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Rights and Liberties

Mumia Abu-Jamal Prepares to Take His Case to the Supreme Court

By Adrianne Appel, IPS News. Posted September 3, 2008.


More than 25 years after being sentenced to death, Mumia Abu-Jamal is fighting for his life and against oppression at home and abroad.
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BOSTON, Sep 3 (IPS) -- Mumia Abu-Jamal rallied thousands of protesters in the U.S. city of Denver last week who were calling for the release of U.S. political prisoners.

In a recorded message for the crowds protesting outside the Democratic National Convention, journalist Abu-Jamal attacked U.S. foreign policy, the protection of "foreign despots" and war for "foreign pipelines".

Abu-Jamal made the recording from his death row prison cell at a time when his 26-year battle for freedom has reached a critical point.

He and his lawyer are preparing to take his case to the U.S. Supreme Court to ask it to rule on whether the lower courts have denied him justice because of racial bias.

The decision to go to the Supreme Court was taken after a federal appeals court in Philadelphia in July refused to reconsider an application for a new trial about his guilt or innocence, Robert R. Bryan, the head of Abu-Jamal's legal team, told IPS.

The application was first turned down by the appeals court last March.

Abu-Jamal, a journalist and political activist, was sentenced to death 26 years ago after being convicted of shooting dead a white Philadelphia police officer in 1981.

His case has been taken up by rights activists in the U.S. and abroad who have contested much of the evidence that was presented to secure his conviction. Abu-Jamal has always maintained his innocence.

"Racism continues to raise its ugly head in this country, and should have no place in our legal system," Bryan said after the appeal court's decision.

"Bigotry lingers [on] today in Philadelphia. It would be naive not to realize that this case continues to reek of politics and injustice."

"In America … people often go to the death chamber because of the incompetence of their lawyers," Bryan said.

"The indisputable facts are that the prosecutor [in the 1982 trial] engaged in racism in selecting the jury in this case," Bryan said. "We will not rest until Mumia is free."

Abu Jamal's Supreme Court petition will focus on a number of issues, including that black jurors were intentionally excluded from his [1982] trial. Studies have shown that white jurors are more ready to pass death sentences than jurors of color.

It is uncertain whether the court will agree to hear the case, since only between 1 and 2 percent of petitions are heard each year.

But because the three appeal court judges were split two to one on the issue of racism in the jury selection, the Supreme Court might be more likely to hear the case to resolve the differences of opinion.

A Supreme Court ruling in favor of Abu-Jamal would mean that the appeals court would have to reconsider his request for a new trial about his guilt or innocence.

At the same time that the appeals court turned down Abu-Jamals's request for a new trial, it ruled that he deserved a trial limited to determining whether his sentence should be changed from death to life without the possibility of parole.

This appeals court ruling removed the immediate threat that Abu-Jamal will be executed, but it could be overturned.

Bryan is not satisfied with the narrow ruling of the appeals court. He wants a re-trial to prove Abu-Jamal's innocence.

The prosecution is also unhappy and is likely to file its own petition to the Supreme Court, asking it to overturn the appeals court ruling and order Abu-Jamal's sentence remains as death.

In an interview with IPS, Philadelphia district attorney Hugh Burns, the chief prosecutor, said he had not yet made a decision whether to petition the Supreme Court to send Abu-Jamal back to death row to await execution.

Burns said he was confident that racial bias had not influenced Abu-Jamal's original trial. He said it was "not possible" that significant errors had occurred during the trial.

If the Supreme Court refused to hear Abu-Jamal's appeal and agreed to the prosecution's request to reinstate the death penalty, the execution clock would start ticking again, Bryan said.

"Mumia remains very much on death row because this is still under review."

Mark Taylor, a coordinator of Educators for Mumia Abu-Jamal and professor of theology and culture at Princeton Theological Institute, said the Abu-Jamal case was a potential embarrassment to important state officials.

The Pennsylvania governor, Ed Rendell, who would order the death warrant for Abu Jamal's execution, was a former chief prosecutor on the case. Ronald Castille, chief justice on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, is a former prosecutor who worked to keep Abu-Jamal in prison. He did not remove himself when the state Supreme Court ruled on Abu-Jamal's case in February.

Taylor said his organization would continue to hold workshops and teach-ins to keep the public informed and rally support for Abu-Jamal's release.

"We have to continue doing what we have been doing, educating the public about the details of the case and its significance to issues like the death penalty in America, and racism and police brutality and prisons," he said.

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Good article
Posted by: HansBennett on Sep 3, 2008 9:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for featuring this important article, as it is often very difficult to get fair stories about Mumia's case, even from much of the alternative media.

Recent notable stories that have been ignored by the mainstream media include: 1) the newly discovered crime scene photos that document police manipulation of evidence, as seen on last Dec. 6's Today Show, and viewable at the Journalists for Mumia website.
2)The new book by J Patrick O'Connor, "The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal" which argues that the actual shooter of PO Faulkner was a man named Kenneth Freeman (READ MORE).

Most recently ignored by the mainstream media is 3rd Circuit Judge Thomas Ambro's dissenting opinion where he argues that the ruling violated previous court precedent when they denied Mumia a new guilt-phase trial on his "Batson" claim regarding racist jury selection from the DA.

Publicizing Ambro's dissent is crucial to getting the Supreme Court to consider the case. Hopefully this feature on Alternet can help spread the word.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Great
Posted by: Love Me, I'm a Liberal on Sep 4, 2008 9:11 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Free Mumia!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

A few more facts
Posted by: Axiom69 on Sep 4, 2008 11:11 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The article did not mention a few facts about the case.
1. Mumia's brother was pulled over by the cop and was going to be arrested.
2. Minutes later back-up officers arrived and found the cop dead. Shot in the back.
3. Mumia was lying a few feet away. Shot in the chest. Next to him was a handgun registered in his (Mumia's) name.
4. Bullets from Mumia's chest matched the cops gun. Bullet's in the cops back matched Mumia's gun.
5. Mumia's brother was there with his hands up and kept saying "I had nothing to do with it".

Now I'm no rocket scientist but I can reasonably infer what happened here.
If Mumia was wrongfully shot why didn't his brother say so? If my brother was shot by a cop for no reason I'd be screaming it, not just standing there saying "I had nothing to do with it".
I can't say whether the trial was fair or not but from everything I read justice was served.

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» RE: A few more facts Posted by: Aunt C
» Huh?! Posted by: schiffer
» RE: Huh?! Posted by: Axiom69
Georgia set to execute Troy Davis based on zero physical evidence
Posted by: fanny666 on Sep 5, 2008 9:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Axiom's 'facts' are misleading
Posted by: HansBennett on Sep 7, 2008 3:20 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well, Axiom69, many points raised, so I'll start with your assertion that:

"Bullets from Mumia's chest matched the cops gun. Bullet's in the cops back matched Mumia's gun."

Well, despite no official "smell and wipe" tests on Faulkner's gun or hands, it is true that officially the bullet in Mumia was matched to Faulkner's gun.

However, it is NOT true about Mumia's gun being tied to the fatal bullet. First, the bullet that went through Faulkner's back, and exited near his throat, was never officially recovered. The fatal bullet recovered from Faulkner's head, was officially too damaged, so that the "particular traits" of the bullet could not be tied directly to Mumia's legally registered .38 caliber Charter Arms revolver. Rather, via the bullet's "general traits" the bullet could only be tied to "multiples of millions" of guns, including those not made by Charter Arms. Also, Mumia's hands and gun were never officially given the "smell" and "wipe" tests. To quote Amnesty International, “the failure of the police to test Abu-Jamal’s gun, hands, and clothing is deeply troubling.”

Based on having read all the transcripts and books written on the case, this is what I think is the most likely scenario. There was a third person, named Kenneth Freeman, who was Billy Cook's business partner and a family friend. Billy Cook was Mumia's brother. Cook and Freeman got pulled over. When Faulkner was beating Cook with his flashlight, it caused a huge gash in Cook's head, with significant bleeding. When Mumia ran over from across the street, he was shot be Faulkner. In response Faulkner (while facing Mumia, and having his back turned to Freeman) was shot in the back by Freeman, and then shot in the head. Freeman then ran away before police arrived.

For more on Freeman, here is a link to the recent "21 FAQ's" that Journalists for Mumia recently co-authored with Educators for Mumia:

http://www.emajonline.com/index.php?action=4&content_id=205

In the shirt pocket of Officer Faulkner was a driver’s license application in the name of Arnold Howard, which Howard later testified was paperwork he had given to Kenneth Freeman. We don’t know quite why Freeman was given the paper work or what Freeman would do with it, but the fact that he was known to have it, and that it ended up in Officer Faulkner’s shirt pocket, suggests that Faulkner and Freeman had some interchange on the night of the shooting.

--Where is Kenneth Freeman himself now?

* He was found dead on the night of May 13/14, 1985, the night of the firebombing of the MOVE house. Freeman was found “handcuffed and shot up with drugs and dumped on a Grink’s lot on Roosevelt Boulevard, buck naked.”[17] Again, no jury ever heard or deliberated on Kenneth Freeman’s fate, or on his possible connections to the crime for which Mumia Abu-Jamal was convicted and sentenced to death.

* Given the actual flimsiness of the case against Abu-Jamal – lying eyewitnesses, a phony confession, distorted or non-existent ballistic evidence – the police at the scene had to suspect that someone else was involved and probably the actual shooter. Since they were aware of the Howard license in Faulkner’s shirt, an immediate trail led to none other than Kenneth Freeman. Given the revengefulness and propensity of the Philadelphia police for deadly violence, as well as the date and extremely suspicious circumstances under which the dead Freeman was found, the conclusion that he was killed by the police as part of a general vendetta against its perceived “enemies” (remember that 11 MOVE members were killed the same night) doesn’t seem far-fetched.

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Read the full trial and post-conviction review transcripts at justice4danielfaulkner.com
Posted by: justice4danielfaulkner on Sep 14, 2008 4:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Then you'll understand why the jury and every reviewing judge since has put the killer in his place.

A killer who, unlike the witnesses to what he did, still lacks the courage to face up to questions in the witness box about it: lacking that courage at his trial and at his post-conviction review hearings.

How convenient to raised the deceased Kenneth Freeman as scapegoat. Was he brought forward as a witness by the killer in his defence at trial while still alive? Of course not. Not him, not the killer, and not the killer's spineless brother either.

Don't lose any sleep wondering whether the right man went down for murder of Police Officer Daniel Faulkner all those years ago.

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