Tawana Brawley speaks to reporters with her adviser, the Rev. Al Sharpton, in this Oct. 8, 1988, photo from Chicago. AP View Enlarged Image
Race Relations: A quarter-century after a black teenager falsely accused an innocent white man of rape, she has begun paying reparations for her slander. The man who rocketed to fame on her falsehoods is still at it.
If ever there was a case of racial injustice it was the case of Tawana Brawley and Steven Pagones, except the roles of victim and perpetrator were reversed in the parallel universe of the racial grievance industry. The master of that universe is Al Sharpton.
Pagones is not as well-known as George Zimmerman, nor is he likely to be now, given the media's subservience to that grievance industry. But 25 years ago the former New York prosecutor was accused of rape by Brawley, then just 15 years old.
Sharpton, the man who demanded justice for Tawana as she told her blatantly false story, is the man who now demands justice for Trayvon Martin, the teenager shot by neighborhood-watch volunteer Zimmerman, who was found not guilty of second-degree murder in what a jury ruled was legitimate self-defense.
As the New York Post reports, Tawana Brawley has finally started payment on a defamation judgment awarded Pagones. He sued Brawley and her handlers, including Sharpton, alleging the story that she was abducted and raped by a gang of white men, including Pagones, was a hoax. A grand jury, which heard from 180 witnesses over seven months, concluded in 1988 that the entire story was indeed apocryphal.
Last week, 10 checks totaling $3,764.61 were delivered to Pagones, the first from Brawley on the 1998 judgment on which she still has $431,000 left to pay.
Brawley, who quickly disappeared from public view and moved about under several aliases, was finally tracked down by the Post and found to be working as a licensed practical nurse in Hopewell, Va.
Pagones filed for garnishment of her wages to pay the judgment with the circuit court in Surry County, Va., in January and won. Brawley must now pay Pagones $627 each month, possibly for the rest of her life, having the right under Virginia law to appeal the garnishment every six months.
Brawley's advisers in the infamous race-baiting case, the Rev. Al Sharpton and attorneys C. Vernon Mason and Alton Maddox, have already paid, or are paying, their defamation debt. At least the monetary part.
Sharpton has never paid in human terms for the damage done to Pagones' life, which quickly unraveled, even as Sharpton's career as a race-baiting hustler pushed him forward to his current job as an MSNBC commentator. Pagones' marriage collapsed, and he left his job as a prosecutor
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