"The Trials of Darryl Hunt is a feature documentary about a brutal
rape/murder case and a wrongly convicted man, Darryl Hunt, who spent
nearly twenty years in prison for a crime he did not commit. Both a
social justice story and a personally driven narrative, the film
chronicles this capital case from 1984 through 2004. With exclusive
footage from two decades, the film frames the judicial and emotional
response to a chilling crime - and the implications that reverberate
from Hunt's conviction - against a backdrop of class and racial bias in
the South and in the American criminal justice system. This documentary
is the culmination of ten years of research and filming. In 1993,
inspired by claims of injustice and police conspiracy, the filmmakers
began to shoot in North Carolina. Working from a mix of formats (16mm
and 24P video) the film melds the visceral reality of a murder case with
first person accounts and cinematic imagery, illuminating perceptions
and memories of events as they unfolded for the people closest to this
haunting story. This unique look at one man's loss and redemption
challenges the assumption that all Americans have the right to unbiased
justice. Hunt's story - while one man's personal journey - reflects
systemic issues of national concern: cross-racial eyewitness
identification, prosecutorial misconduct, inexperienced defense
attorneys assigned to capital cases, racial bias in death penalty cases
and errors in police procedure. Barry Scheck from The Innocence Project,
who worked on Hunt's case for ten years, and Gary Wells, professor and
eyewitness expert, offer concrete examples where errors occurred in
Hunt's saga and offer future remedies and effective ideas to prevent
future "Darryl Hunts." Hunt himself addresses the need for systemic
reforms to prevent wrongful convictions, underscoring the haunting
reality that Hunt could have been sentenced to death and we would never
have known this story."
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