He Spent a Decade in Jail Without Being Convicted. Now His Lawyer Says His Case Should Be Dismissed.
Maurice Jimmerson has spent 10 years in jail awaiting trial for a 2013 murder charge.
Maurice Jimmerson has been behind bars for 10 years but hasn't been convicted of a crime. Due to a series of bureaucratic holdups, Jimmerson has been held in a Dougherty County, Georgia, jail since he was charged with murder in 2013—a crime for which two of his codefendants have already been acquitted. Making matters worse, Jimmerson recently spent eight months without any lawyer at all.
After local journalists uncovered Jimmerson's case in April, an Atlanta criminal defense attorney stepped in to represent Jimmerson pro bono—and he's motioned to dismiss the charges altogether.
It's unclear why exactly Jimmerson has languished in jail for so long. Gregory Edwards, the Dougherty County district attorney, told Atlanta News First that some of the delay can be attributed to a 2021 courthouse flood, the COVID-19 pandemic, and a previous judge's decision to try Jimmerson and his codefendants separately for the 2013 double-murder charge. Two of Jimmerson's codefendants were tried—and acquitted—in 2017.
Things got even worse for Jimmerson in the summer of 2022, when his public defender, Benjamin Harrell, filed several requests to be released from Jimmerson's case, noting that he needed to travel frequently to obtain medical care for his infant daughter. However, court employees seemingly lost Harrell's requests and didn't actually grant his release from the case until April 12 of this year—apparently after local journalists questioned one judge on why she hadn't approved Harrell's request.
While Jimmerson was effectively without a lawyer during this period, the Georgia Public Defender Council has insisted that, though Harrell was not providing Jimmerson with any legal help, Jimmerson was, in fact, being properly represented.
"A court error, if one took place, does not obviate Mr. Harrell's responsibilities or representation," Thomas O'Conner, the Public Defender Council's communications director said. "In law and in fact, Mr. Harrell was Mr. Jimmerson's attorney until April 12; assertions to the contrary are deliberately misleading."
Critics were quick to point out this absurdity. "To claim that Mr. Jimmerson was 'represented' under these circumstances makes a mockery of the right to counsel," Maya Chaudhuri, an attorney for the Southern Center for Human Rights, told Atlanta News First. "This is certainly not the type of 'representation' anyone of means would pay for."
Things could be looking up for Jimmerson. Last month Atlanta defense attorney Andrew Fleischman began representing Jimmerson pro bono, even filing a motion to have Jimmerson's case dismissed.
Justifying his decision to file the motion, Fleischman cited the 1972 case Barker v. Wingo, in which the Supreme Court ruled that if someone is held in custody too long before trial, the case can be dismissed. Fleischman tells Reason that "it made sense to file the motion" given that Jimmerson has been locked up for 10 years. "And as far as I know," he says, "that's the longest anybody's been held in custody before a trial outside of [Guantanamo Bay]."
"I have this very strong conviction that people should have a trial before they are punished. And it seems like that is like such a minority view," adds Fleischman. In fact, the Sixth Amendment guarantees the right to a speedy trial and the right to an attorney, both of which Jimmerson has been denied. "We should be trying people in a reasonable amount of time, and we should put a reasonable amount of resources toward making that happen. And if we have a system where people have to wait in jail for two or three years before they have a trial, that's not due process."
According to Atlanta News First, a hearing for the motion to dismiss is set for the end of June. But even if the case against Jimmerson is dismissed, nothing can give him back the decade he's spent behind bars due to administrative incompetence.
"You talk about getting hostages out of other countries like North Korea or Iran," says Fleischman. "And the average time is six years. We talk about those countries having failed puppet justice systems with no expectation of due process. And yet we have Americans in this country waiting 10 years for an opportunity to force the state to prove its case. And that to me is outrageous."
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J6?
Oh yeah. Reason doesn’t give a shit.
Reason is shit.
Translation: Reason doesn’t shill for the Orange Harangue-you-tan
That won’t ever happen. How Reason publishes this articles and those like it without shame is beyond me.
Well, they are called reason and not irrational bullshit.
They should be called ‘Delusional Sellouts’.
And you should be called… Nah, never mind, CHUD is fine.
Racist! Unclean racist!
“J6?”
You mean the cases that are consistently being prosecuted and resulting in guilty verdicts?
Also, for the math-challenged, 2 1/2 is less than 10. If there are even J6 def3ndants who have been in jail since J6, which is doubtful.
Many were arrested almost immediately afterwards. So yes. And we’re talking hundreds of people. And I know this doesn’t matter to you because it’s Americans and not BLM or antifa.
Arrested and charged or arrested and released pending trial are very different things than held without charges.
Pretending that J6 defendants have been held without charges or not being tried or are in any way similar to this case is first-order gaslighting.
Show me a J6 defendant held without charges or the government not going through the process necessary to get to trial and I”ll show you someone who is being unjustly detained and who should be released. But as far as I know, none of the J6 rioters fit that description.
Not remotely comparable. We’re talking about people who committed crimes on video, versus a case that looks awfully weak. (Two other defendants actually acquitted?) Besides, if they hadn’t given all their money to the previous Grifter in Chief, maybe they cold make bail.
“He Spent a Decade in Jail Without Being Convicted”
Terrible.
Now how about an article about the people who spent year + in jail without even being charged?
Never happened. Kari Lake thinks it did.
We’re having a serious conversation here. So piss off.
“We’re having a serious conversation here.”
Not if you’re claiming that J6 rioters have been held for years without charges.
The day CHUD-boy gets serious is the day I break out the reinforced umbrella for protection from the rain of pig shit.
So are you the broken drunk pussy, or the pedophile?
“Never happened…”
Happened, obnoxiously arrogant lying piece of shit.
It’s Georgia and he is Black. No one cared.
I went to law school in the South. In rural areas every player in the CJS is no one’s first, second, or third choice.
Dougherty County generally returns a 65%+- Democratic vote in presidential elections, and is majority Black.
Look at how bad black on black crime is in places like Chicago. The democrats there, especially the black politicians, shout you down if you even try to talk about it.
White on white crime is also the majority. Talking about black-on-black crime is one of the oldest dog-whistles around.
No it isn’t. It’s an issue because of people like you lying about white on black crime. You do this because you and your fellow travelers are race hustlers and poverty pimps. So don’t pull that ‘dog whistle’ bullshit with me.
I said nothing about white-on-black violent crime. Intrarace violence is the vast majority of cases. Black-on-white or white-on-black crimes are the exception.
It’s a dog whistle and always has been. Like anti-trans rhetoric is just warmed-over anti-gay slogans of the 80s. Although, to be fair, the dangerous black man trope never really went away like the gay stuff did.
Emotions (love, sexual attraction) are subjective. People can and should love or desire whomever they want (children excepted).
Biological sex is objective. A man can’t become a woman just because he thinks it or feels it.
Gay and trans aren’t remotely the same thing. LGBTQ is an amalgamation where the old Sesame Street song “one of these things is not like the others, one of these things just doesn’t belong” applies.
Again, you use that weasel term ‘dog whistle’ to link things together that aren’t related. It’s a term you use when you’ve already lost the argument.
Oh, goody. Nelson the brain-dead lefty shit shows up again!
Eat shit and die, asshole.
6th Amendment violation. Cut him loose.
And give him a huge settlement.
From the Georgia AG’s budget.
The money coming from Corrections’ pension funds would be closer to justice, I suspect.
If it were a roach in an ashtray, or helping a girl escape Army-of-Allah vigilantes, or aggravated driving while black, throwing away the key would make sense under Cruickshank v US. But homicide? What if it were justifiable, or even praiseworthy. Did the defendant create a political vacancy by any chance?
It’s unclear why exactly Jimmerson has languished in jail for so long. Gregory Edwards, the Dougherty County district attorney, told Atlanta News First that some of the delay can be attributed to a 2021 courthouse flood, the COVID-19 pandemic, and a previous judge’s decision to try Jimmerson and his codefendants separately for the 2013 double-murder charge. Two of Jimmerson’s codefendants were tried—and acquitted—in 2017.
If one were to be asked why this person was in jail sans trial for ten years, why would you start your chin-scratching explanations at year 8?
Georgia’s justice system — one of the few legitimate functions of government — is painfully under-resourced. Georgia has a state budget of $28.15 billion, of which only $0.37 billion — 1.3% — is spent on the courts ($0.162 billion), prosecutors ($0.104 billion), and public defenders ($0.106 billion).
“How many times do I have to say it? I won’t tell you if I did it or not until after the fucking trial! Did you learn anything from O.J.? Fuck!”
They never did find the real killer…
It seems to me that the prosecutor(s) and JUDGE(s) need to be imprisoned for 9 years automatically. They allowed the violation of civil rights under color of authority.
The ONLY way to get through to thee bureaucratic criminals that ‘civil rights’ are inalienable is to make them spend the time in prison that they caused illegally while violating those rights. Enough said.
And in this case, possibly the defenders as well. Seriously, it would be outrageous enough if the prosecution were claiming that he was represented, despite the fact that the supposed defender was physically absent and doing zero work on his case. But when the Public Defender Council is saying that?
Politicians keep passing more and more laws (the easy part) but apparently don’t understand this requires money (the hard part) for the extra court rooms, judges, public defenders, probation officers, law enforcement, and jails/prisons. The sad part is, the majority of these laws make no difference to society or its safety and are passed for no other reason then re-election bait.
If every law passed had to include an element that measured its stated effectiveness after 1-5 years with an automatic repeal if it did not meet it, half the laws would cease to exist.
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Awesome article
Why’d they toss the lawyer in jail?
Oh, just more sloppy writing; sorry.
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