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1995-02-26
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<text id=93TT0417>
<title>
Nov. 01, 1993: A Slap For A Broken Head
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Nov. 01, 1993 Howard Stern & Rush Limbaugh
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
LAW, Page 46
A Slap For A Broken Head
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In another verdict that defies videotape evidence, the men who
attacked Reginald Denny get off relatively light. What guided
the jury?
</p>
<p>By RICHARD LACAYO--Reported by Sylvester Monroe/Los Angeles
</p>
<p> In the collective mind, the beatings of Rodney King and Reginald
Denny have become a matched pair--two videotaped outrages,
two tests of the criminal justice system. As it emerged last
week, one parallel was still to be played out. Just as in the
King case, videotape evidence was supposed to make the verdict
in the Denny trial a foregone conclusion. Just as in the King
case, that was wrong.
</p>
<p> When one of the most tumultuous jury deliberations in recent
memory ended with something close to acquittal for Damian Monroe
Williams, 20, and Henry Keith Watson, 29, some of Los Angeles
celebrated, but much of the city--and the U.S.--was stunned.
Out of the 12 counts facing both men, the jury returned one
felony conviction. For disfiguring Denny with a brick, Williams
was found guilty of simple mayhem, which carries a prison term
of up to eight years. Watson, who was convicted on a misdemeanor
assault charge that carries a six-month prison term, was released
from jail, where he had already spent 17 months awaiting trial.
Though the streets of L.A. stayed quiet, the radio-talk-show
lines were on fire for days.
</p>
<p> Should the verdict have come as such a surprise? From the arrest
of Williams to the uproar in the jury room, there were ample
signs that the prosecution's case was harder than it looked.
Here's some advice they should have heeded:
</p>
<p> DON'T OVERCHARGE. Though they may have thought public outrage
at the crime required it, prosecutors erred by hitting Williams
and co-defendant Watson with the heaviest possible charges,
including attempted murder and aggravated mayhem, both of which
carry terms of life in prison. At trial, even videotape evidence
couldn't prove the attackers had a specific intent to do harm--the very thing jurors were required to decide before finding
the defendants guilty on the most serious points. "From day
one, we thought the prosecution would never be able to prove
[that]," said Edi Faal, the defense attorney for Williams.
</p>
<p> Prosecutors thought they could prove intent simply by pointing
to the attackers' actions. "When you take a brick and hurl it
at point-blank range as hard as you can into a helpless man's
head, what other logical conclusion is there other than that
you are trying to kill him or at least disfigure him?" asked
Deputy District Attorney Lawrence Morrison. But the defense
was able to convince jurors that the beatings arose from the
wild circumstances of a riot and were not premeditated acts.
</p>
<p> DON'T UNDERCHARGE. Despite the long indictment they brought
against the defendants, who were also accused in connection
with attacks on seven other people at the intersection that
day, prosecutors failed to hit Williams with one crucial count:
assaulting Denny with a deadly weapon. While conviction would
not require proof of intent, the charge still carries jail time
of up to four years in California. That could have been added
to any other sentence the defendants received.
</p>
<p> Through some adroit lawyering, Faal turned that mistake to a
decisive advantage. Ordinarily, juries that fail to find a defendant
guilty on a serious charge have the option of convicting on
a lesser one not specified in the original indictment. At the
conclusion of trial testimony, Faal took a crucial gamble. Exercising
a right of defense, he moved successfully to have Judge John
Ouderkirk instruct jurors that if they failed to convict Williams
of premeditated attempted murder, they could not consider a
lesser charge. That left jurors no choice between attempted
murder and acquittal on that most serious count.
</p>
<p> IN THE COURTROOM, DEFENDANTS BECOME REAL. To bolster his effort
to prove that Denny's attackers acted with no specific intent
to kill or maim, Faal sought constantly, and with some success,
to humanize them. At one point, in a step that actually supported
a prosecution contention that Williams had a rose tattoo that
was visible on the videotape, Faal sent his client to the jury
box so that jurors could not only see the young man's arm but
also touch it.
</p>
<p> On another occasion, when the prosecution attempted to identify
Williams as the figure in a videotaped scene, Faal countered
that the man in the tape, who had a gap between his front teeth,
could not be his client. To underscore his point, he asked Williams
to go before the jury and smile. When the defendant stood before
them exposing a mouthful of gapless teeth, the jury had one
of its rare moments of laughter. Faal considered it a turning
point "when we were able to inject some levity into the proceedings
and get the jurors to start laughing with us."
</p>
<p> AND VIDEOTAPES BECOME UNREAL. Faal at first tried to prove that
Williams was not the man seen attacking Denny on the tape. To
counter his argument, prosecutors Morrison and Janet Moore had
to replay the video for the jury over and over again, thus dulling
one of the state's sharpest tools. Jurors were ultimately convinced
that Watson was the man who could be seen putting his foot on
Denny's neck and that Williams was the one who hit Denny with
a brick, then performed a demonic high step for the helicopter
news cameras. As it appears to have done in the first Rodney
King trial, repeated viewing of the brutal videotape may have
anesthetized the jury, so that it counted for less in their
final judgment.
</p>
<p> JURORS ARE ONLY HUMAN. This was the question that had Los Angeles
in an uproar. In a community exhausted by 2 1/2 years of strife
since Rodney King's arrest, jurors reached their conclusions
under the influence of a number of forces inside and outside
the courtroom. Were they scared? Were they moved by a desire
to bring events to a close by meting out a punishment for Denny's
attackers comparable to the one for King's? A day after the
trial ended, one juror denied that anxiety about the potential
aftermath of their decision influenced the verdict. "We weren't
thinking, `We'll have this verdict so another riot won't break
out.' That wasn't on our mind," said a female juror, who appeared
in silhouette on a Los Angeles news program with her voice altered
electronically. "If a riot occurred, it would occur." But a
day before the final verdicts, the jury forewoman told Judge
Ouderkirk that "one juror has expressed fear for herself and
her family."
</p>
<p> The actions of police and prosecutors helped weight the trial
with symbolism. The uncommon spectacle of Williams being arrested
at home, in front of TV cameras, by no less a figure than then
police chief Daryl Gates, strengthened the case of those who
said the accused were being made scapegoats for the entire riot.
When Williams and Watson, along with co-defendants Antoine Miller
and Gary Williams, were booked on high bail--$580,000 for
Williams alone--it added power to that argument. For the jury,
signals from outside the court may have been too much, compelling
them to aim for an outcome in the Denny trial roughly equivalent
to that obtained in the Rodney King case. When the scales of
justice were weighing the evidence, they may also have been
balancing two videotapes.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>