Mumia Abu-Jamal
- Von: "MUMIA ABU-JAMAL" <>
- Betreff: !*"Linn
Washington on
- "The
'Mumia Exception' -
- Explaining
Injustice"
- Datum: Freitag, 12. Februar 2010 00:15
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- From: mumianyc < info@freemumia.com >
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- ==================
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- Once again, Linn Washington summarizes
endless examples of prosecutorial misconduct CONSISTENTLY
sanctioned by state and federal judges in contradiction
to their rulings on the exact same issues in other cases.
Now known as THE MUMIA EXCEPTION, the phrase coined by
Linn Washington.
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- Last Update: Jun 15, 2009
- Linn Washington, "The 'Mumia
Exception' - Explaining Injustice" (February 11,
2010)
- By Linn Washington Jr.
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- Two inmates on Pennsylvania's death
row raise the same issue on appeal blatant
misconduct by prosecutors and police yet Pa's
Supreme Court issues different rulings in these
respective cases.
- The Pa Supreme Court released Jay C.
Smith directly from his death row cell, ruling the
misconduct by prosecutors and police so
"egregious" that retrying Smith for murdering a
school teacher and her two children would violate fair
trial protections in Pa's state Constitution.
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- However, in appeals from convicted
Philadelphia cop killer Mumia Abu-Jamal, Pa's highest
court repeatedly rejects solid evidence of wrongdoing by
prosecutors and police despite that misconduct being more
extensive than misconduct in Smith's case.
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- Why, people wonder worldwide, does
Mumia Abu-Jamal remain imprisoned when mounds of evidence
unearthed since his 1982 trial undermine all aspects of
the controversial conviction that sent this acclaimed
journalist to death row?
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- The answer to this justice
denying/logic defying question is simple: "The Mumia
Exception."
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- This "Mumia Exception" is
the phrase devised to describe the practice repeatedly
employed by state and federal courts to strip Abu-Jamal
of the same legal relief those courts extend to other
inmates raising the same legal issue when challenging
violations of their legal rights.
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- Jurists bending and/or breaking the
bedrock American legal principal of equal justice under
the law is the driving dynamic of "The Mumia
Exception."
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- This "Exception" explains
how Pa's Supreme Court in the Smith case castigated
authorities for illegally withholding evidence crucial to
the high school principal's defense while that court
constantly refuses to criticize any of the misconduct
that crippled Abu-Jamal's defense.
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- The fact that courts including
the U.S. Supreme Court have consistently upheld
the conviction of the world's most recognized death row
denizen is a key argument advanced by persons backing
Abu-Jamal's execution when countering claims of his
innocence.
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- Execution advocates reject "The
Mumia Exception" as the reason why courts uphold
Abu-Jamal's conviction despite the fact that dismissing
the role of the "Exception" requires embracing
scenarios that defy statistics and common sense.
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- For example, Philadelphia and
Pennsylvania appellate courts overturned 86 Philadelphia
death penalty convictions between Abu-Jamal's December
1981 arrest and October 2009 after finding various errors
by prosecutors, police, defense attorneys and even judges
including the judge at Abu-Jamal's trial.
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- Yet, those same courts declare that
not a single error evidentiary or procedural
exists anywhere in the contentious Abu-Jamal case
a statistically improbable circumstance.
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- Pa and federal courts have even
brushed aside credible evidence that on the eve of
Abu-Jamal's 1982 trial the presiding judge, Albert Sabo,
declared he would help prosecutors "fry the
Nigger" an odious admission oozing racial
bigotry and lack of impartiality clearly violating
Abu-Jamal's constitutionally guaranteed fair trial
rights.
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- The twin pillars of this "Mumia
Exception" are: courts refusing to apply their
established legal rulings (precedent) to Abu-Jamal's
appeals; and/or courts creating new legal standards to
sabotage Abu-Jamal's appeals.
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- One easily understood example of the
failure-to-follow-precedent prong of "The Mumia
Exception" involves state and federal appellate
courts in Pennsylvania dismissing 22 death sentences
because of failures by defense lawyers to present any
mitigating evidence for their clients during death
penalty hearings.
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- Yet, Pa state and federal courts
repeatedly found no violation in the failure of
Abu-Jamal's trial lawyer to present any kind of
mitigating evidence during the penalty hearing producing
Abu-Jamal's death sentence.
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- It's important to note that courts
uphold procedural rights in death penalty cases
like the mitigating evidence requirement without
challenging evidence of guilt.
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- The most recent example of the
"Exception's" create-new-law prong is the 2008
ruling by the federal 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals
upholding Abu-Jamal's conviction where it created a new
standard for challenging racist jury selection practices
by prosecutors.
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- That newly invented 3rd Circuit
standard exceeded both the jury bias proof precedent that
appeals court used six previous times in faulting
discriminatory practices by prosecutors. Further, that
new standard was more stringent than U.S. Supreme Court
precedent.
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- But, when the U.S. Supreme Court
rejected Abu-Jamal's appeal in April 2009, it exhibited
"The Mumia Exception" by allowing the 3rd
Circuit's precedent-contradicting standard to stand thus
keeping Abu-Jamal sitting in a death row cell.
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- Examples of the "Mumia
Exception" abound
even in court rulings
involving defendants convicted of killing police
officers.
- Three years before Abu-Jamal's
December 9, 1981 arrest for fatally shooting Philadelphia
Policeman Daniel Faulkner the Pa Supreme Court granted a
new trial to a Pittsburgh, Pa man sentenced to death for
the ambush slaying of a police officer.
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- The Pa Supreme Court, in that 1978
ruling, condemned a judge for allowing prosecutors to
introduce "irrelevant and prejudicial" evidence
that improperly inflamed the jury.
- But eleven years later the Pa Supreme
Court rejected Abu-Jamal's appeal claim that his trial
judge allowed prosecutors to improperly taint jurors with
their inflammatory yet unsubstantiated assertion that
Abu-Jamal's teenaged membership in the Black Panther
Party spurred his killing a cop.
- Abu-Jamal, an award-winning journalist
who voluntarily left the BPP in 1970, had no record of
violence or other criminal conduct.
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- In 1999, the Pa Supreme Court released
two reputed gangsters convicted of a high-profile mob
murder in Philadelphia, declaring that pair was denied a
fair trial due to "extensive and flagrant
prosecutorial misconduct."
- That ruling releasing the mobsters
from prison came one year after the Pa Supreme Court
rejected all allegations of fair trial violations when
upholding
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- Abu-Jamal's conviction for the second
time.
- That October 1998 ruling rejected
voluminous evidence presented during Abu-Jamal's
mid-1990s post-conviction appeal proceedings documenting
official misconduct. That evidence included prosecutorial
misconduct of improperly withholding evidence of
innocence, discriminatory jury selection practices and
intimidating defense witnesses.
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- The pro-prosecution bias of Judge
Albert Sabo during Abu-Jamal's 1995 post-conviction
appeal hearing was so pronounced that it drew intense
criticism from local and national news media normally
hostile to Abu-Jamal.
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- While editorials, commentaries and
news coverage assailed Sabo's improprieties, including
fining and jailing Abu-Jamal's defense lawyers, the Pa
Supreme Court proclaimed the "opinions of a handful
of journalists" did not convince it that Sabo acted
improperly.
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- One 1995 rights demolishing action
completely ignored by state and federal courts was then
PA Governor Tom Ridge issuing a death warrant on the eve
of Abu-Jamal's lawyers filing their post-conviction
appeal.
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- Ridge's office knew when lawyers
planned to file that appeal because Pa prison authorities
were illegally intercepting mail from Abu-Jamal's lawyers
and forwarding copies of that correspondence containing
legal strategy to the Governor's office.
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- That death warrant, violating
Abu-Jamal's appeal right, cast a disruptive cloud,
allowing Sabo to rush the appeal hearing citing the
urgency of that death warrant.
- Shamelessly, the Pa Supreme Court
allowed Sabo to handle that appeal hearing despite his
bias during the 1982 trial being one of the appeal
issues.
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- The enormous attention given to the
`whodunit' aspects underlying Abu-Jamal's conviction
easily obscures critical context regarding systemic
violations like that legally indefensible interference by
then Gov. Ridge who later served as Homeland Security
czar for President George W. Bush.
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- Assertions by Abu-Jamal's opponents
that his obvious guilt negates any need for judges to
apply fair trial protections and/or employ equal justice
principles contradict decades of court rulings --
precedent.
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- The Pa Supreme Court declared in a
1959 ruling that defendants are entitled "to all the
safeguards of a fair trial
even if the evidence of
guilt piles as high as Mt. Everest."
- That fair trial right exists
irrespective of whether judges or prosecutors are
convinced of a defendant's guilt, Pa's highest court
stated in that ruling issued when Abu-Jamal was
four-years-old.
- That 1959 ruling arose from a
Philadelphia murder case where the defendant pled guilty.
Abu-Jamal has consistently proclaimed his innocence in
the fatal shooting of Officer Faulkner before, during and
after his trial.
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- The U.S. Supreme Court first employed
"The Mumia Exception" during rulings in the
early 1990s granting relief to a white racist prison gang
member and a devil worshipper who'd raised the same
appeal issue as Abu-Jamal.
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- Each defendant claimed prosecutors
violated their First Amendment free association rights
with references to respective prison gang, devil
worshipping and BPP memberships.
- The Supreme Court faulted
prosecutorial references to the then current
organizational affiliations of that gang member and devil
worshipper while it twice found no fault in prosecutors
exploiting Abu-Jamal's past BPP membership.
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- Equal protection of laws seemingly
should have provided an ex-Black Panther with the same
Constitutional protections extended to the racist gang
member and devil worshipper.
- Incredibly "The Mumia
Exception" is the least scrutinized aspect of this
heavily examined case.
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- Jurists never admit employing
"The Mumia Exception" because that improper
procedure violates their sworn duty to uphold the legal
principles of equal justice and adherence to precedent.
- Failure to factor the endemic impact
of "The Mumia Exception" elevates the
credibility of fallacious claims about Abu-Jamal's
`open-&-shut' guilt.
- Linn Washington Jr. is a columnist for
The Philadelphia Tribune who's followed the Abu-Jamal
case since December 1981. Washington, a graduate of the
Yale Law Journalism Fellowship, coined "The Mumia
Exception" phrase.
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