1:01:05
Okay. I can live
with those.
1:01:08
[ Sighs ]
Thank you, Mr. Carter.
1:01:12
You're welcome,
Mr. Williams.
1:01:15
Shower's all yours.
1:01:26
Thank you.
1:01:28
[Carter Narrating]
lt came to me as
kind of a revelation...
1:01:31
that my own freedom
lay in not wanting...
1:01:35
or needing anything of which
they could deprive me.
1:01:38
lf punishment consisted
of being locked in your cell,
1:01:42
then by simply choosing
to never leave my cell,
1:01:45
l deprived them
of that weapon.
1:01:48
l would not work in their shops.
l would not eat their food.
l began to study.
1:01:53
l dissected my entire case
piece by piece,
1:01:56
beginning with
my initial arrest
through the trial itself...
1:02:00
and finally,
to the awful verdict.
1:02:03
I didn't get a trial...
1:02:05
free from constitutional error
and racial prejudice.
1:02:07
He knows that.
You know it !
1:02:09
That's not helpin' me
in here, Myron.
1:02:12
Look. Look !
1:02:14
I'm innocent.
That's why.
1:02:17
Seven years !
You're goddamn right
it's seven years !
1:02:19
Just get me outta here.
I want a new trial. Okay ?
1:02:25
[ All Chanting ]
The people united
will never be defeated.
1:02:28
The people united
will never be defeated.
1:02:32
The people united
will never be defeated.
1:02:36
The people united--
1:02:38
It shows that
there's still hope.
1:02:42
There is hope for change
in America.
1:02:46
I believe in law and order,
1:02:48
and I believe that everybody
have a right to another trial.
1:02:51
Here comes the story
of the Hurricane
1:02:55
The man the authorities
came to blame
1:02:58
For something
that he never done