Police shot a Philly man, then accused him of rape. He was exonerated after 19 years
by Samantha Melamed
The Philadelphia Inquirer
December 16, 2020
It was before dawn on Nov. 27, 2001, and Termaine Joseph Hicks was at the wrong place at precisely the wrong time.
A woman had been pistol-whipped, dragged into an alleyway behind what
was then St. Agnes Hospital in South Philadelphia, and raped — until the
rapist was startled and fled the scene. Hicks heard her screams and
rushed to help. But, seconds later, police officers arrived, took him
for the rapist and shot him three times. Hicks survived, but was charged
with the rape and sentenced to 12½ to 25 years in prison.
On Wednesday, after 19 years’ incarceration, Hicks, 45, was, at last, exonerated.
The Philadelphia District Attorney’s Conviction Integrity Unit agreed
with Hicks and his lawyers, civil-rights attorney Susan Lin, and the
Innocence Project, that the case was built on lies — possibly to cover
up the unjustified shooting — that were contradicted by newly analyzed
and compelling forensic evidence.
Philadelphia Common Pleas Court Judge Tracy Brandeis-Roman vacated the
conviction and offered a “bittersweet congratulations” to Hicks. She
also extended an apology to the victim, whose name was withheld. “I am
quite cognizant of the pain and the trauma of the victim, and then more
pain in realizing that the wrong person was convicted,” Brandeis-Roman
said. But, she added, “I do feel that, one case at a time, this system
is being improved.”
At the time of his arrest, Hicks was an assistant manager at a South
Philadelphia Popeye’s, raising a 5-year-old son. One of the bullets that
entered the back of his arm lodged in his chest, collapsing a lung and
requiring emergency surgery. He was arraigned while handcuffed to a
hospital bed.
When he was sentenced to a maximum of 25 years, he told the judge: “An
innocent man can’t sit in jail for long.” But at parole hearings,
according to his lawyers, he was penalized for refusing to accept
responsibility for the crime.
Now, said Innocence Project attorney Vanessa Potkin, “He is going to be
returned to something that he should have had on Nov. 27, when police
encountered him, but he didn’t: the presumption of innocence.”
The new analysis outlined a case in which ample physical evidence
available 19 years ago ought to have been enough to clear Hicks, who was
known in court records as Jermaine Weeks.
Police Officer Martin Vinson said he shot Hicks in the chest or stomach
as Hicks was pulling a gun from his pocket and lunging toward him.
Hicks said the officer shot him in the back as he was reaching into his
pocket for his phone to call 911. Both a forensic analysis of Hicks’
medical records and a review of his clothing — with bullet holes in the
back, but none in the front — supported Hicks’ account, according to the
city’s chief medical examiner.
Potkin said further evidence suggests police planted the gun they said
they retrieved from his jacket pocket. She noted that the gun was
smeared with blood, while the inside of Hicks’ coat pocket was clean.
“He has always maintained that he arrived at the scene when he
attempted to help the victim,” she said. “He had his hand in his pocket
because he was going to attempt to call the police when they arrived and
shot him in the back. Police claimed that Mr. Hicks had a gun on him as
part of their effort to cover up the circumstances of the shooting, but
the weapon that was attributed to Mr. Hicks was registered to an active
Philadelphia police officer.” The officer had not reported the gun
missing.
Vinson and then-partner Sgt. Dennis Zungolo, who was with him at the
scene, did not return phone and email messages Wednesday. A spokesperson
for the Philadelphia Police Department had not provided a comment as of
Wednesday afternoon. Vinson and Zungolo remain employed by the
department. In 2016, the city paid $15,000 to settle a civil-rights
lawsuit naming Vinson as one of two officers who dragged a taxi driver
falsely accused of stealing a cell phone out of his cab, assaulted him,
and told him if he did not like it, he could “go back to his country.”
The Police Advisory Commission’s executive director, Anthony Erace,
said he was not familiar with Hicks’ case but would seek a review. “When
you have a circumstance where at a minimum misconduct is discovered,
and at a maximum potential criminal behavior is possible, it’s got to be
examined.”
Hicks is the 16th person exonerated by the Conviction Integrity Unit
since District Attorney Larry Krasner took office in 2018, and the first
to be cleared of a rape.
CIU chief Patricia Cummings said her office would not retry the case,
as it was tainted beyond repair. “False testimony was used, and I
believe it’s impossible to say that did not contribute to the
conviction.”
Before finalizing the decision to drop charges, she consulted with the
victim’s family. “They have told me that the trauma of a retrial would
be unbearable,” she said.
Going back to the morning of the crime, the victim was not able to
identify her assailant. It was dark, and she suffered a head trauma
during the assault. What she remembered was that after bright lights
appeared, the assault stopped. She assumed those were police spotlights.
Surveillance tape from that night could reconcile her account with
Hicks’. According to lawyers, it shows a man in a hoodie dragging the
victim into the alley. The footage then shows a delivery van arriving,
the flash of its headlights flooding the alley. Hicks’ lawyers argue
that was the light that caused the attacker to flee before Hicks, and
then police, arrived. That matched other witness statements that the
attacker wore a gray hoodie, while Hicks’ coat had no hood. But the
surveillance footage was not provided to Hicks or his lawyers until
after his trial had concluded.
Hicks fought for years to get the forensic evidence in his case
reviewed. Now, Potkin said, he’s focused on returning to society,
building on his relationship with his son, now 24, and meeting a
2-year-old grandson for the first time. Hicks didn’t want his grandson
to see him in prison.
He wrote and directed 12 plays in prison. Now, he hopes to produce work
for the wider community, including a play about his own life and
performances inspired by the “oldheads” who shared their wisdom over
decades in prison.
On Wednesday afternoon, released from the State Correctional
Institution Phoenix to his brother’s home just a few miles away in
Montgomery County, Hicks said he was both overjoyed and overwhelmed.
“I feel 100 pounds lighter,” he said.
But, he added: “It’s unfortunate and sad that it took how long it took
for me to clear my name. I’ve been saying the same thing since day one.
... The things that are promised to citizens should be delivered: a fair
trial, and a fair look at what’s being presented.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: Everyone involved in this travesty of justice should be locked up for 19 years, the same amount of time they caused Hicks to spend in prison.
2 comments:
Sounds like crooked cops to me. I hope they get what's coming to them.
Certainly a good reason for Hicks to hate cops.
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