
Cases like Banks’s, in which a person is wrongfully convicted and later exonerated, are the exception, not the rule. While it’s next to impossible to calculate the exact number of innocent people in prison, we know this: there are a lot. Some people are never exonerated. Those that are exonerated are left to fend for themselves after years in prison, and without any resources or support system. If men’s rights activists are as incensed as they claim to be about our broken justice system, where is their anger at cases like the West Memphis Three, which left three innocent men in prison for decades? A search for “Brian Banks” on Reddit’s “men’s rights” subforum turns up a seemingly never-ending list of results. A search for “West Memphis” yields one result.Men’s rights activists are also stuck on the question of what should happen to Wanetta Gibson, the then-15-year-old girl who accused Banks. I have no idea what was going through Gibson’s mind when she did this, and I’m not saying she was in the right. She did a terrible thing. But who owes us more: a private citizen, or our judiciary system? Clearly, the latter, whose very job it is to make sure that justice prevails in our society. So why aren’t men’s rights advocates demanding accountability from the system that pressured Banks into taking a plea bargain? Banks reports that his lawyer advised him to take the plea deal because jurors would see him as a “big black teenager,” and assume his guilt. You heard that right: Banks’s lawyer told him that a plea bargain was his best option because jurors assume black people are guilty.
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