Mumia Abu-Jamal
-
- Von: "MUMIA ABU-JAMAL" <>
- Betreff: !*Supreme
Court Opens
- Door
to Mumia's
- Execution
- Datum: Mittwoch, 27. Januar 2010 20:03
-
- http://www.phillyimc.org/en/supreme-court-opens-door-mumia%E2%80%99s-execution
- http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/01/26/18636298.php
-
- Supreme Court opens door to
Mumias execution
-
- BY JEFF MACKLER
-
- In a dangerous decision and a break
with its own precedent, the U.S. Supreme Court, on Jan.
19, opened the door wide to Pennsylvania
prosecutors efforts to execute the innocent
political prisoner, murder frame-up victim, award-winning
journalist, and world-renowned "Voice of the
Voiceless," Mumia Abu-Jamal.
-
- Six months earlier, on April 6, the
Supreme Court all but shut the door on Mumias
28-year fight for justice and freedom when it refused to
grant a hearing (writ of certiorari) despite its own
decision in the 1986 case of Batson v. Kentucky that the
systematic and racist exclusion of Blacks from juries
voids all guilty verdicts and mandates a new trial.
-
- In Mumias 1982 trial, presided
over by the infamous "hanging judge," Albert
Sabo, Philadelphia prosecutor Joseph McGill, in explicit
violation of Batson, used 10 of his 15 peremptory
challenges to exclude Blacks from the jury panel. But as
with virtually all Mumia court decisions over the past
decades, the "Mumia Exception," a consistent
and contorted interpretation of the "law," or
abject blindness to it, has been employed to reach a
predetermined result. Mumias frame-up murder
conviction was allowed to stand.
-
- In contrast, on Jan. 19, 2010,
Pennsylvania prosecutors, twice rejected in their efforts
to impose the death penalty on Mumia (in 2001 and 2008),
were given yet another opportunity to do so when the
Supreme Court remanded the sentencing issue of life
imprisonment versus execution to the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Third Circuit. The latter was instructed
to take into consideration the High Courts new
ruling in the Ohio case of Smith v. Spisak.
- Frank Spisak was a neo-Nazi who wore a
Hitler mustache to his trial, denounced Jews and Blacks,
and confessed in court to three hate-crime murders in
Ohio. Spisak saw his jury-imposed death sentence reversed
in the federal courts when his attorneys, like
Mumias, successfully invoked a critical 1988
Supreme Court decision in the famous Mills v. Maryland
case.
-
- The Mills decision required, with
regard to sentencing procedures, that both the
judges instructions and the jury forms make clear
that any juror who believes that one or more mitigating
circumstance exists (sufficient to impose a sentence of
life imprisonment as opposed to the death penalty) should
have the right to have that issue(s) considered by the
jury as a whole. Prior to Mills, Maryland jurors were
effectively led to believe that they had to be unanimous
on any possible mitigating circumstance for it to be
considered in the deliberation process.
-
- Mills explicitly rejected the idea of
unanimity; it rejected the notion that a single juror
could block from consideration the mitigating
circumstances hypothetically found by another juror or
even by 11 of the 12 jurors.
-
- Before Mills, the
"unanimity" requirement in the way it was
presented to juries essentially eliminated the vast
majority of mitigating circumstances, and therefore
juries had little or no alternative but to impose the
death penalty. Under Mills, once all mitigating
circumstances were set before the jury, it was then their
responsibility to determine whether they were sufficient
to impose a sentence of life as opposed to death.
-
- In both Spisaks and Mumias
cases the trial court judge violated the Mills principle
and in essence instructed the juries that unanimity on
each mitigating circumstance was required for
consideration of the jury as a whole. As a consequence,
Federal District Courts in both Ohio and in Pennsylvania
(in the case of Mumia), later backed by decisions of the
U.S. Courts of Appeals, invoked Mills to overrule the
jury-imposed death sentence verdicts. They ordered a new
sentencing hearing and trial with the proper instructions
to the jury and where new evidence of innocence could be
presented. The jury remained bound, however, by the
previous jurys guilty finding.
-
- Even so, the long-suppressed mountain
of evidence proving Mumias innocence drives
Mumias prosecutors to avoid a new trial at all
costs. A new trial of any sort could only expose, with
unpredictable consequences, the base corruption of a
criminal "justice" system permeated by race and
class bias. Executing innocent people does not sit well
with the American people. In the courts of the elite, as
in life itself, nothing is written in stone. The
"law" has more than once been
"adjusted" in the interests of the poor and
oppressed when the price to pay by insisting on its
immutability is too costly in terms of doing greater
damage to the system as a whole.
-
- The effect of the 1988 Mills decision
was to make it harder for prosecutors to obtain death
sentences in capital cases; the effect of Spisak is to
make it easier. Armed with this new Supreme Court weapon
and order to reconsider the application of Mills,
Pennsylvania prosecutors will once again seek
Mumias execution before the Third Circuit.
-
- "States rights" logic
of Spisak decision
-
- Prior to this unexpected turn of
events and for the past 22 years, the broad U.S. legal
community appeared to agree that Mills applied to all
states. That is, if a jury were orally mis-instructed
and/or received faulty or unclear verdict forms that
implied it needed to be unanimous with regard to
mitigating circumstances that would be considered to
weigh in against the death penalty, the death penalty
would be set aside and a new sentencing hearing ordered.
-
- That is what happened in Mumias
case when Federal District Court Judge William H. Yohn in
2001 employed Mills to set aside the jurys death
penalty decision. Yohn gave the state of Pennsylvania 180
days to decide whether or not to retry Mumia or to accept
a sentence of life imprisonment.
-
- Since then, Pennsylvania officials
have effectively stayed Yohns order by appealing to
the higher federal courts. The Supreme Court gave them
the victory they sought.
-
- In deciding to hear Ohio
prosecutors arguments in the Spisak case with
regard to Mills the Supreme Court implied that a new
interpretation of the concept of federalism was in the
making. The political pendulum has swung back and forth
on this issue. In past decades, a "states
rights" interpretation was employed to justify
racist state laws that denied Blacks access to public
institutions and facilities. With the rise of the civil
rights movement, federal power was used to compel the
elimination of the same racist laws.
-
- Justice is far from blind in America.
It is applied to the advantage of the working class and
the oppressed only to the extent that the relationship of
forcesthat is, the struggles of the
massesdemand it.
-
- Since Mills was decided based on the
facts in the state of Maryland only, Ohio and
Pennsylvania prosecutors argued, Mills cannot be
automatically applied to other states where a different
set of jury instructions and jury forms were involved.
Indeed, Ohio prosecutors argued before the Supreme Court
on Oct. 13 that Ohio and Pennsylvania were the exception
and not the rule and that the norm in other states was to
essentially reject a strict interpretation of Mills in
favor of various state guidelines regarding jury
instructions. It was not by accident that Mumias
Pennsylvania prosecutors filed a friend of the court
brief (amicus curiae) in support of the Ohio Spisak
appeal.
-
- Undoubtedly, the U.S. Supreme Court
found some delight in rendering their Spisak decision.
They changed the law in order to allow Ohio to execute a
likely deranged Nazis and instructed Pennsylvania
prosecutors to use this law to try to execute a
revolutionarythat is, Mumia Abu-Jamal.
-
- In every sense Mumias life is on
the line as never before. Pennsylvania Governor Ed
Rendell is pledged to sign what could be the third and
final warrant for Mumias execution. Opinions vary
as to the timeline for a final decision of the Third
Circuit. Indeed, the Third Circuit could in turn remand
the Mills issue back to Judge Yohns Federal
District Court, and any decision made therein might well
be appealed by either side back to the Court of Appeals
and then to the U.S. Supreme Court. The process could
take months or years, but the deliberations will be based
on new turf that leads closer to the death penalty for
Mumia than ever before.
-
- Mumia's supporters around the world
and Mumia himself have long noted that the battle for his
life and freedom largely resides in our collective
capacity to build a massive movement capable of making
the political price of Mumias incarceration and
execution too high to pay. Mumia is alive and fighting
today because of that movement. Those dedicated to his
freedom and who stand opposed to the death penalty more
generally are urged get involved. Free Mumia!
-
- --Contact the Mobilization to Free
Mumia Abu-Jamal in California, (510) 268-9429, or the
International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia
Abu-Jamal in Pennsylvania, (215) 476-8812.
-
- --Jeff Mackler is the director of the
Northern California-based Mobilization to Free Mumia
Abu-Jamal.
- This article was originally published
in Socialist Action newspaper, February, 2010.
- http://freemumia.org
-
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