T THE TIME, Schadler and his wife, both white, were Christm shopping in downtown Benton Harbor. They entered a Black ig and record store where a figety, nervous African American male pulled a gun and fired ix times point blank at Sch dler. The assailant ran from the store • and fled. Two years later, based on testimony of convicted drug use , Wilbur Gillespie, Benton Harbor police had Maurice Carter arrested in his home town of Gary, Indiana. Gillespie would retract his accusation that Carter was the assailant before the Carter trial began. Gillespie explained he had fingered Carter to make a deal for himself in a pending drug charge. Gillespie served two years for his petjure4 affadavit. For Carter the retraction came too late. The Benton Harbor police brought Carter into the city police station, allowed the daily ne paper to photograph and publish Carter's picture on the top of page one the next day, before a line up w held. Officer Schadler who spent only two days in the hospital after the shooting, said at that time, he could not identify hi assailant. Two years la1er after Carter's picture was on p geone, Scbadlerpicked Carter out ofa line up. THE WIG and record store clerk - African American and the only witness who spent any time with the assailant close up--swears to this day, Maurice Carter is not the man in the shop who shot Schadler. There was no gun, no physical evidence of any kind to link Carter to the crime. The entire case against Carter was built on "eyewitness" accounts. Most of the witnesses who finge� Carter were white, none of them up close to the assailant on the day of the sbootlng, Carter's court appointed attorney never requested nor examined any police reports, evidence or witnesses prior, to trial. He went to court and winged it Had he examined the police reports he would have discovered a number of inconsistencies between police reports and trial testimony. This newspaper took up the , Carter case and investigated it in 1981. The M,ichigan Citizen investigation was prompted after printing a letter to the editor wIi tten by Carter from prison. In his letter, Carter pleaded for public interest in his cause and laid out some of the inconsistencies urrounding trial testimony. Carter's letter parked a strong reaction from one of the Benton Harbor police officell responsible for oliciting Wilbur Gillespie's false identification of Carter. The reaction was so strong, it got the attention of the paper' editor. The more the case was investigated, the more it became obvious that Carter bad been railroaded for a crime he did not commit. AFTER 1'IIISPAPERpubished - a series of articles on the Carter case, CNN news took up the story and investigative reporter Larry Woods did a one hour apedal on the Carter case which aired in 1984. A Iie detector teat paid for by CNN an4 adminstered to Carter con nu d rom A1 "0 P 0 e iI be- ca the quality of improvement d not provide young people to experien e th program y u hav funded," McGri id. "We expect th core wil higher in th chool than in th who do not re-vamp their program." The committee, chaired by Bard Member Penny Bailer, tentatively approved spending $1 million next year for Dr. McGriff's propo 1, and recommended the propo al to the full board for approv I at the next board meeting cbeduled for April 28. Race form are available at the Easter Seal Society, 2015 Lakeview in St. Jo eph, YMCA, YWCA, WIRX/WSJM Radio, South Shore Health & Racquet Club, St. Jo eph, area ports tore and through major ponsors of the event. LMC Offer Outdoor Adventur Outdoor Adventure is one of the cla e in Lake Michigan College'S spring and ummer clas chedule. The one-credit class, co-sponsored n Colle nu in hi ved full enroll­ erne t r, but tu-. eginnin �/re doing w t it • Doesnt Want Kids To· Smoke One of the mo t trying a, pect of being a parent i encouraging your child to make the right choice - not ju t to follow along. In today' complex . ciety, growing up involve. more pre ure and choice than ever b f reo Studie how that young people do thing becau e their friend do. Smoking i one of tho e thing . At Philip Morri. U.S.A., we believe that moking i an adult deci ion. We don't want children and teenager. to moke. That' why th tobacco indu try i offering a b oklet aimed at helping parent meet the challenge of providing their children with the tool to re i t peer influence. The booklet, "Tobacco: Helping Youth Say No," i de igned to keep parent and children communicating about important i sues like moking. To c ntinue it. long tanding commitment that m king i: not for young people, the t bacco indu tryal 0 has trengthenedit marketing code and i upporting tate legi lation to make it tougher for young p ople to buy cigarette . We are al 0 working with retailer for trict compliance with tate law prohibiting ale of cigarette to minor. . For your free copy of "Tobacco: Helping PIDLIP MORRIS Youth Say No," return the coup n today. U.S.A. r-------------------------, I I I I I I I I I STATE ZIP_' _ P.O. Box 41130 I Washington, DC I 20018 I I I I I I I L __ � � � ith PLEASE SEND ME MY FREE COpy OF "TOBACCO: HELPING YOUTH SAY NO." Please �rint NAME __ ADDRESS __ CITY ...._ _ , . 4 • • I • . . • . . , . · . . · . . • .. .