More
than two decades ago, police in Shreveport, Louisiana, stopped Fair Wayne
Bryant on the side of the road for allegedly stealing a pair of hedge
clippers. His vehicle looked like one that had been used in a recent
home burglary, they told the Black 38-year-old moments before arresting him. Bryant
insisted the clippers police found in the van belonged to his wife, but
he did make a confession to the officers: After his vehicle had broken
down on an unfamiliar road, he had entered a carport in search of a tank
of gas.
That
disclosure would eventually land Bryant life in prison, a sentence that
has effectively been rubber-stamped by the state’s highest legal
authority. Last week, the Louisiana Supreme Court denied a request from Bryant to hear a review of his life sentence. Six of the seven justices backed the decision, which was first reported by The Lens NOLA, a nonprofit news site based in New Orleans.
The lone Black judge on the bench was the only one to disagree. In a searing dissent,
Chief Justice Bernette Johnson said Bryant’s sentence was only due to
Louisiana’s harsh habitual offender laws, a “modern manifestation” of
the “Pig Laws” designed to keep Black people in poverty during
Reconstruction. “Mr.
Bryant has already spent nearly 23 years in prison and is now over 60
years old,” she wrote. “If he lives another 20 years, Louisiana
taxpayers will have paid almost one million dollars to punish Mr. Bryant
for his failed effort to steal a set of hedge clippers.”
The
decision from the state Supreme Court gives Bryant few, if any, options
for recourse to leave Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, the
country’s largest maximum-security prison, which is also the site of a former slave plantation. In
her dissent, Johnson — the court’s first Black chief justice — drew a
straight line from slavery to the laws that she said enabled Louisiana
prosecutors to send Bryant to Angola for the rest of his life.
In
the years following Reconstruction, she wrote, Southern states
introduced extreme sentences for petty theft, such as stealing cattle
and swine, that criminalized recently freed African Americans who were
still struggling to come out of poverty. Much
like Black Codes before them, they allowed states to sentence people to
forced labor. Under these laws, the Black prison population in the Deep
South exploded starting in the 1870s. “Pig Laws were largely designed to re-enslave African Americans,” Johnson wrote.
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