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NEWS & LETTERS, APRIL 2003

Dennis Williams

Dennis Williams, 47, died March 20. He was one of the Ford Heights Four, and as such he spent 18 years on Death Row for a crime he did not commit. The suit brought against Cook County, Illinois by him and his co-defendants made him a millionaire, but could not restore his youth and early adulthood.

On July 2, 1996 I took the day off work so I could stand in a courtroom and hear Judge Thomas Fitzgerald say to Dennis, Kenneth Adams and Willie Range, “All the convictions are vacated.” My knees went weak and I nearly cried.

After he became free, Dennis responded to requests to speak about the death penalty and wrongful convictions.  At a Northwestern University forum, a student questioned him on how he had maintained his integrity through an ordeal that had taken away half his life.  His reply: You have to understand the power of innocence.  Not he nor his co-defendants, Adams, Verneal Jimerson, and Range ever cooperated with crooked law enforcement or prosecutors who plied them with threats and blandishments to testify against each other. 

The last time I saw Dennis was at an event where Governor George Ryan announced the pardon of Paula Jones, the 16-year-old who had been coerced and terrified into testifying against the four.  None of the four held her testimony against her because they knew that she was also a victim.   It comforted me to know that he had won some of his battles and that he stuck it to the people who had framed and betrayed him. I’m going to miss that comfort now.  He was the first person I ever talked to on the phone from death row.  I hate knowing that that young, stubborn life is gone.

--January

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