Robert Johnson - No Crime

Johnson, Robert ; forgery; NRE: no crime

NRE synopsis (by Meghan Barrett Cousino):

"In or around 1979, a series of money orders were stolen from a United Parcel Service (UPS) truck in Atlanta, Georgia. Available court records do not provide precise dates for the thefts, but each stolen money order had a maximum value of $200.

"Tracey Johnson and her common-law husband, Robert Johnson, of Westchester County, New York, came into possession of seven of the stolen money orders. According to later testimony, the Johnsons told friends and neighbors that they had received approximately $1,400 in money orders as a gift. They told some people that the money orders were a gift from Tracey's father in Michigan, and they told others that the money orders were a gift from Tracey's uncle in Atlanta.

"In 1979, Tracey signed her name to these money orders and used them to make payments for rent, for tuition at the private school their son attended, and for a vehicle rented through Budget Rent a Car. The three money orders used to pay budget were identified as stolen.

"When the Johnsons returned the rental car, police interviewed them regarding the stolen money orders. The Johnsons denied any knowledge of the theft. They said that the money orders had been a gift. Police arrested Tracey and Robert, who were each charged with seven criminal counts related to the money orders. Three of the counts were for forgery in the second degree with regard to the money orders paid to Budget."

""The Johnsons' joint trial took place in September 1980 in Westchester County...Court. At the trial, the parties stipulated that the money orders had been stolen from a UPS truck and that Tracey had signed her name to the three money orders negotiated to Budget. Tracey's father did not testify regarding her claim that the money orders had been a gift from him. It is not known whether the defense offered any evidence regarding the claim that the money orders were a gift. On September 18, 1980, the jury convicted Tracey of three counts of forgery and Robert of three counts of aiding and abetting a forgery. The court sentenced Robert to between two and ahalf years to five years in prison. Available records did not include Tracey's sentence.

"On June 1, 1982, the appellate division...reversed the convictions of both Robert and Tracey. The court ruled that because Tracey had only signed her own name to the money orders, she could not be guity of forgery, and Robert, therefore, could not be guilty of aiding and abetting in the forgeries, since no forgeries had occurred. In the same opinion, the court dismissed the Johnsons' indictments.

""After the dismissal, Robert Johnson filed a claim for unjust conviction and imprisonment under the New York Court of Claims Act. Robert died before the court ruled on his claim, and his sister continued to pursue the claim on behalf of his estate. On September 14, 1992, Judge Gerard M. Weisberg of the court of Claims awarded $40,000 in compensation to Robert's estate."

 

Perversion of Justice

Is deliberately finding someone guilty of things he did not do ever justified? If we convict people for acts of child sexual abuse that never happened, does that somehow 'make up' for all the past abuse that went completely unpunished? Is it okay to pervert justice in order to punish people wrongly perceived as perverts?

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