) im TV
Mumia Abu-Jamal
- Von: "MUMIA ABU-JAMAL" <
>
- Betreff: *Other Voices of TV:
- The
Framing of
- Mumia
Abu-Jamal
- Datum: Freitag, 31. Oktober 2008 03:30
-
-
- via: Hans Bennett
- ==============
-
- Please go here for the links and
videos:
-
-
- J. Patrick O'Connor is the author of
the new book The Framing of Mumia
- Abu-Jamal. During O'Connor's SF Bay
Area book tour this October, he
- was a guest onthe 'Other Voices'
television show, produced by the
- Peninsula Peace and Justice Center.
The one-hour show can be viewed
- here.
-
- If you like what you see, please
download this special flyer providing
- an overview of O'Connor's key points,
and help spread the word in your
- community. Also, consider buying his
book (available at your local
- bookstore, and from the publisher or
Amazon. All proceeds from the
- book will go to both the MOVE 9
andKansas City 5 prisoners.
-
- **Read the new articles on O'Connor's
book by Carolina Saldaña, Linn
- Washington Jr., Hans Bennett, and
radio shows Law and Disorder,Jazz
- and Justice, and KOWA**
- On May 2, the day after the book's
release The Framing of Mumia Abu-
- Jamal was featured in The NY Times:
"Book Asserts Black Reporter
- Didn't Kill White Officer in
'81."
- OConnor argues that the actual
shooter was Kenneth Freeman and he
- criticizes the media, who "bought
into the prosecutions story line
- early on and has never been able to
see this case for what it is: a
- framing of an innocent and peace
loving man." For more on "The Framing
- of Mumia Abu-Jamal" we are
featuring anexcerpt, a previous interview,
- OConnors review of
"Murdered By Mumia," and his response to the
- March 27 ruling.
- Watch the Video Interview with J.
Patrick O'Connor at Philadelphia
- City Hall(PARTS 1, 2, and 3)
-
- J. Patrick O'Connor's April, 2008
interview focusing on the frame-up,
- Kenneth Freeman, the March 27 court
ruling, and Frank Rizzo's legacy--
- is featured below:
- In his new book, OConnor argues
that Abu-Jamal was clearly framed by
- police, and that the actual shooter
was a man named Kenneth Freeman.
- OConnor criticizes the local
media, who, he says "bought into the
- prosecutions story line early on
and has never been able to see this
- case for what it is: a framing of an
innocent and peace loving man."
-
- In his review of the recent book
"Murdered by Mumia," OConnor writes
- that "theres a great deal
to admire about Maureen Faulkner, the widow
- of Philadelphia Police Officer Daniel
Faulkner," but concludes that
- her "obsessive hate for Abu-Jamal
has blinded her to the prosecutorial
- misconduct and judicial bias that
plagued his trial and justifiably
- fueled his rise to a world stage. The
real villains in her life were
- the police and prosecutors who framed
Abu-Jamal for Officer Faulkners
- killing. They are the ones, not the
long drawn out appellate process
- that has kept Abu-Jamal alive, who
have denied her the closure she was
- due more than twenty-five years
ago."
-
- Hans Bennett: Advocates of Abu-Jamal's
conviction and execution always
- say that a police frame-up of
Abu-Jamal is a lunatic, far-fetched
- "conspiracy theory" that
should be dismissed by any sane observer.
- What do you mean when you say he was
"framed"? How was this done?
-
- J. Patrick O'Connor: Mumia's early
association with the Philadelphia
- branch of the Black Panther Party
marked him as a subversive to George
- Fencl, the chief inspector of the
Philadelphia Police Departments
- Civil Defense Bureau. His subsequent
sympathetic coverage of MOVE
- while reporting for the local public
radio station made him an avowed
- enemy of Mayor Frank Rizzo. Minutes
after Officer Faulkner was shot at
- 3:55 a.m., Inspector Alfonzo Giordano
who reported directly to Fencl
- took command of the crime scene
and personally set in motion the
- framing of Abu-Jamal. It would be
Giordano who claimed that Mumia told
- him in the paddy wagon that he dropped
his gun after he shot Faulkner;
- it would be Giordano who arranged for
prostitute Cynthia White and
- felon Robert Chobert to identify
Abu-Jamal as the shooter. Giordano
- and White would be the D.A.
Offices only witnesses at the preliminary
- hearing to hold Abu-Jamal over for
trial where Giordano repeated this
- "confession."
-
- Giordano is as corrupt a police
officer as one can imagine. For years
- he had been extorting kickbacks
personally averaging $3,000 per
- month from Center
Cityprostitutes, pimps and bar owners, which
- explains his early arrival at the
crime scene. He knew Cynthia White
- and her pimp. He coerced her at the
scene to identify Abu-Jamal as the
- shooter. She would be the only witness
the D.A. had to claim to see
- Abu-Jamal holding a gun over Faulkner.
In her original statement to
- the police given within an hour
of the shooting she had Abu-Jamal
- running from the parking lot and from
as far away as 10-yards firing
- off "four or five shots" at
Faulkner before the officer fell. In her
- third interview with police
detectives, given on December 17, she fine-
- tuned her statement to comport with
the actual evidence in the case
- that Faulkner was shot at close range.
(In one of the most sinister
- aspects of Abu-Jamals case, the
police department waited until the
- Monday after Abu-Jamals
conviction to "relieve" Giordano of his
- duties on what would prove to be
well-founded "suspicions of
- corruption." Four years after
Abu-Jamals trial, Giordano pled guilty
- to tax evasion in connection with
those payouts and was sent to prison.)
-
- Incredibly, the police arriving at the
crime scene would later claim
- not to have conducted any tests to
determine if Abu-Jamal had recently
- fired a gun by checking for powder
residue on his hands or clothing,
- nor did they claim to even feel or
smell his gun to determine if it
- had been recently fired. Tests such as
these are so routine at murder
- scenes that it is almost inconceivable
the police did not run them. It
- is more likely that they did not like
the results of the tests.
- From the outset, the investigation
into the shooting death of Officer
- Faulkner was conducted with one goal
in mind: to hang the crime on
- Mumia Abu-Jamal. There was no search
for the truth, no attempt at
- providing the slain officer with the
justice he deserved. Giordano
- handed Abu-Jamal to the D.A.s
Office with his own lie about Abu-Jamal
- confessing to him and packing off
Cynthia White in a squad car to tell
- her concocted account of the shooting.
When the D.A.s Office was
- forced to back away from the corrupt
Giordano, Assistant D.A. Joseph
- McGill elicited a new
"confession" to replace Giordanos in
February
- when security guard Priscilla Durham
and Officer Garry Bell,
- Faulkners best friend on the
police force, responded to his
- promptings by saying they heard
Abu-Jamal blurt out at the hospital,
- "I shot the mother-fucker and I
hope the mother-fucker dies." Not one
- of the dozens of other officers
present at the hospital would make
- such a claim. In fact, the two
officers who accompanied Abu-Jamal from
- the time he was placed in the paddy
wagon until he went into surgery,
- reported that he made no comments in
signed statements given to
- detectives assigned to the case that
morning.
-
- The prosecution knew that its new
"confession" could be skewered if
- Abu-Jamals defense attorney,
Anthony Jackson, called the two officers
- who accompanied Abu-Jamal to the
stand, so all the prosecution really
- had was Cynthia White. With White
saying she saw it all from beginning
- to end, and willing to testify that
she saw Abu-Jamal blow the
- helpless Faulkners brains out in
ruthless cold blood, McGill had his
- case made, providing Whites
credibility could survive Jacksons cross-
- examination. McGill bet the entire
case that it could, and despite the
- utter web of lies she told the jury,
was right.
-
- Bennett: Why do you think that Kenneth
Freeman was the actual shooter
- of Police Officer Daniel Faulkner?
- O'Connor: Kenneth Freeman was Billy
Cooks street vendor partner and
- was riding with him in the VW when
Faulkner pulled the VW over.
- Freeman got out of the VW and
subsequently handed Faulkner a phony
- drivers license application
bearing the name of Arnold Howard, which
- Howard had recently loaned to him.
Howards papers were found in
- Faulkners shirt pocket. Police
rounded up both Howard and Freeman in
- the early morning hours of December 9
and brought them in for
- questioning. At the Post-Conviction
Relief Act hearing in 1995, Howard
- testified that on several occasions,
Cynthia White picked Freeman out
- of a lineup.
- At Billy Cooks March 29 trial
for assaulting Officer Faulkner, with
- McGill as the prosecutor, White told
McGill in direct testimony that
- the passenger in the VW "had got
out." McGill said, "He got of the
- car"? White responded,
"Yes." (At Abu-Jamals trial, McGill got
White
- to testify that only Abu-Jamal, Cook,
and Faulkner were at the scene.)
-
- Various witnesses said they saw a
black man running from the scene
- right after the shooting. Some of the
eyewitnesses said this man had
- an Afro and wore a green army jacket.
Freeman did have an Afro and he
- perpetually wore a green army jacket.
Freeman was tall and burly,
- weighing about 225 pounds at the time.
-
- Cab driver Robert Harkins was driving
right by the parked police car
- and the VW when he saw a police
officer grab a man. The man "then spun
- around and the officer went to the
ground," falling face down
- backwards, landing on his hands and
knees. The assailant shot the
- officer in the back, causing him to
roll over on his back, and then
- executed him with a shot to his
forehead.
- Harkins described the shooter as a
little taller and heavier than the
- 6-foot, 200-pound Faulkner. Robert
Chobert told police in his first
- statement that the shooter had an Afro
and weighed about 225 pounds.
- (Abu-Jamal, also about 6-foot, wore in
his hair in dreadlocks and
- weighed 170 pounds at the time.)
-
- In Billy Cooks April 29, 2001,
affidavit he declared that Freeman was
- with him the night of the shooting,
was armed, and fled the scene
- after Faulkner was shot. Cook said he
did not see who shot Faulkner.
- Freeman would meet an ignominious
death hours after Philadelphia
- police firebombed the MOVE house on
Osage Avenue in 1985, killing 11
- MOVE members, including John Africa,
whose corpse had been beheaded.
- Freemans dead body was found
bound, gagged and naked in a vacant lot.
- There would be no police investigation
into this obvious murder. The
- coroner listed his cause of death as a
heart attack. The timing and
- modus operandi of the abduction and
killing alone suggest an extreme
- act of police vengeance.
-
- Bennett: In your book, you were very
optimistic about the Third
- Circuit granting Abu-Jamal a new
guilt-phase trial. Were you surprised
- by the March 27 ruling? If so, how do
you account for such a
- surprising ruling?
- O'Connor: I was incredulous. I thought
the oral arguments on May 17
- had gone extremely well for Abu-Jamal
and that he would get a new
- trial. The 2-1 majority ruling
demonstrated anew just how politicized
- this case always has been from the
beginning and continues to be
- still. The two Republican-appointed
judges on the panel formed the
- majority and the lone
Democrat-appointed judge dissented. I hate to
- make it sound that simple, but the
U.S. Supreme Court itself is not
- above making decisions based on party
or ideological lines, and all
- too frequently does.
- In its ruling, the majority stated it
believed Abu-Jamal had
- "forfeited his Batson claim by
failing to make a timely objection. But
- even assuming Abu-Jamals failure
to object is not fatal to his claim,
- Abu-Jamal has failed to meet his
burden in providing a prima facie
- case." The majority stated that
he failed because his attorneys at his
- PCRA evidentiary hearing neglected to
elicit the prosecutors reasons
- for removing 10 otherwise qualified
blacks by means of peremptory
- strikes during jury selection.
-
- "Abu-Jamal had the opportunity to
develop this evidence at the PCRA
- evidentiary hearing, but failed to do
so. There may be instances where
- a prima facie case can be made without
evidence of the strike rate and
- exclusion rate. But in this case, we
cannot find the Pennsylvania
- Supreme Courts ruling [denying
Abu-Jamals Batson claim] unreasonable
- based on this incomplete record,"
the majority wrote. In a nutshell,
- the majority denied Abu-Jamals
Batson claim on a technicality of its
- own invention, not on its merits.
- Judge Ambros dissent was sharp:
"
I do not agree with them [the
- majority] that Mumia Abu-Jamal fails
to meet the low bar for making a
- prima facie case under Batson. In
holding otherwise, they raise the
- standard necessary to make out a prima
facie case beyond what Batson
- calls for."
-
- In other words, the majority, in this
case alone, has upped the ante
- required for making a Batson claim
beyond what the United States
- Supreme Court stipulated. When ruling
in Batson in 1986, the U.S.
- Supreme Court imposed no timeliness
restrictions as to when a Batson
- claim may be raised, nor has the court
done so in the intervening 22
- years. Neither did it require that the
racial composition of the
- entire jury pool be known before a
Batson claim could be raised. (In
- fact, the Supreme Court recently added
heft to its Batson ruling,
- ruling in Synder that the purging of
only one black juror on the basis
- of racial discrimination was grounds
for a new trial.) In addition,
- the Supreme Court ruled in 1986 that
to establish a prima facie case
- for a Batson claim, the defendant must
show only "an inference" of
- prosecutorial discrimination in
purging even one black from a jury.
- Even the Third Circuit has never
previously allowed the timing of a
- Batson claim to be material, nor had
it ever ruled previously that not
- knowing the racial composition of the
entire jury pool was a fatal
- flaw in lodging a Batson claim.
- The fact that the prosecutor in
Abu-Jamals case used 10 of the 15
- peremptory challenges to exclude
blacks from the jury a strike rate
- of 66 percent against potential black
jurors is in itself an
- inference of discrimination. The
result was that only three of the 12
- jurors impaneled were black.
-
- The Third Circuit should have remanded
the case back to Federal
- District Court Judge Yohn the
judge who ruled on Abu-Jamals habeas
- corpus petition in 2001 to hold
an evidentiary hearing to determine
- the prosecutors reasons for
excluding the 10 potential black jurors
- he struck. If that hearing revealed
racial discrimination on the part
- of the prosecutor during jury
selection, Judge Yohn would be compelled
- to order a new trial for Abu-Jamal.
- Abu-Jamal is left with only two
remedies to correct the flawed Third
- Circuit ruling. His first option is to
request the Third Circuit to
- review its decision en banc where the
entire panel of judges sitting
- on the Third Circuit would conduct
oral arguments anew. There is some
- likelihood that the Third Circuit
might agree to meet en banc because
- the panels decision to deny
Abu-Jamals Batson claim went against
- that courts own well-established
precedents in granting similar
- Batson claims in the past. However,
the barrier to en banc
- deliberations is a high one: a
majority of the sitting judges must
- vote to reexamine the case. On the
Third Circuit Court, there are 12
- judges eligible to vote, but four have
already recused themselves from
- this particular case, meaning five of
the remaining eight judges would
- be needed to go forward en banc.
Abu-Jamal has most probably had his
- one day before the Third Circuit.
- Barring a reversal by the Third
Circuit, Abu-Jamals final option is
- to appeal the Third Circuits
ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court, which
- has on three previous occasions denied
to take up his case. This time,
- though, there is a remote possibility
that the high court may take the
- case up because the Third
Circuits ruling created new law by placing
- new restrictions on a defendants
ability to file a Batson claim.
-
- Bennett: With the media spotlight on
the PA Primary Elections, and the
- major demonstrations supporting
Abu-Jamal on April 19, what would you
- like the world to know about this
famous death-row case? How far has
- the city of Philadelphia come since
the days of Police Commissioner
- and Mayor Frank Rizzo, a notorious
racist and public advocate of
- police brutality?
- O'Connor: In a real sense, D.A. Lynn
Abraham, just as Frank Rizzo
- before her, embodies the worst of
Philadelphia. Known as "the Queen of
- Death" for her zeal in seeking
the death penalty, she was depicted as
- the nations "deadliest
D.A." in a New York Times Magazine article in
- 1995. Her personal vendetta against
Abu-Jamal equals that of Officer
- Faulkners widow. The day Federal
District Court Judge Yohn overturned
- Abu-Jamals death sentence in
2001, Abraham put her antipathy for Abu-
- Jamal this way: "Today, Mumia
Abu-Jamal is what he has always been: a
- convicted, remorseless, cold-blooded
killer."
-
- The case of Mumia Abu-Jamal represents
an enormous miscarriage of
- justice, representing an extreme
example of prosecutorial abuse and
- judicial bias. What makes getting to
the truth about this case so
- difficult for people, particularly
people in Philadelphia, is that the
- prosecution built its case on perjured
testimony with a calculated
- disregard for what the actual evidence
established. The local media
- bought into the prosecutions
story line early on and has never been
- able to see this case for what it is:
a framing of an innocent and
- peace loving man.
-
- Two things account for the
unprecedented national and international
- interest in this case. First and
foremost is the man himself. Despite
- more than 25 years of the bleakest
existence possible in isolation on
- death row, Mumia Abu-Jamal remains
what he has always been: an
- articulate, compassionate righter of
wrongs. The second thing that
- makes this case so compelling to such
a wide audience is that his
- trial represents such a monumental
abuse of government power to
- railroad one man that it really says
no citizen is truly free until
- this wrong has been undone.
- Kontakt-
& Diskussionsmöglichkeit