Exclusive: Shortly after Jamal Trulove celebrated his breakout turn in The Last Black Man in San Francisco at the film’s Sundance premiere, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors voted to approve a $13.1 million settlement for Trulove after it was found he had been framed by police for the 2007 murder of a friend, serving six years before a retrial exonerated him and found two police officers deliberately fabricated evidence and failed to disclose exculpatory material.
Trulove is using his freedom and resources to tell enlightening true stories, and he’s got two documentaries that he’s excited about. One is called Black and White: The Greatest Team That Almost Never Was, on which he is partnered with Eterne Films CEO Steve Riach. It tells the story about how racial integration created arguably the greatest team in the history of college football – the 1972 USC Trojans. The consensus National Champion was so dominant,...
Trulove is using his freedom and resources to tell enlightening true stories, and he’s got two documentaries that he’s excited about. One is called Black and White: The Greatest Team That Almost Never Was, on which he is partnered with Eterne Films CEO Steve Riach. It tells the story about how racial integration created arguably the greatest team in the history of college football – the 1972 USC Trojans. The consensus National Champion was so dominant,...
- 6/1/2020
- by Mike Fleming Jr
- Deadline Film + TV
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