Over the summer, Timberwolves center Karl-Anthony Towns added a new line to his résumé — film producer.
But the project wasn't a multimillion-dollar blockbuster or a lighthearted comedy. Instead, the Timberwolves center lent his time and financial resources to a short documentary film, "Forgiving Johnny," which examines the ways technology can help those with developmental disabilities who are trapped in the criminal justice system when they might have a recourse out of it.
Towns became a producer on the film, which is directed by Academy Award-winner Ben Proudfoot, in connection with Publicis Sapient, a digital business transformation company.
The film follows the story of Johnny Reyes, a Los Angeles resident with developmental disabilities who faced up to 20 years in prison following an altercation with his brother-in-law, and his public defender, Noah Cox, who tried to navigate the complexities of the legal system to get Reyes' case dismissed through a diversion program in California.
To do so, Cox needed to access several digital records to make Reyes' case for diversion. The film also touches on family and the virtue of forgiveness. The Wolves recently held a screening of the film at their facility with Towns and Teresa Barreira, the chief marketing officer of Publicis Sapient.
"In the new world we live in, technology most of the time is used for bad reasons. We wanted to show the effectiveness of allowing technology to work for us and not us work for technology. That's an important thing in this film to learn," Towns said. "Everyone deserves forgiveness. It just takes the person, themselves, to have the grace and the strength to be willing to accept it or also give it."
The film came across Towns' radar through his association with Creative Artists Agency, and it's the latest project to come forth in Towns' yearslong commitment to promoting causes that address social injustice and inequality. Even though the movie is centered in Los Angeles, the messages in it can be universal and fit themes Towns has applied in other areas in his charity work.
He has been a part of the NBA Social Justice Coalition and recently helped the group campaign for Congressional passage of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act. He also advocated for the restoration of voting rights to those who have served prison sentences, the "Restore the Vote" act, which Gov. Tim Walz signed into law in March.