“Just Mercy” Sheds Light on Lack of Change in AL Justice System
The film “Just Mercy” premieres Friday in Montgomery. It’s based on civil rights attorney Bryan Stevenson’s efforts to free Walter McMillian, who was wrongfully charged with murder in 1988 and sentenced to death row. A year later, Stevenson founded the Equal Justice Initiative, a Montgomery nonprofit that defends people who may have been wrongly convicted, often due to the color of their skin.
Anthony Ray Hinton credits the Equal Justice Initiative with saving his life.
“Had it not been for EJI, there’s no doubt in my mind I would have been executed by now,” he says.
In 1985, Hinton was convicted of murdering two fast food restaurant managers in Birmingham. Hinton told detectives he didn’t do it, but he says they didn’t care.
“He [the detective] said ‘but since y’all always taking up for one another, take this rap for one of your homeboys who truly did it,'” Hinton says. “And that cost me 30 years of my life.”
Thirty years. That was how long Hinton spent on death row before the state exonerated him in 2015. Decades later, wrongful convictions are still not unusual in Alabama. Kira Fonteneau is the former public defender for Jefferson County.
“Not much has changed,” she says. “The conditions that set people up to be wrongfully convicted still exist in the system today.”
Take race, for example. Fonteneau says people of color are being locked up for things they didn’t do.
“And we see that because there are a lot of things that go along in the criminal justice system that often will make it either easier for people to plea or for their version of the events not to get told in trials,” she says.
Fonteneau says often times people of color can’t afford an attorney or an expert witness ⏤ two things that are vital in many cases.
Carla Crowder is an attorney and executive director of Alabama Appleseed, an advocacy group that focuses on criminal justice issues. She says in Alabama, people of color are at a major disadvantage because of structural racism across the entire criminal justice system.
“You have vastly disproportionate numbers of white prosecutors and district attorneys,” Crowder says. “The appellate courts are entirely white and the Alabama Supreme Court.”
That’s why many civil rights attorneys believe Stevenson’s work, chronicled in his memoir, is so important. They say he’s leveling the playing field to make sure people have the legal representation they need to fight a system much larger than themselves.
Scorching Saturdays: The rising heat threat inside football stadiums
Excessive heat and more frequent medical incidents in Southern college football stadiums could be a warning sign for universities across the country.
The Gulf States Newsroom is hiring an Audio Editor
The Gulf States Newsroom is hiring an Audio Editor to join our award-winning team covering important regional stories across Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana.
Judge orders new Alabama Senate map after ruling found racial gerrymandering
U.S. District Judge Anna Manasco, appointed by President Donald Trump during his first term, issued the ruling Monday putting a new court-selected map in place for the 2026 and 2030 elections.
Construction on Meta’s largest data center brings 600% crash spike, chaos to rural Louisiana
An investigation from the Gulf States Newsroom found that trucks contracted to work at the Meta facility are causing delays and dangerous roads in Holly Ridge.
Bessemer City Council approves rezoning for a massive data center, dividing a community
After the Bessemer City Council voted 5-2 to rezone nearly 700 acres of agricultural land for the “hyperscale” server farm, a dissenting council member said city officials who signed non-disclosure agreements weren’t being transparent with citizens.
Alabama Public Television meeting draws protesters in Birmingham over discussion of disaffiliating from PBS
Some members of the Alabama Educational Television Commission, which oversees APT, said disaffiliation is needed because the network has to cut costs after the Trump administration eliminated all funding for public media this summer.

