Jarrett Adams: Journey From A Defendant To Defender

by Duke Magazine

Attorney Jarrett Adams few years back helped overturn an innocent man’s conviction in the same state that, years ago, had sentenced him to prison for a crime he did not commit.

The case was Adams’ first professional win. But it was also deeply personal for the 38-year-old, who spent nearly 10 years behind bars after being wrongfully convicted of sexual assault in a case that Adams, who is black, believes was tainted by racism.

“This is a storybook,” Adams told NBC News’ Lester Holt. “It’s a storybook tale that you wouldn’t believe until you saw it … to have a conviction overturned and in a court, in a state, that I was wrongfully convicted.”

 Adams was just 17 when an encounter at a party, an accusation, and a court-appointed attorney put his life on hold.

He had just finished high school on Chicago’s South Side and decided to go to the University of Wisconsin for a party, where he and his friends met a young woman and had what he describes as a “completely consensual encounter from beginning to end.”

Three weeks later, as Adams was getting ready to start junior college in the fall of 1998, he was apprehended. An officer informed him that the woman said she was raped, and that he was being charged with a group sexual assault along with two other teenagers.

Adams didn’t have an arrest history albeit. Hence, hevblatantly denied the criminal accusation from the start, and believed the misunderstanding would get resolved quickly

Instead, he was extradited to Wisconsin, where he couldn’t afford legal assistance. A court-appointed attorney chose not to put on a defense, even though there was a witness who could have helped clear Adams; a student living in the dorm who could corroborate Adams’ timeline of events.

: One Wrongfully Convicted Man “This guy is telling us, ‘We know you didn’t do it. They haven’t proven their case. The best defense is a no-defense strategy,'” Adams said. “We’re like, ‘Yeah, sounds good,’ because we didn’t know any better, right? But in reality, it was a horrible idea to not call any witnesses, not to investigate, and to put this in front of an all-white, racially charged jury. We didn’t stand a chance.”

This allegation later got Adam convicted with a stunning 28-year imprisonment; 20 years for another teen who couldn’t pay for representation; and an acquittal for the third, who had hired a private lawyer, and called the alibi witness.

“My only encounter with the criminal court system was ‘Law & Order.’ And at the end of those commercials, and that theme music comes on, you don’t see guys who are wrongfully convicted go to prison and get sentenced to 28 years,” Adams said.

While in prison, Adams met a cellmate who worked for the prison law library and enjoined him to try to get his conviction overturned.

“He said, ‘Listen. I go over hundreds of inmates’ cases, and all of them say the same thing; I’m innocent.’ He said, ‘I’ve never seen a case like yours before. You’re in here for some racist bull crap, and you’ve essentially waved the white flag,'” Adams said.

The cellmate then admonished Adams not to give up; “It’s only going to take a second before you have tattoos on your face and have given up and completely don’t care at all. You need to go down swinging,” he told Adams.

So, Adams started reading law books and later found a Supreme Court case that stated that the Constitution required defendants to be defended with effective assistance of counsel. This discovery of his got him to get in touch with attorney Keith Findley with the Wisconsin Innocence Project, a state chapter of the nonprofit devoted to get justice for wrongfully convicted people.

Findley knew the case was an hard-to-crack battle, but nevertheless, he took it upon himself.

“He had done his homework. He knew the case, factually, better than anybody, and he knew the law, so that he was engaging with us, discussing legal issues and strategy,” Findley said.

Adams’ sentence was eventually overturned, the charges got dropped, and was paroled in 2007 for the exact reason that he had found in the prison law library books; ineffective assistance of counsel.

A month after his freedom in, Adams went on to enroll in community college, and proceeded to earn his Bachelor’s degree up to bagging a Juris Doctorate degree from Loyola University Chicago School of Law in May 2015.

In 2017, he became the first Innocence Project exonoree to be hired as an attorney by the organization.

“What I wanted more than anything was this: I wanted my mother, when she went to church and people asked about her son, for her not to duck her head in her Bible and cry. And I wanted her to be proud,” he said.

In 2018, Adams found himself back in a Wisconsin courtroom, this time working side-by-side with his former attorney Findley, to free another man they believed was wrongfully convicted.

Richard Beranek was convicted of rape in 1990. Although he had alibi witnesses that put him in another state at the time of the rape, the jury found the testimony of an FBI expert tying him to the scene through a forensic means of microscopic hair analysis convincing enough to give a conviction verdict.

Adams, who served term in the same correctional facility as his client was dedicated to freeing him.

“I can talk to Richard about what I’ve seen other exonerees go through, what the experience looks like from the outside, but I couldn’t do what Jarrett can do. I couldn’t speak with the authenticity of knowing what it feels like, that Jarrett can speak to,” Findley said.

In June, a Dane County circuit judge overturned Beranek’s conviction, citing DNA evidence that proves the FBI hair analysis was wrong. Beranek is now a free man, largely courtesy of Adams’ frantic effort to correct the wrong accusation. 

“Nothing pays me back more, or my family, than me walking in the same court, in the same state, where they didn’t even look at me when they gave me 28 years,” Adams said. “But now they have to acknowledge me as ‘Attorney Adams.’

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