Tag: The Wire

  • You can’t make this stuff up

    Life imitates art, after art imitated life. In the Baltimore Sun: “arksdale, ‘Wire’ inspiration, pleads guilty in drug case”

  • What is wrong the C.J. system

    What is wrong the C.J. system

    There’s very little that strikes me as more absurd than offering or accepting a guilty plea for time served. It represents so much about what’s wrong with the criminal justice system. And that’s a lot.

    If you’re guilty, then it’s a travesty of justice because you get to go home.

    If you’re innocent, it’s an even worse travesty. But you get to go home.

    Snoop from “The Wire” just took such a plea. From the Sun:

    She was sentenced to seven years in prison [for heroin dealing], with all of the time suspended except for the five months she has already served while awaiting trial, most of it spent at home, under electronic monitoring.

    Pearson, 31, explaining her decision to take a deal. She repeatedly said she would have been found “not guilty” at trial, but that she couldn’t wait for the proceeding, which could have been years in coming.

    Now I don’t think she innocent. But that doesn’t matter. Why offer this plea? Because the Office of the State’s Attorney has its own issues. And they want their caseload reduced. And they judge their own stats on guilty pleas.

    What would it take to have a justice system where the accused actually had a timely trial and the guilty actually get punished? We’d need more courtrooms, judges, and lawyers on both sides. That would take money. Lot’s of money. And that’s not going to happen any time soon.

    So we continue with a criminal justice that is dedicated to processing the maximum number of people with as little use of court resources as possible. Mostly it means thousand of people getting caught up in its slow wheels until they accept a plea. Call it what you will, it’s not justice.

  • The Real Life Omar

    Omar from The Wire, that is. The story from the Balto Sun.

    [thanks to a reader]

  • A Sixth Season of The Wire…

    …As soon as the Department of Justice is “ready to reconsider and address its continuing prosecution of our misguided, destructive and dehumanising drug prohibition.”

  • “I am therefore ill-equipped to be her judge in this matter.”

    David Simon on Snoop’s Arrest from the Baltimore Sun:

    What follows is a personal statement from David Simon, Creator and Executive Producer of “The Wire” (and currently in production on “Treme”).

    First of all, Felicia’s entitled to the presumption of innocence. And I would note that a previous, but recent drug arrest that targeted her was later found to be unwarranted and the charges were dropped. Nonetheless, I’m certainly sad at the news today. This young lady has, from her earliest moments, had one of the hardest lives imaginable. And whatever good fortune came from her role in ‘The Wire’ seems, in retrospect, limited to that project. She worked hard as an actor and was entirely professional, but the entertainment industry as a whole does not offer a great many roles for those who can portray people from the other America. There are, in fact, relatively few stories told about the other America.

    Beyond that, I am waiting to see whether the charges against Felicia relate to heroin or marijuana. Obviously, the former would be, to my mind, a far more serious matter. And further, I am waiting to see if the charges or statement of facts offered by the government reflect any involvement with acts of violence, which would of course be of much greater concern.

    In an essay published two years ago in Time Magazine, the writers of ‘The Wire’ made the argument that we believe the war on drugs has devolved into a war on the underclass, that in places like West and East Baltimore, where the drug economy is now the only factory still hiring and where the educational system is so crippled that the vast majority of children are trained only for the corners, a legal campaign to imprison our most vulnerable and damaged citizens is little more than amoral. And we said then that if asked to serve on any jury considering a non-violent drug offense, we would move to nullify that jury’s verdict and vote to acquit. Regardless of the defendant, I still believe such a course of action would be just in any case in which drug offenses — absent proof of violent acts — are alleged.

    Both our Constitution and our common law guaranty that we will be judged by our peers. But in truth, there are now two Americas, politically and economically distinct. I, for one, do not qualify as a peer to Felicia Pearson. The opportunities and experiences of her life do not correspond in any way with my own, and her America is different from my own. I am therefore ill-equipped to be her judge in this matter.

  • Another Day, Another Drug Raid

    What makes this one unique is that they got Snoop! And pictures.

  • Balto top cop Bealefeld disses The Wire

    Jesse Walker writes about it in Reason.

    [thanks to Dan K.]

  • Holiday (Criminal) Spirit

    The Christmas crime season is the US begins. This storyfrom the NY Daily News. [November 30 Update] And the Chicago Sun Times. Street crime really does up before Christmas. Keep that in mind.

    I’m in a pub in York, UK, right now. Leeds, where I’m staying, and where David Simon said he might have set The Wire if he set it in the UK, has maybe 3 or 4 homicides a year (or so I was told). Population 440,000. Baltimore, population 630,000 has more than 200.

    In answer to one burning question here in the UK: Are parts of the cities becoming “like The Wire”?

    No.

    Baltimore (and most American cities) have more killings than the entire United Kingdom. Amazing how they manage to fend off all the anti-social drunks here without firearms. Somehow they manage.

  • A Tale of Two Cities

    The Sun is starting a nice little feature where a reporter from London and Baltimore switch places.