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Brutal Society
On-the-spot report from Michigan courtroom: Scenes from the
murder trial of a 13-year-old
By Kate Randall
29 October 1999
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Thirteen-year-old Nathaniel
Abraham was led into a Pontiac, Michigan courtroom on Monday,
October 18, as jury selection began in his murder trial. His slight,
barely five-foot figure was shackled in layers of chains and handcuffsa
set of heavy chains wrapped around his waist, another set of chains
connected to handcuffs on his wrists, and chains with handcuffs
connecting his feet. The dismantling of the shackles took several,
long minutes, requiring the child to turn toward a chair and lean
forward while the sheriff unlocked his leg irons.
Nathaniel Abraham is being tried as an adult for a murder which
took place when he was only 11 years old. Under a new statute
that went into effect in the state of Michigan on January 1, 1997,
there is no minimum age at which a child can be charged as an
adult, and the decision to utilize this option is left up to the
district attorney. Oakland County Prosecutor David Gorcyca has
charged Nathaniel with first-degree murder as an adult for the
death of 18-year-old Ronnie Greene, Jr. His case is being tried
in the family division of the Oakland County Circuit Court. On
Tuesday, Gorcyca again offered the defense a plea bargain of a
"blended sentence," whereby Nathaniel would undergo
rehabilitation for the next eight years, and at age 21 either
be set free or sentenced to prison. Defense counsel has rejected
this offer as it would still call for Nathaniel to be prosecuted
as an adult.
The Detroit Free Press published a front-page photo
of Nathaniel in chains on October 19. Nervous about the negative
publicity potentially generated by such images, presiding Probate
Judge Eugene Moore made the decision that Nathaniel's chains be
removed just outside the door to the courtroom, and he is now
being led into the trial each day by one of his attorneys. An
Oakland County Sheriff is assigned to sit close by to guard Nathaniel.
Although aware that the proceedings concern him, Nathaniel
appears disinterested and distracted, continually doodling on
a pad in front of him and looking around the courtroom, occasionally
glancing over to his mother and grandparents who have attended
every day of the trial. At one point he turned to one of his attorneys
and asked, "When can I go home?"
After Nathaniel's arrest for the October 29, 1997 shooting
death of Ronnie Greene, a court-appointed psychiatrist estimated
his cognitive abilities at that time to be only on the level of
a six- to eight-year-old. Nathaniel's mother Gloria Abraham repeatedly
sought help for her son prior to the shooting, after he had exhibited
angry outbursts and a tendency towards depression. He was tested
for learning disabilities and was found to have an IQ of 78 and
the verbal skills of a kindergartener. In desperation, Ms. Abraham
even tried to get the police to have him placed in juvenile detention.
All of her efforts to find help for her son fell on deaf ears.
Tommy Williams, Nathaniel's surrogate grandfather since infancy,
commented outside the courtroom, "Gloria tried so hard to
get help. Why she wasn't able to get any is really the big question."
Daniel Bagdade, one of Nathaniel's attorneys, said, "My concern
about the mental health system is the fact that so many facilities
are closed which were geared towards juveniles."
Last Tuesday morning, October 19, Geoffrey Fieger signed on
as the lead defense attorney. By that time Court TV had already
planned on covering the trial; however, the case had not received
widespread national publicity. With the entry of Fieger, best
known as the lawyer for assisted-suicide doctor Jack Kervorkian
and for his unsuccessful bid as the Democratic candidate in the
last Michigan gubernatorial race, the Abraham trial suddenly became
a hot topic on television programs such as the Geraldo Rivera
Show. One could rightly ask why it was Fieger's celebrity in large
measureand not the fact that a mentally impaired child was
being tried as an adult for first-degree murderthat focused
the spotlight on the proceeding.
In the media commentary on the case thus far, it is noteworthy
that with a few exceptions there has been no attempt to connect
the tragic circumstances of the trial with the social conditions
that prevail in Pontiac and make themselves felt in the courtroom.
To attend the trial, one must pass through a security checkpoint
at the Oakland County Circuit Court building, which is located
only a short distance from devastated areas of Pontiac, a city
hard-hit by plant closures in the auto industry and blighted by
poverty and crime. Down the hall from the courtroom where Nathaniel's
trial is being held youth who have been ticketed for underage
smoking or picked up for shoplifting have their cases heard. On
any day you see these young people walk by with their parents,
on their way to a hearing where they will receive a $50 fine or
a court order to attend an anti-smoking class. Nathaniel could
receive a sentence of life imprisonment, but the atmosphere inside
the courtroom does not always reflect the seriousness of his predicament.
The prosecution and defense dispute a legal point at one moment,
then joke with each other at the next. The families of Nathaniel
Abraham and Ronnie Greene find little to laugh about during the
proceedings.
Assistant District Attorney Lisa Halushka, the lead prosecutor
in the case, is aggressive and enthusiastic. One gets the impression
that the young attorney is quite conscious of the precedent-setting
nature of the case, and sees her role in it as a chance to make
a name for herself among those leading the "war against crime."
Before questioning each potential juror, she asks: "Do you
know that this is a murder trial? And that this gentleman [with
a sweeping hand gesture to Nathaniel Abraham] seated at the end
of the table is charged with murder and assault with intent to
commit murder? How does that make you feel?" She aims to
identify and seat on the jury those individuals who are not uncomfortable
with the idea of prosecuting a mentally-impaired 13-year-old as
an adult. One wonders how young a defendant would have to be to
make Ms. Halushka uncomfortable.
The jury selection process in this case, although somewhat
repetitive and tedious, has provided an insight into the opinions
of a cross-section of the Oakland County population towards this
case. While many people might choose to go about their business
and ignore the disturbing issues raised by it, those individuals
who find themselvesby virtue of chancein the potential
jury pool are forced to consider their attitudes.
In the voir dire phase of the trial, each potential
juror is brought separately into the courtroom and seated in the
middle of the jury box, and then questioned by the prosecution
and defense. One juror, a fourth grade classroom teacher, obviously
uneasy about the prospect of sitting on the jury, said, "I
question whether a person so young should be on trial as an adult.
I know children make mistakes, serious mistakes. It doesn't mean
you should write them off for life."
In response to a question from Lisa Halushka: "Are you
saying that your sympathy would affect your ability to render
a fair verdict?" another juror replied, "I would have
a hard time returning a verdict of guilty because I have in the
back of my mind that he is a child."
Most of the jurors do not appear enthusiastic about the prospect
of imprisoning a 13-year-old child. One juror said, "I see
him as a child, that's what makes me uncomfortable." Another
said, "It disappoints me that a 13-year-old would be on trial.
The younger they are the more it upsets me; it's more emotional
to me at that young age."
What seemed to predominate among those jurors who indicated
opposition to the proceedings was a certain bewilderment and incomprehension
as to why this was all happening, understandable given the naked
malice of the proceedings, verging on the absurd. Without an understanding
of the class relations and intensifying social polarization in
America, it is hard even for those more informed and humane segments
of the population to make sense of such a situation.
One juror was visibly agitated as she took her seat in the
jury box. When asked by the prosecution how she felt about trying
an 11-year-old for murder she responded, "If he committed
an adult crime, he should be treated as an adult. If he stole
candy, he should be treated as a child. It doesn't matter if he's
six or sixty-six. I would convict a three-year old for murder."
After questioning by Fieger, it was revealed that this woman's
best friend's sister was brutally murdered. Her attitude resembles
that of the law-and-order advocates whose answer to every social
problem is a call for more repression.
This juror expressed in the most obscene way the attitude of
the prosecution in this case: Something is wrong with society
and someone has to pay for it. Discounted are the age of the accused,
his impaired mental state, the economically disadvantaged conditions
of his upbringing and the difficulties his mother faced raising
him under conditions where she could find no help.
Jury selection in the case is expected to be completed within
the next several days, and opening arguments should take place
at the end of this week or the beginning of the next. Anyone seated
in the courtroom, or following the trial on television or in the
press, should asked him or herself: shouldn't it be the system
itself on trial here, and not 13-year-old Nathaniel Abraham?
See Also:
Murder trial of Michigan child
to begin October 18
[24 September 1999]
WSWS
investigative report:
The case of Nathaniel Abraham: background to the prosecution of
a child for murder
[2 July 1998]
Twelve-year-old
faces murder charges in the US
The system puts one of its victims on trial
[7 May 1998]
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