The day Calvin Buari walked out of Green Haven Correctional Facility, was the day the scales of justice were evened a little bit more. For 22 years, Calvin was trapped behind bars for a double homicide, he didn’t commit. The podcast named “Empire on Blood” delves into the heart-tugging story of murder, betrayal, and the mistakes made by the New York Police Department who stole 22 years of an innocent man's life. Of course, it seems like the only thing Calvin actually was innocent of was the double homicide of the Harris brothers, which occurred September 10th, 1992. However, as said by Calvins attorney Maran Beldock, “A person's life was wrongly stolen” (Fishman). Putting a man away for a crime he didn’t commit, isn’t justice for the crimes …show more content…
Instead of being innocent until proven guilty, Calvin was guilty until proven innocent. “It’s amazing Calvin Buari's sheer will to keep fighting for justice.” (Aditi, 6). However, what’s most upsetting about this case is that Clavin isn’t the first of his kind. “The U.S., which leads the world in incarceration of its citizens, has approximately 2 million people behind bars. That means a wrongful conviction rate of 1 percent would translate to 20,000 people punished for crimes they didn't commit. On death row, 1 in 25 are likely innocent, according to a recent study” (Matt, …show more content…
Officers and detectives make mistakes, but in the case of Calvin Buari, it cost him 22 years of his life. There are a multitude of different types of mistakes an officer can make, but the ones shown in the podcast were mistakes of the heart– which occur when an officer makes a decision knowing at the time they take the action that it is wrong (“Police Errors Are Opportunities to Build Trust.”). So in order to prevent these types of mistakes, officers need to understand what is expected of them with clear expectations and reinforcement. Police mistakes are the reason why community-police relationships are very strained at times. The police are granted an extreme amount of authority, so trust is crucial in making the relationship work- it’s an enormous amount of