One conversation would be a wake-up call
One day, after being in prison for a year and a half, Adams had a conversation that changed his entire approach.
“I had a cellmate who was an older white dude who was in prison for two life sentences … he said, ‘Look, you get up every day and you get out here and you play chess, you play basketball and you don’t act like you’re innocent. Innocent people, they’re in the law library,'” Adams recalls. “Ever since that day, that was like a wake-up call to me and I started to try to grasp the law.”
He began to read everything he could at the prison’s law library and learned why his own defense failed him. “I wish I knew every word of the Constitution before I went down to that police station, but I didn’t, right?” Adams says. “I didn’t really realize the magnitude and the seriousness in which the system was systematically putting the noose on young Black men in America.”
He read up on the law, trying to prove his own innocence
Adams put all his energy into trying to prove his own innocence. Through his reading, he discovered that his public defendant failing to locate and call a known witness was a violation of his rights. “Everyone has a constitutional right to an effective attorney,” Adams says. “And so therefore, my constitutional right was violated by not having an effective attorney.”
While in prison, he looked through newspapers to identify attorneys litigating cases in the state of Wisconsin. If it was a case that could support his argument, he would write a letter to the attorney, hoping for a response.
Eventually, he received a reply from a lawyer in Milwaukee. Over the course of six months, Adams worked with the lawyer to begin drafting a habeas petition, creating the groundwork for an argument that would ultimately be successful in the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals.
But he needed help getting there.
The Innocence Project accepts his case
In 2004, the Innocence Project agreed to take on Adams’ case. “They came and saw me, finally accepted my case, and when they did they said, ‘Look. You know, this is a good argument that you made, but we really feel like there’s no evidence in your case to be in here on second degree sexual assault. Based on the testimony of the accuser, we don’t understand how on Earth you are in here with 28 years,'” Adams remembers.
In 2006, eight years after Jarrett’s arrest, the Innocence Project argued his case to the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago. The court unanimously overturned Adams’ conviction, on the grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel. In February 2007, after he had been incarcerated for nearly a decade, he headed back into a Wisconsin courtroom for the state to dismiss all charges against him.
After eight years, he was finally released
“In less than 10 minutes, the motion was filed, the judge threw down her gavel and I was gone and released out of the courtroom,” Adams remembers. “That judge never looked me in my eyes at all. When I walked out of that courtroom, I said, ‘You might not look at me now, but you’re going to have to see me for the rest of your life.'”
He kept his promise. In February 2007, Adams was released. In May, he was enrolled in college. He began by receiving his associate’s degree from a local community college. Right after, he paid his way through Roosevelt University in Chicago, graduating with high honors and a bachelor’s in criminal justice. And he didn’t stop there. In May 2015, Adams graduated from Loyola University Chicago School of Law.
“I may have graduated from Loyola Law School in Chicago, but I started law school in Wisconsin Department of Corrections,” says Adams.
Not long after, he was hired by the Innocence Project, the same organization that helped exonerate him. Today, he works for his own private practice.
Now, as an attorney, he’s working to bring justice to others
“To be able to go back in a courtroom in the same state in which I was wrongfully convicted, and them now having to address me as an attorney, it gives you a sense of, ‘I am human. I am human, and respect me as such,'” says Adams. Now, he is using his power as an attorney to make sure others don’t have to face the same fate he did.
Black people make up only 13% of the population in the United States, but half of the innocent people convicted of crimes and then exonerated are Black. Black people are also 3.5 times more likely to be wrongfully convicted of sexual assault than White people, according to a 2017 study for the National Registry of Exonerations. While Adams was exonerated, one of his co-defendants never had his charges dropped, while another was never convicted at all, even though all three men were all accused of the same crime, by the same accuser. Experiencing firsthand how arbitrary justice can be, Adams knows how important it is to urgently address the failures of the system.
“I strongly believe that the problems with our criminal justice system will only get better when we infiltrate the system, meaning more Black judges, more Black prosecutors, more Black, young Black attorneys, like young Black knowledgeable, powerful young men changing the stereotype that we’ve had to deal with forever,” Adams says. “That’s what we need, and I’m hoping my story will go to that movement.”
One Response to He was wrongfully imprisoned for 8 years, now he’s a defense lawyer by Trisha Gopal, Dominique Turner and Evan Chung Updated 8:28 AM ET, Sun September 13, 2020