Over the past week, New York Times columnist Bob Herbert has 
written three articles about Gary Tyler, a 15-year-old African 
American teenager in Louisiana who was sentenced to death in 
1975 and has remained in prison for more than thirty-two years 
-- with no end in sight -- for a crime he did not commit. 

This case is symbolizes both continuing backlash against the 
Civil Rights movement of the 1960s and 70s, and the 
fundamental racism of the criminal justice system today.*

PLEASE DEMAND JUSTICE FOR GARY TYLER BY SIGNING 
-- AND ASKING EVERYONE YOU KNOW TO SIGN -- THE PETITION AT: 
http://www.freegarytyler.com/petition.php

To help organize on Gary's behalf, please reply to this message.

*Herbert's final article in Thursday's NYT is below. Additional
articles and information are posted at:
http://www.freegarytyler.com/writings/isr.html

--------------------

February 8, 2007
Op-Ed Columnist
'They Beat Gary So Bad'
By BOB HERBERT

ST. ROSE, La.

Juanita Tyler lives in a neat one-story house that sits behind a
glistening magnolia tree that dominates the small front lawn.

She is 74 now and unfailingly gracious, but she admits to being tired
from a lifetime of hard work and trouble. I went to see her to talk
about her son, Gary.

The Tylers are black. In 1974, when Gary was 16, he was accused of
murdering a 13-year-old white boy outside the high school that they
attended in nearby Destrehan. The boy was shot to death in the midst
of turmoil over school integration, which the local whites were
resisting violently.

The case against young Tyler - who was on a bus with other black
students that was attacked by about 200 whites - was built on bogus
evidence and coerced testimony. But that was enough to get him
convicted by an all-white jury and sentenced to die in the electric
chair. His life was spared when the Louisiana death penalty was ruled
unconstitutional, but he is serving out a life sentence with no chance
of parole in the state penitentiary at Angola.

Ms. Tyler's sharpest memory of the day Gary was arrested was of
sitting in a room at a sheriff's station, listening to deputies in the
next room savagely beating her son.

"They beat Gary so bad," she said. "My poor child. I couldn't do
nothing. They wouldn't let me in there. I saw who went in there. They
were like older men. They didn't care that I was there. They didn't
care who was there. They beat Gary something awful, and I could hear
him hollering and moaning. All I could say was, 'Oh Jesus, have mercy.'

"One of the deputies had a strap and they whipped him with that. It
was terrible. Finally, when they let me go in there, Gary was just
trembling. He was frightened to death. He was trembling and rocking
back and forth. They had kicked him all in his privates. He said,
'Mama, they kicked me. One kicked me in the front and one kicked in
the back.' He said that over and over.

"I couldn't believe what they had done to my baby."

The deputies had tried to get Gary to confess, but he wouldn't. Ms.
Tyler (like so many people who have looked closely at this case) was
scornful of the evidence the authorities came up with.

"It was ridiculous," she said. "Where was he gonna get that big ol'
police gun they said he used? It was a great big ol' gun. And he had
on those tight-fitting clothes and nobody saw it?"

The gun that investigators produced as the murder weapon was indeed a
large, heavy weapon - a government-issued Colt .45 that had been
stolen from a firing range used by the sheriff's department. Deputies
who saw Gary before the shooting and those who searched him (and the
rest of the black students on the bus) immediately afterward did not
see any gun.

"I don't know where the police got that gun from," said Ms. Tyler.
"But they didn't get it from my son, that's for sure."

Ms. Tyler worked for many years as a domestic while raising 11
children. Her husband, Uylos, a maintenance worker who often held
three jobs at a time, died in 1989. "He had a bad heart," Ms. Tyler said.

She shifted in her chair in the living room of the small house, and
was quiet for several minutes. Then she asked, "Do you know what it's
like to lose a child?"

I shook my head.

"I always felt sorry for that woman whose son was killed," she said.
"That was a terrible time. I remember it clear, like it was yesterday.
But what happened was wrong. The white people, they didn't want no
black children in that school. So there was a lot of tension. And my
son has paid a terrible price for that.

"They didn't have no kind of proof against him, but they beat him bad
anyway, and then they sentenced him to the electric chair."

Ms. Tyler visits Gary at Angola regularly, the last time a few weeks
ago. "He's doing well," she said. "And I'm glad that he's able to
cope. He tries to help the young ones out when they come in there. He
always tells me, 'My dear, you have to stay strong so I can stay
strong.' So then I just try to hold my head up and keep on going."

She looked for a moment as if she was going to cry, but she didn't.

"It's just sad," she said. "I wonder if he'll ever be able to come
out. I wonder will I live long enough to see him out."



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