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Attorney Flint Taylor, who has represented Wilson and several other alleged Burge victims, predicted before the trial that defense attorneys would attack the men's credibility to play up the notion that "these are just black suspects, so it was OK to torture them." "We can't underestimate, at bottom, the racism involved in all of this," Taylor said. "The fact that it's about black victims and it's such blatantly racist conduct, I think, is a major aspect of why it hasn't gotten the attention it deserves." Many men have alleged that Burge and his men used racial slurs as they abused them. Banks, a convicted burglar and former heroin addict, said one detective used the N-word when he told him officers had "something special" for black men just before he pulled a plastic bag over his head. Ultimately, prosecutors must remind jurors that the men's guilt or innocence is irrelevant and that torture is the central issue, Futterman said. The message must be "we don't torture, that's just not who we are in the United States of America," Futterman said. "That's unforgivable, and it doesn't matter to whom."
[Associated
Press;
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