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Michael Gallagher

Walking Tall: The Justice Behind the Eighth Commandment

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on January 26, 2011 · 6 comments

The Eighth Commandment, innocent men wrongly imprisoned, claims against Catholic priests, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, Rev. Gordon MacRae, Joe Don Baker, Walking Tall, Sheriff Buford Pusser, Cornelius Dupree, Innocence Project, Attorney Barry Scheck, Jamie Bain, wrongfully imprisoned, truth in justice, These Stone Walls, U.S. criminal justice system, false convictions, Michael Jackson, Dan Henninger, The Wall Street Journal, accused Catholic priests, David F. Pierre, The Media Report, Media Research Center, Donald H. Steier, polygraph, Michael Gallagher, a measure of truth, Marcia Clark, U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen, Catholic abuse scandal, Jack Nicholson, A Few Good Men, National Center for Reason and Justice

. . . 20-year-old Cornelius Dupree was arrested for the crime in 1979, and sentenced to 75 years in prison. In 2004, he was set to be released on parole until he refused it again because it required that he submit to a sex offender treatment program which in turn required an admission of guilt. The 20-year-old turned 51 in prison before being exonerated and released. On a national scale, only two other exonerated men spent more time in prison than Cornelius Dupree. Jamie Bain was one of them. I wrote about Jamie in . . .

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The Eighth Commandment

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on January 13, 2010 · 15 comments

Gordon MacRae, Falsely Accused Priest, James Bain, Jamie Bain, Bernard Baran, Amirault Family, Tom Murt, Michael Gallagher, Cotton Mather, Salem Witch Trials, The Wonders of the Invisible World, Dark Night of a Priestly Soul, Priests in Crisis, Sex Abuse and Signs of Fraud, Catholic League, Dean Koontz, Dorothy Rabinowitz, No Crueler Tyrannies,

. . . Last month, a Massachusetts high school teacher was exonerated after facing a nearly identical plight. A 14-year-old student accused him of sexual assault. Months later, his life in near ruins, the teacher was exonerated at trial when it was learned that the girl made up the story because the teacher had reprimanded her in class. Here in prison, men often joke about how easy it is to set someone up in this way. Some have openly asked me for the names of priests who might have been present in their childhood communities so they can bring an accusation for money. (See “Sex Abuse and Signs of Fraud.”).

A few months ago, a self-described member of Voice of the Faithful wrote a scathing message to me. The writer, a retired teacher, declared that any effort to revisit the case against me is “nothing but a misguided right-wing conspiracy.”

The man’s criticism was responded to by a friend who asked him what makes him feel so immune in an arena in which anyone can be accused by anyone, from decades ago, and with no evidence whatsoever. His blustering response was, “I have absolutely no fear of EVER being accused of such a thing.” Well, neither did Michael Gallagher. Neither did I until it happened. . . .

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