Success Story

Escaping 50 years jail term to a lawyer, the inspiring story of Theo Shaw of the ‘Jena Six’

Theo Shaw was one of the six black students from Jena in central Louisiana who were arrested in 2006 and charged with attempted murder. Known as the “Jena Six”, the local prosecutor’s decision to charge them with attempted murder triggered a national outcry and outrage.

The case became a uniting point for the black community and raised questions about the injustices meted out to African Americans by the American Justice System.

Shaw was 17 then. He and the other five black teens were accused of beating up a white classmate at Louisiana’s Jena High School. Shaw spent seven months in jail awaiting trial in a case for which conviction would have meant doing as much as 50 years in prison.

Shaw and four other members of the “Jena Six” eventually pleaded no contest to simple battery, a misdemeanor, in 2009, The Clarion Ledger reported. A defendant under this agreement does not admit guilt but does not offer a defense. They received unsupervised probation for seven days but no additional jail time. 

Despite always maintaining his innocence, Shaw believed the no-contest plea presented him an opportunity to put everything behind and move on.

“Even though you may not be a bad person, you may not be a criminal, people can treat you and make you feel as if you are a degrading, violent person. And I think jail initially had that impact on me,” he said.

Shaw and Robert Bailey Jr. another member of the “Jena Six” combed through law books while in a jail cell for answers that could help them get out. 

“We were looking for hope,” Shaw was quoted as saying in an article by Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). “We were looking to file anything we needed to file to get out.”

Shaw, per the article, started filing motions to lower his bail, which was his best chance of getting released. The bail ultimately reduced from $130,000 to $90,000 and the community came together to post bond, freeing him after seven months behind bars.

Shaw’s record was expunged with the help of attorneys. When he came out, Shaw did not allow the trauma of the awful experience of spending seven months in jail to send him on a downward spiral, rather he used it as a motivation to put himself in a position where he could help others avoid the sort of injustice that was perpetrated on him.

Shaw went back to school and finished high school. He went on to the University of Louisiana at Monroe, interned at the Innocence Project New Orleans during college, worked for the Southern Poverty Law Center for three years after college, before eventually studying law at the University of Washington on a full scholarship.

On Friday, April 29, 2019, Chief Justice Johnson administered Shaw’s oath of admission to the bar and he is now busy being a defendant. 

“Any time I’m in a jail, any time … I have to write a motion for a client, I feel myself in that situation again, so I’m always thinking about my experience and what I went through in the system,” he said.

Mohammed Awal

Recent Posts

Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton says his little brother was racially abused while watching him play

Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton has said that his little brother was subjected to racial abuse,…

2 days ago

This is how Reggie Bush got his Heisman Trophy back after 14 years

Reggie Bush has regained his place as the 2005 Heisman Trophy winner after over a…

2 days ago

Nick Cannon says he is a lupus warrior as he undergoes blood treatment after decade of battle with condition

Since 2012, actor Nick Cannon has openly shared his struggle with lupus to support others…

2 days ago

Here’s how much NFL draft’s No. 1 pick Caleb Williams will earn

Former USC superstar Caleb Williams has been drafted by the Chicago Bears as the No.…

2 days ago

Stephen A. Smith on the money mistake he made that got him fired from ESPN

Stephen A. Smith is an ESPN analyst. People widely regard him as the face of…

2 days ago

‘Hip-hop’s best basketball player’ Lil Durk is giving HBCU students a chance to win $333K in scholarships

Lil Durk is an American rapper and one of the most influential voices in the…

2 days ago

Kevin Hart’s Gran Coramino Tequila donates over $1 million to small Black and Latinx businesses

In 2022, Kevin Hart added a new title to his impressive resume: a tequila entrepreneur.…

2 days ago

‘Nothing was handed out to me’: Swerve Strickland on becoming the first Black AEW World Champion

AEW's latest pay-per-view, Dynasty 2024 on Sunday night saw Swerve Strickland defeat Samoa Joe to…

2 days ago

Opal Lee: 97-year-old ‘Grandmother of Juneteenth’ to receive 8th honorary doctorate

Renowned civil rights activist Opal Lee, known as the "Grandmother of Juneteenth," will be awarded…

2 days ago

Gun violence: Mississippi mother’s two sons fatally shot in the space of a month

Violet Horne lost her two sons to gun violence within the space of a month.…

2 days ago

Ohio police released K-9 on man after mistakenly believing he was driving stolen car

An Ohio man said a K-9 bit him seven times after he was pulled over…

2 days ago

Namibia: Outrage after tourists are spotted posing naked at Big Daddy dune

Three male foreign tourists who were spotted posing naked in a popular dune in Namibia…

2 days ago

Will.i.am partners with media veterans to acquire Uproxx, HipHopDX and more to form new studio

Will.i.am is partnering with other prominent figures to revolutionize the digital media scene by forming…

3 days ago

Meet Eritrea’s Sabelle Beraki who built a thriving toy business out of frustration

Sabelle Beraki's childhood was inundated with the lack of representation when it came to a…

3 days ago

How an entrepreneur used LinkedIn to raise $13.8 million

Benjamin Harvey is the founder of AI Squared, a third-party software company that helps organizations…

3 days ago