logo
'Deceit, dishonesty, betrayal': The wrongful conviction that haunted Johnnie Cochran

'Deceit, dishonesty, betrayal': The wrongful conviction that haunted Johnnie Cochran

Yahoo5 hours ago

He was an uncommonly dangerous man, in the FBI's eyes, a combat-toughened killer who had returned from Vietnam to wage war on the Establishment.
"We are going to drive the pigs out of the community,' Elmer "Geronimo" Pratt, the 21-year-old leader of the Black Panther Party in Los Angeles, told a reporter in 1970.
Pratt was stout, compact and level-eyed, with a raspy drawl bespeaking his childhood on the Louisiana bayou. He envisioned a violent end at the hands of police, whom he cast as an occupying army in African American neighborhoods. "The next time you see me, I might be dead.'
When he went on trial in 1972 — on charges he murdered a white schoolteacher, execution-style, during a robbery — he insisted he was being framed.
His defense attorney, a young Johnnie Cochran Jr., initially dismissed Pratt's talk as paranoia. But Cochran would later describe the case as 'a twilight zone of deceit, dishonesty, betrayal and official corruption.'
Pratt's conviction kept him behind bars for 27 years, and the case haunted Cochran, who believed Pratt was innocent and who had made a mistake at trial that prosecutors skillfully exploited. In the authorities' war against perceived subversives, it would be years before it became clear how brazenly they had cheated.
'It looked on the surface like a really straightforward murder case,' said Stuart Hanlon, now 76, the radical San Francisco defense attorney who took up Pratt's appeal as a law student and pursued it doggedly for decades.
The victim was Caroline Olsen, 27, who was with her husband on a Santa Monica tennis court in December 1968 when a pair of gunmen approached demanding money. The men ordered the couple to lie face down, then began opening fire. She was fatally wounded; her husband was struck but survived. The robbers got $18.
The investigation stalled, and Pratt was not a suspect until 1970, when Julius "Julio' Butler, a beautician and former police officer, implicated him. Butler had been a Panther himself, and had resented Pratt's elevation as Los Angeles leader.
The state's star witness, Butler testified that Pratt had dropped by his beauty shop and announced he was going on a 'mission' and later pointed to an article about the Santa Monica shooting to confirm it was his doing.
Cochran asked Butler if he had ever been a police informant. Butler flatly denied it.
Devastatingly for the defense, Olsen's widower pointed to the defendant and said: "That's the man who murdered my wife.'
Cochran argued against the reliability of cross-racial witness identification, particularly under conditions of stress, and put on the stand a witness who had seen Pratt in the Bay Area around the time of the killing. He also put on Pratt, who had been decorated for heroism during two tours in Vietnam with the Army, and who showed what Cochran called a 'soldier's contempt' for whomever shot the helpless Olsen in the back.
Cochran thought it was a winnable case, but he introduced an exhibit that backfired terribly. It was a Polaroid, given to him by Pratt's brother, who insisted it had been taken a week after the shooting. It showed Pratt with a beard, which contradicted the widower's initial description of the shooter as "a clean-shaven black man.'
Prosecutors countered with a Polaroid employee who said the film had not even been manufactured until five months after the crime, a blow to the defense's credibility that left jurors doubting Pratt's other claims.
It took jurors 10 days to find him guilty of first-degree murder. The sentence was 25 years to life. "You're wrong. I didn't kill that woman,' Pratt erupted. "You racist dogs.'
Pratt spent the next eight years in solitary confinement. He was shuttled among prisons, and eventually allowed conjugal visits; his wife gave birth to two children. At a series of unsuccessful parole hearings, the panel waited for him to say he was sorry. He insisted he hadn't done it.
'The last person I killed,' he would say, 'was in Vietnam.'
There was much the authorities had not shared with Pratt's defense team. They did not reveal that Olsen's widower had previously identified another man as the shooter. (The man had been in jail at the time and could not have done it.)
Nor did they reveal the scope of the star witness' work as an informant for law enforcement officials. Based on FBI documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, Pratt's lawyers pieced together a picture of Butler's intimate involvement with the FBI, the Los Angeles Police Department and the L.A. County district attorney's office in dozens of cases.
To FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, the Panthers had been the most dangerous group in the country, homegrown terrorists with stockpiles of weapons and alarming Maoist rhetoric. His secret COINTELPRO program was a campaign of spying, wiretaps and sabotage aimed at crushing perceived subversives and thwarting 'the coalition of militant black nationalist groups.'
'Geronimo was targeted by the FBI because he was a natural leader,' Hanlon said.
As Hanlon pieced together documents, it became clear that Butler had been helping. Rejecting appeal after appeal, however, courts ruled that Butler had not been an informant — he had been 'a contact and nothing more,' according to one judge — and that Pratt did not deserve a new trial.
He was still considered dangerous. 'If he chooses to set up a revolutionary organization upon his release from prison, it would certainly be easy for him to do so,' a prosecutor said at one parole hearing. 'He does have this network out there.'
When defense lawyers brought their evidence to then-L.A. County Dist. Atty. Gil Garcetti in 1993, they presented it as a chance to undo the injustice his predecessors had sanctioned two decades earlier. But Garcetti's review dragged on for years, and the attorneys turned again to the courts.
This time, the courts granted a hearing. Because the L.A. County Superior Court bench was recused — the original prosecutor was now an L.A. County judge and a probable witness — the case was transferred to Orange County Superior Court. For Pratt's supporters, this provoked a chill. What hope did they have in a staunchly conservative county?
But Judge Everett Dickey surprised them.
"It's clear that this is not a typical case," Dickey said. "It cries out for resolution.'
This time, Pratt's team was armed with evidence never heard at the original trial. They had the testimony of a retired FBI agent who supported Pratt's claim that he had been in Oakland during the killing.
They knew that the D.A.'s office had allowed Butler to plead no contest to four felonies in exchange for probation, around the time he testified against Pratt.
And they had an index card, recently discovered by one of Garcetti's investigators in the office files, that listed Butler as a D.A. informant. It was filed under B; it had been there all along.
"It had never been turned over to the defense. How could they have not turned this over?' Garcetti said in a recent interview. 'I couldn't find anyone who would fess up to the fact that, 'Yeah, we had that document in the files.''
Still, Garcetti's prosecutors downplayed the card's importance. Butler was not an informant, they argued vehemently, but merely a 'source.'
In late 1996, Cochran finally got a chance to confront Butler. He had waited years. Butler had become an attorney and an official at a prominent Los Angeles church. He insisted he had been merely a 'liaison' between law enforcement and the Panthers.
Cochran asked him his definition of informant. He admitted he had told the FBI that Pratt had a submachine gun. He said his definition of an informant was someone who supplied accurate information.
"So under your own definition, you were informing to the FBI?" Cochran asked.
"You could say that," Butler said.
Dickey threw out Pratt's conviction, concluding that Butler had lied and that prosecutors had hidden evidence that could have led to Pratt's acquittal.
Pratt was released on bail in June 1997, to the cheers of his supporters.
"The greatest moment of my legal career,' Cochran called it.
Pratt flew home to Morgan City, La., 'to see my mama and my homefolks,' he said. "It wasn't easy getting here.'
He said he wanted to hear rain on the tin roof of his childhood home.
Pratt's legal ordeal was not over, however. Garcetti appealed, saying he had found no evidence pointing to Pratt's innocence. He did not drop the case until an appeals court sided with Pratt in February 1999. The following year, Pratt won $4.5 million in a false-imprisonment lawsuit against the city of L.A. and the FBI. He bought a farmhouse in Imbaseni, Tanzania, where he enjoyed the companionship of Pete O'Neal, a former Black Panther who had fled the U.S. in 1970.
O'Neal found him dead at home in May 2011. Pratt had been hospitalized with high blood pressure, a condition that had plagued him for years, but had torn out his IVs and gone home. He hated confinement. He was 63.
"We always say, 'The system works,' but no, the system only produced the right result because Geronimo and the community and a band of lawyers fought the system. The system doesn't work by itself,' said Mark Rosenbaum, one of the lawyers who helped with Pratt's appeal. "They took away half of his life. And they couldn't break him.'
So, who killed Caroline Olsen? Hanlon believes the killers were other Black Panthers — a pair of heroin addicts known to feed their habit with armed robbery. They died violently in the 1970s, one by gunfire, the other impaled on a fence during a burglary.
In a recent interview, Garcetti, one of the defense team's primary antagonists for years, said that his views on the case have evolved. In retrospect, he regrets fighting to keep it alive.
"He was more likely framed than he was the person who actually committed the crime,' Garcetti said.
Since leaving office, he said, he has learned more about the U.S. government's tactics against disfavored groups in the 1960s and '70s.
'I have read enough to know the FBI, from the top down, were working to isolate any quote-unquote leader in the Black Panther movement, and it wouldn't shock me to learn that they went after people who really hadn't committed a crime that they were bent on removing from the scene."
Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rialto man shot, killed after allegedly attacking family members
Rialto man shot, killed after allegedly attacking family members

CBS News

time17 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Rialto man shot, killed after allegedly attacking family members

A person in Rialto shot and killed a family member who stabbed a woman and attacked two others on Friday afternoon, according to authorities. The Rialto Police Department said officers responded to a reported family disturbance around 1:13 p.m. at the 300 block of North Spruce Avenue. Upon arrival, officers found multiple injured people, including a man suffering from a gunshot wound. That man was transported to a local trauma center where he was pronounced dead at 2:04 p.m., according to police. He has been identified publicly only as a 29-year-old man from Rialto. Investigations revealed that the man allegedly physically assaulted a male family member and stabbed a female family member. He was also allegedly attempting to stab another female family member when one family member fired a gun at him. The stabbed woman suffered non-life-threatening injuries and has since been released from a hospital. The 40-year-old man who fired the gun was not arrested, according to police. The three victims were two women, 61 and 31, and a 57-year-old man. As of Saturday morning, it's not clear why the 29-year-old man allegedly attacked his family members, and their exact relationships have not yet been revealed. The investigation is ongoing, according to authorities. All surviving parties are cooperating with investigators.

Two Coachella residents arrested for homicide near Indio, Coachella
Two Coachella residents arrested for homicide near Indio, Coachella

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Two Coachella residents arrested for homicide near Indio, Coachella

Two Coachella residents have been arrested on suspicion of murdering a 24-year-old Indio woman found dead in a home between Indio and unincorporated Riverside County. Deputies with the Riverside County Sheriff's Department responded around 7 a.m. Thursday, June 26 to the 84-000 block of Manila Avenue, where they found Alexis Cano "suffering from traumatic injuries inside a residence," according to a press release from Sgt. Jarred Bishop. The Riverside Sheriff's Central Homicide Unit determined the incident stemmed from a domestic disturbance. Cano's boyfriend, Mario Morales Jr., 25, was arrested Friday on suspicion of murder and booked into the John J. Benoit Detention Center in Indio. Juanna De Morales, 55, was arrested Thursday and booked into the John J. Benoit Detention Center on suspicion of being an accessory to murder. The investigation is active and ongoing. Jennifer Cortez covers education in the Coachella Valley. Reach her at This article originally appeared on Palm Springs Desert Sun: Two Coachella residents arrested for homicide near Indio, Coachella

Hundreds donate to Fosston father and daughters who were hospitalized after fatal house fire
Hundreds donate to Fosston father and daughters who were hospitalized after fatal house fire

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Hundreds donate to Fosston father and daughters who were hospitalized after fatal house fire

Jun. 28—POLK COUNTY, Minn. — It will be a long road to recovery for a Fosston man and his two daughters who were severely injured in a house fire, all while mourning the loss of the man's 60-year-old father, who died in the blaze. Meanwhile, the community is offering support in the wake of the family's tragedy. Law enforcement responded to 718 First St. E. in Fosston after receiving a fire report at approximately 4:30 a.m., Wednesday, June 25, according to a Fosston Police Department press release. After extinguishing the fire, which had fully engulfed the house. Kevin Haugen died as a result of the fire. Kevin Haugen's son, 31-year-old Zachary Haugen, was injured in the fire. Also injured were two of Zachary Haugen's children, 8-year-old Ronnie Haugen and 4-year-old Evelyn Haugen. His youngest child, 2-year-old Pheonix Haugen, was at the home but uninjured, and is being cared for by another family member, according to Sherri Berg, Zachary Haugen's mother. They were taken to the emergency room in Fosston; the father, 8-year-old and 4-year-old were then life-flighted to Minneapolis. In addition to suffering injuries, the loss of their belongings and family home, "they're struggling, too, because (Zachary) lost his father," Berg said. "(Kevin) was in the house at the time, and he wasn't able to save him." As of approximately 3 p.m. Thursday, Berg said her son had been taken off his ventilator. He wasn't scheduled to have it taken off until Friday, but he was persistent and talked medical staff into checking whether it would be possible — and it was. "That is a huge success," she said. "He's ahead of schedule on that." Ronnie Haugen suffered minor burns and lung damage caused by smoke inhalation. Evelyn Haugen suffered the worst injuries; she has severe lung damage and very bad burns on the top half of her body, so she is anticipated to be in the hospital for quite some time, Berg said. The two girls remain sedated and on ventilators. "They help them breathe," Berg said. "Then what they do is they put medications in the ventilator so then that is pushing it into their lungs to help them heal faster. It's like taking a nebulizer, only it's going straight to their lungs." All three will be in the hospital for a while, and their treatment won't end when they are discharged, she said. A GoFundMe arranged by a family member, Amara Allen, garnered $20,480 in donations within less than two days. There were a total of 211 donations as of late Thursday afternoon, some of which Berg recognized as coming from friends and family, others from complete strangers. "It's wonderful," she said. "The GoFundMe was good. The amount is great, but his needs are great. Even when Zach is discharged, technically, he will stay here with Evelyn — the 4-year-old — until she is discharged. So he won't be at work, and that's going to be a hardship for him." The father of three was working two jobs prior to the fire to support his family. He's a hard worker, Berg said. "He does everything for the girls," she said. "He's just a good family man, and this is really difficult for him, but he'll be there for (his daughters,) and he appreciates everybody who's supporting him." Anyone interested in making a donation can go to or reach out to Ultima Bank Minnesota, located at 603 Hilligoss Blvd. SE in Fosston, in person or by phone at (218) 435-2265.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store