) Mumia Abu-Jamal
Mumia Abu-Jamal
- Von: "MUMIA ABU-JAMAL"
<>
- Betreff:!*The Framing of
- Mumia
Abu-Jamal
- Datum: Mittwoch, 16. April 2008 04:54
-
-
- via Hans Bennett
- ================
-
- BIG NEWS! Check this out! The book
should be a powerful tool for us in these
- crucial weeks and months coming up. I
have read the book and it is very
- strong for Mumia.
- Best,
- Hans
-
- http://www.abu-jamal-news.com/article.php?name=framing4
-
-
- The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal: An
interview with author J. Patrick O'Connor
-
- By Hans Bennett
-
- On March 27, the US Third Circuit
Court of Appeals ruled against granting a
- new guilt-phase trial < http://phillyimc.org/en/node/66346 > to world-famous
- journalist and death row prisoner
Mumia Abu-Jamal. While ruling against the
- three issues that could have led to a
new guilt-phase trial, the court
- affirmed US District Court Judge
Yohn's 2001 decision overturning the death
- sentence. If the District Attorney
wants to re-instate the death sentence,
- the DA must call for a new
penalty-phase jury trial that would be limited to
- the question of life in prison without
a chance of parole or a
- re-instatement of the death sentence.
-
- Outraged by this decision, Abu-Jamal's
supporters around the world held "day
- after" protests, and are now
organizing a mass demonstration in Philadelphia
- on April 19 < http://www.opednews.com/maxwrite/diarypage.php?did=6857 >, just
- days before the PA Presidential
Primary Election. Simultaneously, Abu-Jamal
- is appealing the court ruling < http://phillyimc.org/en/node/66467 > "en banc"
- to the entire Third Circuit, and if
unsuccessful there, he will appeal to
- the US Supreme Court, in an effort to
be granted a new guilt-phase trial.
-
- At this critical juncture in
Abu-Jamal's case, an explosive new book is set
- for release in May, titled "The
Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal," by J. Patrick
- O'Connor, and published by Lawrence
Hill Books. O'Connor explains that he
- "was an associate editor for TV
Guide at its headquarters in nearby Radnor,
- Pennsylvania during the time Officer
Faulkner was killed and Abu-Jamal was
- put on trial and convicted of
murdering him....Sometime in the mid-1990s I
- began hearing and seeing the 'Free
Mumia' slogan. In 1996, when HBO
- premiered the one-hour documentary
'Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Case for Reasonable
- Doubt?', I developed some questions
about the verdict and certainly the
- fairness of his trial." Soon,
O'Connor had "read all the trial transcripts
- as well as all of the transcripts from
Abu-Jamal's Post-Conviction Relief
- Act hearings that were held in 1995,
and continued in 1996 and 1997. I also
- read all the contemporaneous newspaper
articles from The Philadelphia
- Inquirer and Philadelphia Daily News,
as well as all the books published
- about the case."
-
- In his new book, O'Connor argues that
Abu-Jamal was clearly framed by
- police, and that the actual shooter
was a man named Kenneth Freeman.
- O'Connor criticizes the local media,
who, he says "bought into the
- prosecution's 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," O'Connor writes that
- "there's 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 Faulkner's 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."
-
- For more background on "The
Framing of Mumia
- Abu-Jamal"< http://www.ipgbook.com/showbook.cfm?bookid=1556527446&userid=3F711707-803F-2B7A-708FD8627CED70E2 >and
- J. Patrick O'Connor,
- Abu-Jamal-News.com < http://www.abu-jamal-news.com/ > is featuring an
- excerpt< http://www.abu-jamal-news.com/article.php?name=framing1 >from
- the new book, a previous
- interview < http://www.abu-jamal-news.com/article.php?name=framing3 > with the
- author, and O'Connor's review
- of< http://www.abu-jamal-news.com/article.php?name=framing2 >"Murdered
- By Mumia." This new interview was
conducted on April 11, 2008, and
- will be featured in the
"Journalists for Mumia" newspaper, to be
released
- days before the April 19 demonstration
in Philadelphia.
-
- *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 Department's 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. Office's 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 City prostitutes, 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-Jamal's
case, the police department waited
- until the Monday after Abu-Jamal's
conviction to "relieve" Giordano of his
- duties on what would prove to be
well-founded "suspicions of corruption."
- Four years after Abu-Jamal's 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 Giordano's in February when
security guard Priscilla Durham and
- Officer Garry Bell, Faulkner's 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-Jamal's 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 Faulkner's
- brains out in ruthless cold blood,
McGill had his case made, providing
- White's credibility could survive
Jackson's 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
Cook's 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 driver's license
- application bearing the name of Arnold
Howard, which Howard had recently
- loaned to him. Howard's papers were
found in Faulkner's 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 Cook's 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-Jamal's
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 Cook's 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. Freeman's 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-Jamal's 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 prosecutor's
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
- Court's ruling [denying Abu-Jamal's
Batson claim] unreasonable based on this
- incomplete record," the majority
wrote. In a nutshell, the majority denied
- Abu-Jamal's Batson claim on a
technicality of its own invention, not on its
- merits.
-
- Judge Ambro's 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-Jamal's 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-Jamal's 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 panel's decision to
- deny Abu-Jamal's Batson claim went
against that court's 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-Jamal's final option is to
- appeal the Third Circuit's 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 Circuit's ruling
created new law by placing new
- restrictions on a defendant's 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 nation's
- "deadliest D.A." in a New
York Times Magazine article in 1995. Her personal
- vendetta against Abu-Jamal equals that
of Officer Faulkner's widow. The day
- Federal District Court Judge Yohn
overturned Abu-Jamal's 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 prosecution's 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.
-
- *--Hans Bennett is a Philadelphia
journalist and co-founder of Journalists
- for Mumia, whose website is
Abu-Jamal-News.com.*
Kontakt-
& Diskussionsmöglichkeit