sullivan was appointed Advisor to the Department of Justice Presidential Transition Team.
In 2007, in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Sullivan was asked to create a system to solve a criminal justice crisis. More than 6,000 citizens were incarcerated in and around New Orleans without representation and with all official records destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. Sullivan designed an indigent defense delivery system that resulted in the release of nearly all the 6000 inmates.
Sullivan still maintains an appellate and trial practice. He has represented persons ranging from politicians to professional athletes to recording artists to pro bono clients in criminal jeopardy. Representative clients include: The family of Michael Brown, former New England Patriot Aaron Hernandez and the family of Usaamah Rahim.
Sullivan is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Morehouse College and the Harvard Law School, where he served as President of the Harvard Black Law Students Association and as General Editor of the Harvard BlackLetter Law Journal.
Ronald S. Sullivan Jr. | Speaker | TED.com