Rittenhouse out on bail as right-wing fans raise millions, while innocent Black men wither in prison
newsdepo.com
The headline was jarring: “Black Man Who Spent 25 Years Incarcerated for a Murder He Didn’t Commit Has Been Exonerated,” The Root’s homepage shouted at me. The story of 62-year-old Jaythan Kendrick, who was arrested for a crime he did not commit&Rittenhouse out on bail as right-wing fans raise millions, while innocent Black men wither in prison
The headline was jarring: “Black Man Who Spent 25 Years Incarcerated for a Murder He Didn’t Commit Has Been Exonerated,” The Root’s homepage shouted at me. The story of 62-year-old Jaythan Kendrick, who was arrested for a crime he did not commit on Thanksgiving Day 1994—when he was just 36—is a familiar one to anyone who’s paid attention to the chronic miscarriage of justice Black people face: Had law enforcement and or prosecutors actually done their job, Kendrick could have been home in time for Christmas, or maybe never arrested at all. The evidence was thin—at best. It also was manipulated. But this story is not about Jaythan Kendrick. With a quick click of the Back button, and I was back to The Root’s homepage; just below the Kendrick story I’d just read was the face of Kyle Rittenhouse, the 17-year-old high schooler who definitely murdered two—almost three—Black Lives Matter protesters in Kenosha, Wisc. with an illegally obtained AR-15 rifle back in August. Rittenhouse was released Friday on a cash bail of $2 million, paid in part by Mike Lindell—the Trump fanatic usually referred to as the My Pillow Guy—and Rick Schroder, an ex-child actor best known for the vapid 1980s sitcom Silver Spoons. While both Kendrick and Rittenhouse will be home just in time for Thanksgiving, the justice system journeys for these two men—one guilty, and one innocent, one white, and one Black—couldn’t be more different. And so I rage. Read more