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Is it a crime to publicly honor black
death-row prisoner and journalist Mumia
Abu-Jamal (convicted of killing white
Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner
in a 1982 trial that Amnesty International
has declared a "violation of
minimum international standards that govern
fair trial procedures and the use of the
death penalty")? Future Philadelphia
mayoral candidate Peter J. Wirs thinks
so.
Acting
as the Chairman of Philadelphia's 59 th
Republican Ward Executive Committee, Wirs
has filed criminal charges against the
French cities of Paris and St. Denis.
Their crime?
In
2003 Abu-Jamal was declared an honorary
citizen of Paris -the first time since
Pablo Picasso was similarly honored in
the 1970s. This April, the French city
of St. Denis (a Paris suburb) named a
major street after him. Located in the
Cristino Garcia District of the city (named
after an anti-Franco Spanish Republican),
Rue Mumia Abu-Jamal leads directly
to the largest sports arena in Europe
: "Nelson Mandela Stadium."
Wirs
and the GOP ward committee allege that
these public honors violate French Penal
Code, Article 24 § 2 (L. 29 juillet
1881), prohibiting "the glorified perpetration
of a crime [whose elements include] the
voluntary trespass to another person's
life or physical integrity ..."
(Click
for link) The committee's press release
explains that:
"The
59th Republican Ward Executive Committee's
French counsel, Martin Bozmarov, Esq.
filed a plainte, (criminal complaint)
with the Procureur de la Republique, akin
to a District Attorney, in two separate
départements (France's primary
political subdivision) who represents
the government before the trial courts,
the Tribunal de Grande Instance de Paris
for the capital city and Tribunal de Grande
Instance de Bobigny that has jurisdiction
over Saint Denis. Once each Procureur
determines the charges founded, a instruction
judiciaire (judicial investigation)
is requested of the Chambre de l'Instruction,
a separate body of judges, who appoints
the Juge d'Instruction, a special investigating
judge, to conduct a full scale investigation
for both exculpatory as well as inculpatory
evidence, including interviewing parties
and witnesses."
"If
the Juge d'Instruction estimates prosecution
is warranted, the dossier is transferred
back to the Procureur, while the three-judge
Chambre de l'Instruction, if determining
there is sufficient evidence to charge,
issue the mise en examen , the
formal indicting instrument, and transfers
the case to a trial court."
Calling
Abu-Jamal a "punk," Chairman Wirs proclaims
that "Abu-Jamal's gratuitous exploitation
of genuine international opposition to
the death penalty should be exposed for
the 'snake-oil' scam that it is."
Wirs
will be among the numerous Philadelphia
city officials traveling to France on
November 27 to lobby against Rue Mumia
and his honorary citizenship
in Paris . In an (Click
for link) advance letter requesting
a meeting with the Paris City Council,
this delegation writes:
"To
give to honours of the city to a cop killer
is both an immoral and irresponsible choice.
It is all the more choking to see the
name of a murderer next to that of Pablo
Picasso in the gallery of the "Parisian
Honours". But the message that the decision
of your assembly is making is much more
disturbing as the French policemen are
everyday exposed to an increasing number
of assaults and violent urban acts."
Rue
Mumia Abu-Jamal
At
the Rue Mumia inauguration ceremony
in St. Denis this past April, Mayor Didier
Paillard declared: "Mumia's struggle is
a symbol for justice, the abolition of
the death penalty, human rights, and resistance
against a system which has the arrogance
to reign over the world in the name of
those same human rights that it tramples
with complete impunity on its own soil."
In
response to the street-naming, resolutions
condemning St. Denis were introduced in
the US Congress, the Pennsylvania State
Senate, and the Philadelphia City Council.
In
September, a delegation visited from France
to defend Rue Mumia . They attempted
to meet with Philadelphia Mayor John Street
, but after several hours of being ignored,
they left his office to speak at the town
meeting nearby organized by Mumia's local
supporters.
At
the town meeting, the visitors proclaimed:
"As long as the city of St. Denis exists,
we will have Rue Mumia Abu-Jamal."
Mumia's
supporters later presented their own resolution
defending Rue Mumia at the City
Council.
Supporters
in New York City have started an (Click
for link) online petition calling
for a street in Harlem to be named after
Abu-Jamal.
A
History of International Support
Support
from France has been extensive. In November,
2002 a delegation of more than 40 French
supporters of Abu-Jamal traveled to Philadelphia
to hand-deliver a 250,000 signature petition
(demanding a new trial) to the Supreme
Court of Pennsylvania office at City Hall.
However, the Supreme Court ultimately
rejected the petition on grounds that
it was not done on the official form created
by the courts.
Arguably
the world's most famous political prisoner,
Mumia's international supporters include
the Japanese Diet, the European Parliament,
and members of both the British &
German Parliaments.
In
1982 he was convicted of killing white
Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner
in a trial that Amnesty International
has declared a "violation of
minimum international standards that govern
fair trial procedures and the use of the
death penalty,"
Calling
for a new trial, supporters around the
world feel that the original one was tainted
by racism, prosecutorial & judicial
misconduct, coerced witnesses, suppressed
evidence, and a denial of Mumia's constitutional
right to represent himself.
His
case has attracted activists around the
world organizing against racism, poverty,
corporate media censorship, mass incarceration,
political repression, and the death penalty.
Activist
Noam Chomsky argues that "Mumia's case
is symbolic of something much broader...The
US prison system is simply class and race
war...Mumia and other prisoners are the
kind of people that get assassinated by
what's called 'social cleansing' in US
client states like Colombia."
Still
on Death Row
In
December, 2001 Federal District Court
Judge William Yohn affirmed Abu-Jamal's
guilt but overturned the death sentence.
Citing the 1988 Mills v. Maryland
precedent, Yohn ruled that sentencing
forms used by jurors and Judge Sabo's
instructions to the jury were confusing.
Subsequently, jurors mistakenly believed
that they had to unanimously agree on
any mitigating circumstances in order
to be considered as weighing against a
death sentence.
Mumia's
case is now in the federal Third Circuit
Court of Appeals. DA Lynne Abraham is
appealing the death penalty ruling while
Mumia is appealing the guilty verdict.
If
the penalty ruling is overturned, a new
execution date will be set for Mumia.
If his ruling is upheld, the DA can still
impanel a new jury to rehear the penalty
phase, which could then sentence Mumia
to death-regardless of the 3 rd Circuit
ruling.
Because
the DA appealed Yohn's death penalty decision,
Mumia has never left death row, and is
still unable to have such "privileges"
as full-contact visits with his family.
The
Legal Update
In
December, 2005, the 3rd Circuit announced
the beginning of deliberations and shocked
many by agreeing to consider two claims
not "certified for appeal" by Yohn in
2001.
Mumia's
attorney Robert R. Bryan declared it to
be "the most important decision affecting
my client since his 1981 arrest, for it
was the first time there was a ruling
that could lead to a new trial and his
freedom."
On
October 23, attorney Robert R. Bryan (attorney
for death-row prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal)
filed the 4 th Step Reply Brief with the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit,
Philadelphia . Because this should be
the last round of reply briefs, Bryan
estimates that the public hearing of arguments
should begin within three months. After
the hearing, the panel of judges will
then decide whether to grant Abu-Jamal
a new trial.
The
courts are now considering the following
four issues:
#1
. Whether the penalty phase of
Mumia's trial violated the legal precedent
set by the US Supreme Court's 1988 Mills
v. Maryland ruling. This issue was
Yohn's grounds for overturning the death
sentence and is now being appealed by
the DA.
#2.
"Certified for appeal" by Yohn
in 2001, the Batson claim, addresses
the prosecution's use of peremptory challenges
to exclude Blacks from Mumia's jury. In
1986, the US Supreme Court ruled in Batson
v. Kentucky that a defendant deserves
a new trial if it can be proved that jurors
were excluded on the grounds of race.
At
Mumia's trial, Prosecutor McGill used
11 of his 15 peremptory challenges to
remove black jurors that were otherwise
acceptable. While Philadelphia is 44%
black, Abu-Jamal's jury was composed of
ten whites and only two blacks. From 1977-1986
when current Pennsylvania Governor Ed
Rendell was Philadelphia 's District Attorney,
the evidence of racism is striking: from
1977-86, the Philadelphia DA struck 58%
of black jurors, but only 22% of white
jurors.
#3.
The legality of McGill's statement
to the jury minimizing the seriousness
of a verdict of guilt: "if you find the
Defendant guilty of course there would
be appeal after appeal and perhaps there
could be a reversal of the case, or whatever,
so that may not be final."
In
1986 the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled
against McGill in another case ( Commonwealth
v. Baker) on the same grounds. When
Abu-Jamal addressed this same issue in
his 1989 appeal with the State Supreme
Court, the court reversed its decision
on the legality of such a statement-ruling
against the claim for a mistrial.
Incredibly,
just one year later, in the very next
case involving this issue ( Commonwealth
v. Beasley ), the State Supreme Court
flip-flopped and restored the precedent.
However, this would not affect the ruling
against Mumia, because the court ruled
that this precedent would only apply in
"future trials." This suggests that the
rulings were designed to specifically
exclude Mumia's case from its precedent.
#4.
The fairness of Mumia's 1995-97
PCRA hearings when the retired, 74-year-old
Judge Sabo was called back specifically
for the hearing. Besides the obvious unfairness
of recalling the exact same judge to rule
on his fairness in the original 1982 trial,
his actual PCRA bias has been extensively
documented.
During
the 1995 hearings, the mainstream Philadelphia
Inquirer wrote that the "behavior
of the judge in the case was disturbing
the first time around-and in hearings
last week he did not give the impression
to those in the courtroom of fair mindedness.
Instead, he gave the impression, damaging
in the extreme, of undue haste and hostility
toward the defense's case."
Concluding
the PCRA hearing, Sabo rejected all evidence
and every witness presented by the defense
as not being credible. Therefore, Sabo
upheld all of the facts and procedures
of the original trial as being correct.
"I'm
Going To Help Them Fry The Nigger"
In
2001 another witness-Terri Mauer-Carter-challenged
Sabo's integrity, but the State Supreme
Court ruled against the defense's right
to include her affidavit in their current
federal appeal. Mauer-Carter was working
as a stenographer in the Philadelphia
Court system on the eve of Mumia's 1982
trail when she states that she overheard
Judge Sabo say in reference to Mumia's
case that he was going to help the prosecution
"fry the nigger."
Journalist
Dave Lindorff recently interviewed Mauer-Carter's
former boss, Richard Klein, who was with
Mauer-Carter when she states she overheard
Sabo. A Philadelphia Common Pleas Court
judge at the time, who now sits on PA's
Superior Court, Klein told Lindorff: "I
won't say it did happen, and I won't say
it didn't. That was a long time ago."
Lindorff considers Klein's refusal to
firmly reject Mauer-Carter's claim to
be an affirmation of her statement.
The
State Supreme Court ruling was an affirmation
of lower-level Judge Patricia Dembe's
argument that even if Maurer-Carter is
correct about Sabo's stated intent to
use his position as Judge to throw the
trial and help the prosecution "fry
the nigger," it doesn't matter. According
to Dembe, since it "was a jury trial,
as long as the presiding Judge's rulings
were legally correct, claims as to what
might have motivated or animated those
rulings are not relevant."
Organizing
for December 9
Pam
Africa (coordinator of Mumia's support
network) explains that "when we defend
Rue Mumia , we call attention
to Mumia's current battle in the courts.
We know the Supreme Court won't hear his
case, so this current phase truly is the
last chance for a new trial."
"I
believe Mumia is innocent and am personally
calling for his immediate release. However,
I'll work with anyone supporting a fair
trial. By demanding a new trial, we can
work with those who know the trial was
rotten but are unsure of Mumia's innocence."
Philly
supporters are organizing for Dec. 9-the
25 th anniversary of Abu-Jamal's incarceration.
Africa is urging supporters to come to
Philly or otherwise organize an event
in their hometown. "Mumia's case represents
all that is wrong with this system. We
must take action now before it is too
late!"
Hans
Bennett is a Philadelphia-based photojournalist
who has been documenting the movement
to free Mumia and all political prisoners
for more than 5 years. Check
out his new website:
www.insubordination.blogspot.com
Please
see photo-essays from past French visits
to Philadelphia in:
2005
(Click
for link)
2006
(Click for link)
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