Inside Cable News

October 29, 2007

Genarlow Wilson on “Out in the Open”

Rick Sanchez will be interviewing Genarlow Wilson, the 21 year old who was just released from prisonafter spending more than two years behind bars for a teen sex conviction, tonight on “Out in the Open”. On American Morning this morning they played a clip from tonight’s interview. Transcript follows…

ROB MARCIANO, CNN ANCHOR: Genarlow Wilson says his sights are set on going to college. The 21-year-old was released from prison on Friday after the Georgia supreme court ruled his ten-year sentence amounted to cruel and unusual punishment. His four-year court battle drew national outrage after he was sent to prison for having oral sex with an underaged teenager back in 2003.

Our Rick Sanchez sat down one on one with Wilson and joins us live this morning.

Good morning, Rick.

RICK SANCHEZ, CNN ANCHOR: Hey, Rob. Good to see you as usual.

MARCIANO: Hey, listen, you spoke with Genarlow back when he was in prison. Now he’s out of prison. Obviously he’s a little bit happier now. But is he bitter about the whole thing? Is he angry at the experience?

SANCHEZ: You’d think, right.

MARCIANO: Yes.

SANCHEZ: You’d think he’d be bitter after going through something like this, two-and-a-half years in prison, hard time with rapists, with murders, with, I mean, all types of really bad people, and basically for a law that most people in the state, including the legislature, has decided, no, ruled, that it’s outdated, that it shouldn’t be on the books, that really it should amount to nothing more than a misdemeanor.

Yet he sits there for those two-and-a-half years.

Finally the supreme court says this is ridiculous. This is really just unusual punishment against this young man. He gets out not bitter at all, not even a little bit, as a matter of fact. I was curious when he said this to me. In fact, take a listen for yourself:

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

GENARLOW WILSON, FORMER PRISONER: You can’t let everything that you’ve been through, you know, get the best of you and turn you bitter, because you will never achieve anything. You know, I feel like everything I’ve done and, you know, everything that I’ve endured, it’s only made me stronger as a person.

You have to be very open-minded to the situation. Of course, I believe that it was absurd, but you know, I had to look at it as, you know, these gentlemen were doing their job, and you know, they felt like they were carrying out the law.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MARCIANO: Certainly a matured young man there, Rick. Another question for you, there were five other defendants in this case. They entered guilty pleas. Got out a little bit earlier. Wilson could have done the same thing and been freed a long time ago. Did he say when he chose not to do that?

SANCHEZ: He chose not to do that from the very start, and his argument is, Rob, I’m not a child molester. I was 17 years old, and I had a relationship, albeit stupid, using bad judgment at a party where there were drugs and alcohol, with a 15-year-old girl. That’s a teenager with another teenager. Does that make me a child molester?

And his main reason for not wanting to do so, he says, is he’s got a little sister, and if he’d done this, he wouldn’t be able to be around her, by law. Here’s his explanation:

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

WILSON: It wasn’t necessarily just about the time, you know, it was the principle. It was that, you know, I didn’t want to be labeled as a sex offender, because I am not one. I might have had lesser time, but then again, I would have nowhere to go, because I would have no home. I wouldn’t be able to stay with my mother because I have a little sister.

You know, when you’re a sex offender, you can’t be around kids.

Basically that’s like, I can’t even have kids myself, you know, so what is the point of life?

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MARCIANO: Boy, you really see in that video, Rick, when he’s there reunited with his family, all of the decisions he had to make, all the motions he may have went through.

Did he talk with you at all about the night when all of this went down, New Year’s Eve, 2003, his behavior with the 15-year-old girl. Did he say why, you know, why he did what he did, and furthermore, why in the heck did videotape it?

SANCHEZ: Because he was a stupid teenager, that’s why.

MARCIANO: Fair enough.

SANCHEZ: Really, I mean let’s just call it what it is. He was 17 years old. It’s a youthful indiscretion. He got invited to a party. A bunch of his buddies were there. They were getting high. They were — pardon me — they were drinking, and they behaved in a stupid way, as people sometimes do in their lives.

I mean, that’s why, you know, Rob, we at CNN, and I took it on to do and continue to follow this story because, as a dad, with teenage boys, I asked myself, what would I do if my son did something like this?

Well, you know, heaven forbid, because I’d be really, really angry at my son, and I would have a right to.

But do I want the state to step in, and say we’re taking your son and we’re putting him in prison for 10 years because of something like this? I mean, I think this is the parents’ job, and that’s where I think maybe it was an overreach on the part of the justice system. But I asked him these questions, and he does own up to it. Here’s what he says:

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

WILSON: I don’t think any of us made very wise decisions, you know, but I don’t think that any of us can go back then and change what happened. You know, for the most part, I think all we can do is mature from it, you know, make sure it doesn’t happen again and, you know, and someone can get caught up in the same thing, but you know, yes, I was young then. You know, I’ve done some idiotic things in my teen years, but, you know, every average teen does.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MARCIANO: … being a teenager is in this country, Rick. It seems like our friend here has grown up quite a bit.

SANCHEZ: He has, Rob, and there was a certain understatedness about him now, you know, a quietness about him. I think he’s learned his lesson. One never knows. We all grow throughout life. But I think he’s going to do well, and I think he’s very committed now to helping others not make the same mistake that he has as well. He says he wants to go to college, maybe study sociology. Should be an interesting story. And we’re going to have a lot more on this tonight at 8:00 p.m., our exclusive first-time interview with Genarlow after getting out of prison.

— Rob.

MARCIANO: We look forward to that. And always good to see you, Rick. Thanks very much.

SANCHEZ: Sure.

MARCIANO: You catch Rick’s entire interview, as he said, with Genarlow tonight on “OUT IN THE OPEN.” That’s at 8:00 Eastern Time.

Filed under: Cable News, CNN - Spud

1 Comment »

TrackBack: http://insidecable.blogsome.com/2007/10/29/7881/trackback/

  1. Mr. Marciano

    Let me say first, your are very good meteorologist’s and lately notice you have been adventuring in other areas, which it is good in your line of business. Now, let me say, the way Mr. Wilson case was dealt. It was disgusting. The three judges almost had the decision turn their way. The decision should have been unanimous, which it would have sent a stronger message. There are many laws on the books that needs revisions and they only come up until you get a smart butt lawyer, whom wants to make a point which is totally wrong. These puritan minded people needs to accept that “America” in not in a box and they must open their minds to fresh idea’s especially when it’s comes to rendering decisions on people lives. The lawyer’s and the system knew that this case should not have started, but they wanted to drive a point, which it was totally wrong.

    Well Peace and would like to hear your point.

    Comment by Michael Mitchell — November 9, 2007 @ 12:20 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment



Anti-spam measure: please retype the above text into the box provided.

Get free blog up and running in minutes with Blogsome | Theme designs available here