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"Fair" means "white". "Fair" does not mean just. It does not mean justice. It does not mean correct or correctness. It is always incorrect to use the word "fair", the word "just", the word "justice", or the word "correct", as if they all mean the same. To do so may lead many people to belive that "fair" means "justice", and that "fair", "justice", and "white", mean the same thing. Thus, some people may be lead to belive that "white" people are "fair" people, and that "fair" people are people who practice justice. It is best, therefore, to use the word "fair" to mean "white" - and only to mean the word "white". The word "fair" should never be used to mean justice or correctness. [MORE] From [HERE] The prosecutor who won (is the prosecutor's job to win or to do justice?) convictions against four men in the 1991 double murder on the old Chain of Rocks Bridge had to fend off claims Monday that he bolstered his case by having a police report altered and ignoring signs of police brutality. Lawyers for Reginald Clemons also highlighted crime lab results — which they argue would have raised doubt of his culpability — that never made it into the 1993 trial in which their client was sentenced to death.
Reggie Clemons was sentenced to death in St. Louis as an accomplice to a 1991 murder of two young white women. There was no physical evidence and since allegations have arisen of police coercion, prosecutorial misconduct, and a ‘stacked’ jury in the Clemons case. Despite so many lingering questions, Missouri is still planning to execute Reggie Clemons.