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There is a cardboard box in Genarlow Wilson's old bedroom at his house in Georgia. Genarlow Wilson may have been a household name if…….yeah, the If is because of the State of Georgia’s archaic law system. The following is copied from a facebook group site “Despite lacking size, overachieving Genarlow Wilson was being recruited by several college football programs. It rests on the floor of his empty closet, near the deflated football and basketball. It's filled with things he needed in his old life. Mostly, it's overflowing with recruiting letters, from schools big and small. A "Good luck on the SAT" wish from the coaches at Columbia. From another Ivy League college, Brown, a note from the football coach: "You have been recommended to me as one of the top scholar-athletes in your area." There's a questionnaire from the Citadel. A brochure from Elon. An envelope from Sewanee. College after college, all wanting the undersized but overachieving Genarlow Wilson to consider their football programs. One open letter, dated three months before everything in this box became a reminder of a life derailed, invites him to take a campus visit. It begins: Dear Genarlow, Here you stand, on the threshold of four of the most influential, challenging, and rewarding years of your life. Genarlow Wilson is standing on a threshold all right, at the end of the last hall of Burruss Correctional Training Center, an hour and a half south of Atlanta. He's just a few feet from the mechanical door that closes with a goosebump-raising whurr and clang. Three and a half years after he received that letter, he's wearing a blue jacket with big, white block letters. They read: STATE PRISONER. He's 20 now. Just two years into a 10-year sentence without possibility of parole, he peers through the thick glass and bars, trying to catch a glimpse of freedom. Outside, guard towers and rolls of coiled barbed wire remind him of who he is. Once, he was the homecoming king at Douglas County High. Now he's Georgia inmate No. 1187055, convicted of aggravated child molestation. When he was a senior in high school, he received oral sex from a 10th grader. He was 17. She was 15. Everyone, including the girl and the prosecution, agreed she initiated the act. But because of an archaic Georgia law, it was a misdemeanor for teenagers less than three years apart to have sexual intercourse ... but a felony for the same kids to have oral sex. Afterward, the state legislature changed the law to include an oral sex clause, but that doesn't help Wilson. In yet another baffling twist, the law was written to not apply to cases retroactively, though another legislative solution might be in the works. The case has drawn national condemnation.” This sums up the article written on ESPN by Wright Thompson. http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/eticket/story?page=wilson I have not decided if this was a race problem or just a problem with the judicial system, but it seems to me that the District Attorney could have simply dropped the charges. It had to be pushed by the “victims” parents to get him tried in the first place. Something needs to be done about this; there is a petition that everyone could sign at: http://www.wilsonappeal.com/petition.php Post your feelings below this to help me understand why or why not he should be in prison.
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