Op-Ed Commentaries
March 16, 2008
Benjamin Saji
Black and white in West Virginia: Will Megan Williams case reveal the progress of race relations, despite the outside interference?
Advertisement - Your ad here

As a transplanted black West Virginian (born and raised in Whitman Creek in Logan County) I read with interest a Feb. 28 Associated Press article reporting the Williams family's outrage over seemingly light sentences given the attackers of their daughter, Megan; I share their outrage, but I blame them more than I do the county prosecutor.

I have followed this case from its beginning. Williams is the young black lady who was kidnapped, raped, imprisoned, maliciously wounded and sexually and physically debased by a gang of seven white hooligans in the Big Creek area of Logan County. Operating on a tip from an anonymous caller, deputies rescued Williams from her tormentors on Sept. 8, 2007, after nearly a week of near unmentionable torture. Despite her reported mental challenges, Williams was able to recount her experiences to the police in full detail and to identify her assailants. The police rounded up the accused with alacrity and jailed them.

I, most of Logan County and much of the country were appalled, shocked and outraged when first we learned of Williams' ordeal. Logan county residents and countless other West Virginians, black and white, inundated the Logan Banner with letters expressing sympathy and demanding justice. Some Logan black leaders - the Rev. Audie Murphy, president of the Logan NAACP, and members of the Ministerial Alliance - demanded also that hate-crimes be added to the charges pending against the accused. County Prosecutor Brian Abraham met with local, state and national NAACP officials over a three-hour period and advised them that the charges filed were sufficient to ensure long prison terms for the accused.

Hate crime in West Virginia is a civil rights matter carrying lighter sentences than the felonies charged. Since there was a prior, personal relationship between Williams and one of her attackers, a hate-crime charge would be problematic.

Those leaders were persuaded, but held onto a cautious wait-and-watch mind-set. Their caution stemmed from their stated belief that, in the past, white-on-black crime was prosecuted there with a wink and a nod and leniency, while black-on-white crime was prosecuted with vigor and severity. Thus the stage was set to mete out justice: a speedy trial; a proven prosecutor with an excellent theory of the case and no intentions to run for re-election; a compelling and sympathetic victim; a klatch of unattractive, recidivist suspects; and an outraged populace.

Then the scene seemed to change. Williams' adoptive mother, Carmen Williams, opted away from the prosecutor's stated preference for anonymity for sex crime victims. She wanted to let the world know in graphic and minute detail all that had beset her daughter and precisely who it was that did it to her. (Cynics have said it was also to better enable sympathizers to send donations.) Press conferences proliferated, and the tone and content of them evolved. They took on the characteristics of repertory theater. Some performances bore a near pornographic taint and seemed to cast Williams' ordeal as a titillating, sadomasochistic tryst or dalliance, rather than the evil, sadistic, abduction, rape and torture the police and prosecutor charged.

Thus began Williams' transformation from sympathetic and compelling victim to some sort of macabre celebrity, much to the stated chagrin of the prosecutor and to the probable relief and delight of the attorneys for the accused.

The prosecutor, knowing Williams' intellectual limitations and aware that defense attorneys can cross-examine, asked that interviews and public appearances not take place. But to no avail. Only when Abraham threatened to seek a guardian ad litem to look after Williams' best interest, did her parents slow the press conferences.

Somewhere along the line, Williams acquired one Malik Shabazz, co-founder of the Black Lawyers for Justice, based in Washington, D.C., as her "legal adviser," whatever that means. With a group called the New Black Panther Party and a random assortment of other obscure activist (?) entities, they descended upon Logan with a paternalistic bent and an evangelistic zeal to stage a rally for the support and protection of black womanhood, and to demand that hate-crimes be charged. Their attitude was eerily reminiscent of the KKK's early rationale for its malevolent activities.

Thoughtful Logan residents, not wanting to compromise a jury pool, stayed away from the rally. The boisterous outsiders wrote them off as losers, stood on the Logan County Courthouse steps, stamped their feet and thrust their fists into the air and demanded hate-crime charges.

Virtually ignored by blacks in Logan, they later took their show to Charleston for a march. Dismissing the wishes of black leaders there (as they had in Logan) and defining those local leaders' refusal to participate in the planned march as Uncle Tomism and political consorting with "the enemy" mayor, they took their ragtag band and marched - all 200 of them. Somehow they were able to persuade the Rev. Al Sharpton to lay aside his principles for a moment and speak to the handful of true believers. After lamenting the sparse local turnout, Sharpton also called for a hate-crime charge. And with a televised, theatrical flourish, Sharpton presented $1,000 to Williams' mother as a "Christmas gift for Megan."

Thus, as the prosecutor investigated his charges and developed his case, Williams' parents, her "legal adviser" and hangers-on began presenting a contrary, parallel, revenue-generating, hate-crime media case. The bottom line of their myriad public statements was that all Logan and Kanawha County whites are racist, and all the blacks there are simple-minded Uncle Toms and handkerchief-headed Aunt Jemimas who are insufficiently outraged, and whose abhorrence for Williams' ordeal was not deeply enough felt nor stridently enough stated. That is not the way to gain or maintain the sympathies of a potential jury pool.

Advertisement - Your ad here
Report a violation or offensive comment.
[X] Close
to report abuse.
Posted By: blackunity coalition (10:53am 09-09-2008)
Report Abuse


YOU MAKE A MISTAKE IN NOT RECOGNIZING THE WORK OF BLACK LAWYERS FOR JUSTICE< THE NEW BLACK PANTHER PARTY AND OTHERS, WITHOUT OUR UNITED WORK THEIR WOULD BE NOT
HATE CRIME PROSECUTION AND/OR GUILTY PLEA IN THE MOST
BRUTAL HATE CRIME OF THE CENTREY.

MEGAN WILLIAMS IS BUT A GLIMPSE OF RACE BACED CRIME AND
DISCRIMINATION IN WEST VIRGINIA. STARTLING DATA ISSUED
IN 2003 AT THE WVU FORUM ON EDUCATION AND BROWN VS BOARD OF EDUCATION IS PROOF THAT CANNOT BE DENIED.

ARE U PART OF THE SOLUION OR PART OF THE PROBLEM?

Posted By: ABDNotary (10:15pm 08-01-2008)
Report Abuse


I think this article says quite a bit about the lack of legal knowledge of some people. Saji drove a lot of points home and for the most part, Megan may never know, but I'm sure her parents will someday with hind sight, understand the delivery of such a relevant message. Hopefully this won't turn into a rapid set back for the Black community but a surmounting pilar for those who can read and understand.

WOW

It's easy to follow the top stories with home delivery of The Charleston Gazette.

Click here to order home delivery.

Advertisement - Your ad here