Marc Wilson Was Just Sentenced To 10 Years In Prison

This is what we mean when we talk about this dis­gust­ing racist soci­ety in which even the laws they pass are enforced dif­fer­ent­ly based n the col­or of peo­ple’s skin.
It is a despi­ca­ble and nau­se­at­ing sys­tem of deceit, col­lu­sion and complicity.

By Trone Dowd

Marc Wilson — the Black man con­vict­ed for shoot­ing a 17-year-old in Georgia, despite claims of self-defense — will spend a decade in prison. 

Judge Ronnie Thompson hand­ed down the max­i­mum sen­tence for felony invol­un­tary manslaugh­ter on Tuesday, although Wilson will be cred­it­ed for his time spent await­ing tri­al. The deci­sion brings clo­sure to more than two years of lit­i­ga­tion in a case wide­ly seen as a test for Black Americans’ right to “stand their ground.”

The 23-year-old Georgia native was con­vict­ed on Aug. 31 for the death of Haley Hutcheson. The judge decid­ed against invok­ing a pro­vi­sion of Georgia law which allowed him to sen­tence Wilson as if the charge was a mis­de­meanor instead of a felony, as many of Wilson’s sup­port­ers had hoped.

Wilson said that he was harassed, called racial epi­thets, and near­ly run off the road in his car by three male teens in a pick­up truck on June 14, 2020. Fearing for his life and that of his then-girl­friend who was sit­ting in the pas­sen­ger seat, Wilson fired his legal­ly-owned hand­gun at the truck hop­ing to scare them off. 

But as he found out a day lat­er, one of his three shots struck and killed Hutcheson, who he didn’t know was sit­ting in the vehi­cle. He even­tu­al­ly turned him­self in to police and was charged with felony mur­der and aggra­vat­ed assault.

I would like you to remem­ber that Marc Wilson saved my life that night,” Wilson’s ex-girl­friend Emma Rigdon told the judge Tuesday. “I tru­ly believe that if he didn’t do what he did, we would’ve both lost our lives that night. Marc is not the rea­son Haley is not here.”

Georgia is one of 36 so-called “stand your ground” states where a per­son can use dead­ly force when­ev­er they rea­son­ably fear for their life. Defense attor­neys for Wilson tried to claim the defense in the lead-up to the tri­al, but the effort ulti­mate­ly fell short, lead­ing to ques­tions about the law’s fair­ness. A 2020 study by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights found that between 2005 and 2010, just 11 per­cent of stand your ground cas­es involv­ing a Black shoot­er were seen as jus­ti­fied, com­pared to 45 per­cent of cas­es involv­ing a Black vic­tim and a white shooter. 

The dis­par­i­ty in the appli­ca­tion of the law has been wide­ly crit­i­cized for near­ly a decade, par­tic­u­lar­ly after George Zimmerman was acquit­ted after shoot­ing and killing Trayvon Martin. Zimmerman claimed self-defense because he feared for his life, even though he ini­ti­at­ed con­tact with the 17-year-old. 

In the weeks lead­ing up to Wilson’s sen­tenc­ing, his sup­port­ers open­ly opposed his guilty ver­dict. For one, they argued state pros­e­cu­tors only brought the manslaugh­ter charge to ensure a con­vic­tion in the late stages of the tri­al. While Wilson was ulti­mate­ly found not guilty on both the felony mur­der and aggra­vat­ed assault charges he orig­i­nal­ly faced, the manslaugh­ter charge was brought before the jury dur­ing deliberation. 

They also argued that the judge failed to pro­vide the jury with all of the pos­si­ble less­er charges to con­sid­er. They say the jury should have been allowed to con­sid­er mis­de­meanor invol­un­tary manslaugh­ter, which car­ries a penal­ty of up to just one year in prison.

While Tuesday’s sen­tenc­ing presents a dis­ap­point­ing out­come for many of Wilson’s sup­port­ers, the case might not be over just yet. Wilson’s lead defense attor­ney Francys Johnson told VICE News last week that he and his col­leagues were pre­pared to appeal to a high­er court if Wilson was sen­tenced to sig­nif­i­cant time.

The polit­i­cal pres­sure has been on from Day One to lynch Marc Wilson for the death of Haley Hutcheson. We’re going to con­tin­ue to fight for this young man at each stage,” Johnson said.