
The difference between finding justice and following the letter of the law sometimes takes a simple act of compassion. Where others might have seen an incorrigible offender, one judge saw promiseâand following a hunch, he acted on his intuition.
At first glance, Edward Martell, a 27-year-old high school dropout with an extensive arrest record might not have seemed a prime candidate for rehabilitation, but when he was facing a 20-year drug conviction, instead of meting out the maximum sentence, presiding judge Bruce Morrow gave Martell probationâand a challenge.
Morrow told Martell the next time he stepped into the courtroom, he expected him to have made something of himselfâsomething big.
âHe said, âI challenge you to be a CEO of a Fortune 500 company instead of being out here selling drugs,ââ Martell told Deadline Detroit. âAnd I love a challenge.â
âIt was kind of in jest,â Morrow recalled in an interview with The Washington Post, âbut he understood I believed he could be anything he wanted to be.â
Fast forward 16 years and Martell is standing in front of Judge Morrow againâonly this time, heâs being sworn in as an attorney after passing the Michigan state bar. While the outcome is sweet, Martellâs path wasnât easy or assured.
Since there was a very real possibility that his prior criminal record might scuttle his future plans, as he was completing his GED, Martellâs guidance counselors discouraged him from pursuing a legal career. But he refused to give up.
After obtaining his associateâs degree, Martell went on to score scholarships for both his undergraduate studies and law school. He then clerked at the District of Columbiaâs Federal Public Defenderâs office, and eventually was hired by the Perkins Law Group as a researcher and writer.
When it came time to take the bar exam, Martell had plenty of supporters in his cornerâincluding Judge Morrow, with whom heâd kept touch over the years.
With the help of his law firm mentors, Martell submitted a 1,200-plus page application detailing the steps heâd taken to turn his life around.
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âThe main thing they look for is candor. I let them know I am remorsefulâthat Iâm downright embarrassed,â Martell told WAPO. âI am the same person, but I donât think like that anymore. Iâve evolved.â
His approval took only 15 minutes. The seeds of a dream heâd planted had finally come to fruition. Martell still has a job with the Perkins Group, only now, heâll be a practicing attorney rather than a researcherâand all because one man was willing to take a chance and made a challenge Martell couldnât walk away from.
âItâs a crazy clichĂ©, but some defendants, thatâs what they need,â Morrow told DD. âIf you believe like I believe, that there but for the grace of God go you and me… It took some intelligence to get in and out of the kind of trouble he got into. I told him, âYou could be my son. Letâs see how far you can go.â And man, he hasnât finished yet.â
Which is just the kind of sentencing recommendation we could likely use a lot more of these days.
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