On April 6, 2009, the US Supreme Court
refused to consider an appeal from death-row journalist and former
Black Panther, Mumia Abu-Jamal, who was convicted of first-degree
murder in the shooting death of white Philadelphia Police Officer,
Daniel Faulkner, at a 1982 trial deemed unfair by Amnesty
International, the European Parliament, the Japanese Diet, Nelson
Mandela, and numerous others. Citing the Supreme Court denial and
several instances of withheld evidence, Abu-Jamal’s international
support network is now calling for a federal civil rights investigation
into Abu-Jamal’s case.
The facts of the Abu-Jamal/Faulkner case are highly
contested, but all sides agree on certain key points: Abu-Jamal
was moonlighting as a taxi-driver on December 9, 1981, when, shortly
before 4:00 a.m., he saw his brother, William “Billy” Cook, in an
altercation with Officer Faulkner after Faulkner had pulled over
Cook’s car at the corner of 13th and Locust Streets, downtown Philadelphia.
Abu-Jamal approached the scene. Minutes later when police arrived,
Faulkner had been shot dead, and Abu-Jamal had been shot in the
chest. The bullet removed from Faulkner, reportedly a .38, was officially
too damaged to match it to the legally registered .38 caliber gun
that Abu-Jamal says he carried as a taxi driver, after he was robbed
several times on the job. Further, Amnesty International
has criticized the official “failure of the police to test Abu-Jamal’s
gun, hands, and clothing” for gunshot residue, as “deeply troubling.”
Abu-Jamal has always maintained his innocence, and today still fights
the conviction from his death-row cell in Waynesburg, PA, where
he also records weekly radio commentaries,
and has now written six books.
Recently, Abu-Jamal had petitioned the US Supreme
Court to review the US Third Circuit Court ruling of March, 27 2008,
which rejected his bid, based on three issues, for a new guilt-phase
trial. One issue was that of racially discriminatory jury selection,
based on the 1986 case Batson v. Kentucky, on which the three-judge
panel split 2-1, with Judge Thomas Ambro dissenting. Ambro argued
that prosecutor Joseph McGill’s use of 10 out of his 15 peremptory
strikes to remove otherwise acceptable African-American jurors,
was itself enough evidence of racial discrimination to grant Abu-Jamal
a preliminary hearing that could have led to a new trial. In denying
Abu-Jamal this preliminary hearing, Ambro argued that the Court
was creating new rules that were being exclusively applied to Abu-Jamal’s
case. The denial “goes against the grain of our prior actions…I
see no reason why we should not afford Abu-Jamal the courtesy of
our precedents,” wrote Ambro.
In his new essay titled, “The Mumia Exception,”
author J. Patrick O’Connor argues that the Third Circuit Court’s
rejection of the Batson claim and of the other two issues presented
is only the latest example of the courts’ longstanding practice
of altering existing precedent to deny Abu-Jamal legal relief. O’Connor
cites many other problems, including the 2001 affidavit by a former
court stenographer, who says that on the eve of Abu-Jamal’s trial,
she overheard Judge Albert Sabo say to someone at the courthouse
that he was going to “help” the prosecution “fry the nigger,” referring
to Abu-Jamal. Common Pleas Judge Pamela Dembe rejected this affidavit
on grounds that even if Sabo had made the comment, it was irrelevant
as long as his “rulings were legally correct.”
The phrase “Mumia Exception” was first coined by
Linn Washington, Jr., a Philadelphia Tribune columnist
and professor of journalism at Temple University, who has covered
this story since the day of Abu-Jamal’s 1981 arrest. Washington
criticizes the Third Circuit’s ruling against Abu-Jamal’s claim
that Judge
Sabo had treated him unfairly at the 1995-97 Post-Conviction Relief
Act (PCRA) hearings, which was another issue the Circuit Court
had considered. Citing “the mound of legal violations in this case,”
Washington says “the continuing refusal of U.S. courts to equally
apply the law in the Abu-Jamal case constitutes a stain on America’s
image internationally.”
Launched Campaign Cites Withheld Evidence
The Philadelphia Inquirer has reported that supporters of Mumia Abu-Jamal are responding to the
April 2009 US Supreme Court ruling by launching a campaign
calling for a federal civil rights investigation into Abu-Jamal’s
case. The campaign’s supporters include the Riverside Church’s Prison
Ministry, actress Ruby Dee, professor Cornel West, and US Congressman
Charles Rangel, who is Chairman of the House Committee on Ways and
Means. In 2004, the NAACP passed a resolution supporting a new trial
for Abu-Jamal, and campaign supporters will be gathering to publicize
the civil rights campaign at the upcoming NAACP National Convention
in New York City, July 11-16, and to pressure the NAACP to honor
their earlier resolutions by actively supporting the current campaign
seeking an investigation. Supporters will then be in Washington,
DC on July 22 to lobby their elected officials, and in mid-September,
they’ll return to Washington, DC for a major press conference.
Thousands of signatures have been collected for a
public letter to US Attorney General Eric Holder, which reads: “Inasmuch
as there is no other court to which Abu-Jamal can appeal for justice,
we turn to you for remedy of a 27-year history of gross violations
of US constitutional law and international standards of justice.”
The letter cites Holder’s recent investigation into the case of
former Senator Ted Stevens, which led to all charges against him
being dropped: “You were specifically outraged by the fact that
the prosecution withheld information critical to the defense’s argument
for acquittal, a violation clearly committed by the prosecution
in Abu-Jamal’s case. Mumia Abu-Jamal, though not a US Senator of
great wealth and power, is a Black man revered around the world
for his courage, clarity, and commitment, and deserves no less than
Senator Stevens.”
Several campaigns seeking a civil right investigation
into the Abu-Jamal case have been launched since 1995, at which
time, the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) was one of many groups
that publicly supported an investigation. In a 1995 letter written
independently of the CBC, Representatives Chaka Fattah, Ron Dellums,
Cynthia McKinney, Maxine Waters, and John Conyers (now Chairman
of the House Judiciary Committee) stated, “There is ample evidence
that Mr. Abu-Jamal’s constitutional rights were violated, that he
did not receive a fair trial, and that he is, in fact, innocent.”
Assistant Attorney General Andrew Fois responded to the CBC’s request,
and in a September 1995 rejection letter written to Congressman
Ron Dellums, Fois conceded that even though there is a 5-year statute
of limitations for a civil rights investigation, the statute does
not apply if “there is significant evidence of an ongoing conspiracy.”
One of the 2009 campaign’s organizers is Dr. Suzanne
Ross, a spokesperson for the Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition
of New York City. Citing Andrew Fois’ letter, Ross argues
that the “continued denial of justice to Mumia in the federal courts,
as documented by dissenting Judge Thomas Ambro,” is evidence of
an “ongoing conspiracy,” and thus merits an investigation. “Throughout
the history of this case, we were always told ‘Wait until we get
to the federal courts.They will surely overturn the racism and gross
misconduct of Judge Sabo,’ but we never got even a preliminary hearing
on the issue considered most winnable: racial bias in jury selection,
the so called Batson issue.” Ross also criticizes the Third
Circuit’s denial of Abu-Jamal’s claim that Judge Sabo was unfair
at the 1995-97 PCRA hearings, and considers this denial to be further
evidence of an “ongoing conspiracy.” Ross argues that the courts’
continued affirmation of Sabo’s rulings during the PCRA hearings,
and Sabo’s ultimate ruling that nothing presented at the PCRA hearings
was significant enough to merit a new trial, serves to legitimize
numerous injustices throughout Abu-Jamal’s case.
Specifically referring to the issue of withheld evidence,
that was central to the case of former Senator Ted Stevens, organizer
Suzanne Ross identifies five key instances in Abu-Jamal’s case,
where “evidence was withheld that could have led to Mumia’s acquittal.”
The DA’s office withheld two items from Abu-Jamal’s defense: the
actual location of the driver’s license application found in Officer
Faulkner’s pocket; and Pedro Polakoff’s crime scene photos. Then,
at the request of prosecutor McGill, Judge Sabo ruled to block three
items from the jury: prosecution eyewitness Robert Chobert’s probation
status and criminal history; testimony from defense eyewitness Veronica
Jones about police attempts to solicit false testimony; and testimony
from Police Officer Gary Waskshul.
DA Suppresses Evidence About Kenneth Freeman
In their recent books, Michael Schiffmann (Race Against Death: The Struggle for the Life and Freedom of Mumia
Abu-Jamal, 2006) and J. Patrick O’Connor (The
Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal
, 2008) argue that the actual shooter of Officer Faulkner was a
man named Kenneth Freeman. Schiffmann and O’Connor argue that Freeman
was an occupant of Billy Cook’s car, who shot Faulkner in response
to Faulkner having shot Abu-Jamal first, and then fled the scene
before police arrived.
Central to Schiffmann and O’Connor’s argument was
the presence of a driver’s license application for one Arnold Howard,
which was found in the front pocket of Officer Faulkner’s shirt.
Abu-Jamal’s defense would not learn about this until 13 years later,
because the Police and DA’s office had failed to notify them about
the application’s crucial location. Journalist Linn Washington argues
that this failure was “a critical and deliberate omission,” and
“a major violation of fair trial rights and procedures. If the appeals
process had any semblance of fairness, this misconduct alone should
have won a new trial for Abu-Jamal.” More importantly, Washington
says “this evidence provides strong proof of a third person at the
scene along with Faulkner and Billy Cook. The prosecution case against
Abu-Jamal rests on the assertion that Faulkner encountered a lone
Cook minutes before Abu-Jamal’s arrival on the scene, but Faulkner
got that application from somebody other than Cook, who had his
own license.”
At the 1995 PCRA hearing, Arnold Howard testified
that he had loaned his temporary, non-photo license to Kenneth Freeman,
who was Billy Cook’s business partner and close friend. Further,
Howard stated that police came to his house early in the morning
on Dec. 9, 1981, and brought him to the police station for questioning
because he was suspected of being “the person who had run away”
from the scene, but he was released after producing a 4:00 a.m.
receipt from a drugstore across town (which provided an alibi) and
telling them that he had loaned the application to Freeman (who
Howard reports was also at the police station that morning).
Also pointing to Freeman’s presence in the car with
Cook, O’Connor and Schiffmann cite prosecution witness Cynthia White’s
testimony at Cook’s separate trial for charges of assaulting Faulkner,
where White describes both a “driver” and a “passenger” in Cook’s
VW. Also notable, investigative journalist Dave Lindorff’s book
(Killing
Time:
An Investigation into the Death Row Case of Mumia Abu-Jamal, 2003)
features an interview with Cook’s lawyer Daniel Alva, in which Alva
says that Cook had confided to him within days of the shooting that
Freeman had been with him that morning.
Linn Washington argues that “this third person at
the crime scene is consistent with eyewitness accounts of the shooter
fleeing the scene. Remember that accounts from both prosecution
and defense witnesses confirm the existence of a fleeing shooter.
Abu-Jamal was arrested at the scene, critically wounded. He did
not run away and return in a matter of seconds.” Eyewitnesses Robert
Chobert, Dessie Hightower, Veronica Jones, Deborah Kordansky, William
Singletary, and Marcus Cannon all reported, at various times, that
they saw one or more men run away from the scene. O’Connor writes
that “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.” Then there’s eyewitness Robert Harkins,
whom prosecutor McGill did not call as a witness. O’Connor postulates
that the prosecutor’s decision was because Harkins’ account of a
struggle between Faulkner and the shooter that caused Faulkner to
fall on his hands and knees before Faulkner was shot “demolished
the version of the shooting that the state’s other witnesses rendered
at trial.”O’Connor writes further that “Harkins described the shooter
as a little taller and heavier than the 6-foot, 200-pound Faulkner,”
which excludes the 6’1”, 170-lb Abu-Jamal.
Linn
Washington’s 2001
affidavit states that he knew Freeman to be a “close
friend of Cook’s,” and that “Cook and Freeman were constantly together.”
Washington first met Freeman when
Freeman reported his experience of police brutality to the Philadelphia
Tribune, where Washington worked. Washington says today that “Kenny
did not harbor any illusions about police being unquestioned heroes
due to his experiences with being beaten a few times by police and
police incessantly harassing him for his street vending.”
Regarding the police harassment and intimidation
of Freeman, which continued after the arrest of Abu-Jamal, Washington
adds: “It is significant to note that the night after the Faulkner
shooting, the newsstand that Freeman built and operated at 16th
and Chestnut Streets in Center City burned to the ground. In news
media accounts of this arson, police sources openly boasted to reporters
that the arsonist was probably a police officer. Witnesses claimed
to see officers fleeing the scene right before the fire was noticed.
Needless to say, that arson resulted in no arrests.” Dave Lindorff
argues that the police clearly “had their eye on Freeman,” because
“only two months after Faulkner’s shooting, Freeman was arrested
in his home, where he was found hiding in his attic armed with a
.22 caliber pistol, explosives and a supply of ammunition. At that
time, he was not charged with anything.” O’Connor and Schiffmann
argue that police intimidation ultimately escalated to the point
where police themselves murdered Freeman.
The morning of May 14, 1985, Freeman’s body was found:
naked, bound, and with a drug needle in his arm. His cause of death
was officially declared a “heart attack.” The date of Freeman’s
death is significant because the night before his body was found,
the police had orchestrated a military-style siege on the MOVE organization’s
West Philadelphia home. Police had fired over 10,000 rounds of ammunition
in 90 minutes and used a State Police helicopter to drop a C-4 bomb
(illegally supplied by the FBI) on MOVE’s roof, which started a
fire that destroyed the entire city block. The MOVE Commission
later documented that police had shot at MOVE family members when
they tried to escape the fire: in all, six adults and five children
were killed.
As a local journalist, Abu-Jamal had criticized the
city government’s conflicts with MOVE, and after his 1981 arrest,
MOVE began to publicly support him. Through this mutual advocacy,
which continues today, Abu-Jamal and MOVE’s contentious relationship
with the Philadelphia authorities have always been closely linked.
Seen in this context, Schiffmann argues that “if Freeman was indeed
killed by cops, the killing probably was part of a general vendetta
of the Philadelphia cops against their ‘enemies’ and the cops killed
him because they knew or suspected he had something to do with the
killing of Faulkner.” O’Connor concurs, arguing that “the timing
and modus operandi of the abduction and killing alone suggest an
extreme act of police vengeance.”
DA Suppresses Pedro Polakoff’s Crime Scene Photos
On December 6, 2008, several
hundred protesters gathered outside the Philadelphia District
Attorney’s office, where Pam Africa, coordinator of the International
Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal, spoke about
the newly discovered crime scene photos taken by press photographer
Pedro Polakoff.Africa cited Polakoff’s statements today that he
approached the DA’s office with the photos in 1981, 1982, and 1995,
but that the DA had completely ignored him. Polakoff states that
because he had believed Abu-Jamal was guilty, he had no interest
in approaching the defense, and never did. Consequently, neither
the 1982 jury nor the defense ever saw Polakoff’s photos. “The DA
deliberately kept evidence out,” declared Africa: “someone should
be arrested for withholding evidence in a murder trial.”
Advocacy groups called Educators for Mumia
and Journalists for Mumia explain in their fact sheet,
“21 FAQs,” that Polakoff’s photos were first discovered by German
author Michael Schiffmann in May 2006, and published that Fall in
his book, Race
Against Death. One of Polakoff’s photos was first published
in the US by The
SF Bay View Newspaper on Oct. 24, 2007. Reuters
followed with a Dec. 4, 2007 article, after which the photos made
their television debut on NBC’s
Dec. 6, 2007 Today Show. They have since been spotlighted
by National
Public Radio, Indymedia.org,
Counterpunch,
The
Philadelphia Weekly and the new British documentary “In Prison My
Whole Life,” which features an interview with Polakoff.
Since May, 2007, www.Abu-Jamal-News.com
has displayed four of Polakoff’s photos, making the following points:
Photo 1: Mishandling
the Guns - Officer
James Forbes holds both Abu-Jamal’s and Faulkner’s guns in his bare
hand and touches the metal parts. This contradicts his later court
testimony that he had preserved the ballistics evidence by not touching
the metal parts.
Photos 2 &
3: The Moving Hat -
Faulkner’s hat is moved from the top of Billy Cook’s VW, and placed
on the sidewalk for the official police photo.
Photo 4: The
Missing Taxi –
Prosecution witness Robert Chobert testified that he was parked
directly behind Faulkner’s car, but the space is empty in the photo.
The Missing
Divots – In
all of Polakoff’s photos of the sidewalk where Faulkner was found,
there are no large bullet divots, or destroyed chunks of cement,
which should be visible in the pavement if the prosecution scenario
was accurate, according to which Abu-Jamal shot down at Faulkner
- and allegedly missed several times - while Faulkner was on his
back. Also citing the official
police photo, Michael Schiffmann writes: “It is thus no question
any more whether the scenario presented by the prosecution at Abu-Jamal’s
trial is true, because it is physically impossible.”
Pedro
P. Polakoff was a Philadelphia freelance photographer who reports
having arrived at the crime scene about 12 minutes after the shooting
was first reported on police radio, and at least 10 minutes before
the Mobile Crime Detection Unit that handles crime scene forensics
and photographs. In Schiffmann’s interview with him, Polakoff recounted
that “all the officers present expressed the firm conviction that
Abu-Jamal had been the passenger in Billy Cook’s VW and had fired
and killed Faulkner by a single shot fired from the passenger
seat of the car.” Polakoff bases this on police statements made
to him directly, and from his having overheard their conversations.
Polakoff states that this early police opinion was apparently the
result of their interviews of three other witnesses who were still
present at the crime scene: a parking lot attendant, a drug-addicted
woman, and another woman. None of those eyewitnesses, however, have
appeared in any report presented to the courts by the police or
the prosecution.
It is undisputed that Abu-Jamal approached from across
the street, and was not the passenger in Billy Cook’s car. Schiffmann
argues that Polakoff’s personal account strengthens the argument
that the actual shooter was Billy Cook’s passenger Kenneth Freeman,
who Schiffmann postulates, fled the scene before police arrived.
Robert Chobert’s Legal Status Withheld From Jury
At prosecutor Joseph McGill’s request, Judge Albert
Sabo blocked Abu-Jamal’s defense from telling the 1982 jury that
key prosecution eyewitness, taxi driver Robert Chobert, was on probation
for throwing a molotov cocktail into a school yard, for pay. Sabo
justified this by ruling that Chobert’s offense was not crimen
falsi, i.e., a crime of deception. Consequently, the jury never
heard about this, nor that on the night of Abu-Jamal’s arrest, Chobert
had been illegally driving on a suspended license (revoked for a
DWI). This probation violation could have given him up to 30 years
in prison, so he was extremely vulnerable to pressure from the police.
Notably, at the later 1995 PCRA hearing, Chobert testified that
his probation had never been revoked, even though he continued to
drive his taxi illegally through 1995.
At the 1982 trial, Chobert testified that he was
in his taxi, which he had parked directly behind Faulkner’s police
car, and was writing in his log book when he heard the first gunshot
and looked up. Chobert alleged that while he did not see a gun in
Abu-Jamal’s hand, nor a muzzle flash, he did see Abu-Jamal standing
over Faulkner, saw Abu-Jamal’s hand “jerk back” several times, and
heard shots after each “jerk.” After the shooting, Chobert stated
that he got out and approached the scene.
Damaging Chobert’s credibility, however, is evidence
suggesting that Chobert may have lied about his location at the
time of Faulkner’s death. As noted earlier, the newly discovered
Polakoff crime scene photos show that the space where Chobert testified
to being parked directly behind Officer Faulkner’s car, was actually
empty. Yet, even more evidence suggests he lied about his location.
While prosecution eyewitness Cynthia White is the only witness to
testify seeing Chobert’s taxi parked behind Faulkner’s police car,
no official eyewitness reported seeing White at the scene. Furthermore,
Chobert’s taxi is missing both from White’s first sketch of the
crime scene given to police (Defense Exhibit D-12), and from a later
one (Prosecution Exhibit C-35). In a 2001 affidavit, private investigator
George Michael Newman says that in a 1995 interview, Chobert told
Newman that Chobert was actually parked around the corner, on 13th
Street, north of Locust Street, and did not even see the shooting.
Amnesty International documents that both Chobert and White “altered their
descriptions of what they saw, in ways that supported the prosecution’s
version of events.” Chobert first told police that the shooter simply
“ran away,” but after he had identified Abu-Jamal at the scene, he
said the shooter had run away 30 to 35 “steps” before he was caught.
At trial, Chobert changed this distance to 10 “feet,” which
was closer to the official police account that Abu-Jamal was found
just a few feet away from Officer Faulkner.
Nevertheless, Chobert did stick to a few statements
in his trial testimony that contradicted the prosecution’s scenario.
For example, Chobert declared that he did not see the apparently
unrelated Ford car that, according to official reports, was parked
in front of Billy Cook’s VW. Chobert also claimed that the altercation
happened behind Cook’s VW (it officially happened in front of Cook’s
VW), that Chobert did not see Abu-Jamal get shot or see Officer
Faulkner fire his gun, and that the shooter was “heavyset” - estimating
200-225 lbs (Abu-Jamal weighed 170 lbs).
In his 2003 book Killing
Time, Dave Lindorff wrote about two other problems with Chobert’s
account. While being so legally vulnerable, why would Chobert have
parked directly behind a police car? Why would he have left his
car and approached the scene, if in fact, the shooter were still
there? Lindorff suggests that “at the time of the incident, Chobert
might not have thought that the man slumped on the curb was the
shooter,” because “in his initial Dec. 9 statement to police investigators,
Chobert had said that he saw ‘another man’ who ‘ran away’…He claimed
in his statement that police stopped that man, but that he didn’t
see him later.” Therefore, “if Chobert did think he saw the shooter
run away, it might well explain why he would have felt safe walking
up to the scene of the shooting as he said he did, before the arrival
of police.”
The Attempts to Silence Veronica Jones
Veronica Jones was working as a prostitute at the
crime scene on December 9, 1981. She first told police on December
15, 1981 that she had seen two men “jogging” away from the scene
before police arrived. As a defense witness at the 1982 trial, Jones
denied having made that statement; however, later in her testimony
she started to describe a pre-trial visit from police, where “They
were getting on me telling me I was in the area and I seen Mumia,
you know, do it. They were trying to get me to say something that
the other girl [Cynthia White] said. I couldn’t do that.” Jones
then explicitly testified that police had offered to let her and
White “work the area if we tell them” what they wanted to hear regarding
Abu-Jamal’s guilt.
At this point, Prosecutor McGill interrupted Jones
and moved to block her account, calling her testimony “absolutely
irrelevant.” Judge Sabo agreed to block the line of questioning,
strike the testimony, and then ordered the jury to disregard Jones’
statement.
The DA and Sabo’s efforts to silence Jones continued
through to the later PCRA hearings that started in 1995. Having
been unable to locate Jones earlier, the defense found Jones in
1996, and (over the DA’s protests) obtained permission from the
State Supreme Court to extend the PCRA hearings for Jones’ testimony.
Sabo vehemently resisted—arguing that there was not sufficient proof
of her unavailability in 1995. However, in 1995 Sabo had refused
to order disclosure of Jones’ home address to the defense team.
Over Sabo’s objections, the defense returned to the
State Supreme Court, which ordered Sabo to conduct a full evidentiary
hearing. Sabo’s attempts to silence Jones continued as she took
the stand. He immediately threatened her with 5-10 years imprisonment
if she testified to having perjured herself in 1982. In defiance,
Jones persisted with her testimony that she had in fact lied in
1982, when she had denied her original account to police that she
had seen two men “leave the scene.”
Jones testified that she had changed her version
of events after being visited by two detectives in prison, where
she was being held on charges of robbery and assault. Urging her
to both finger Abu-Jamal as the shooter and to retract her statement
about seeing two men “run away,” the detectives stressed that she
faced up to 10 years in prison and the loss of her children if convicted.
Jones testified in 1996 that in 1982, afraid of losing her children,
she had decided to meet the police halfway: she did not actually
finger Abu-Jamal, but she did lie about not seeing two men running
from the scene. Accordingly, following the 1982 trial, Jones only
received probation and was never imprisoned for the charges against
her.
During the 1996 cross-examination, the DA announced
that there was an outstanding arrest warrant for Jones on charges
of writing a bad check, and that she would be arrested after concluding
her testimony. With tears pouring down her face, Jones declared:
“This is not going to change my testimony!” Despite objections from
the defense, Sabo allowed New Jersey police to handcuff and arrest
Jones in the courtroom. While the DA attempted to use this arrest
to discredit Jones, her determination in the face of intimidation
may, arguably, have made her testimony more credible. Outraged by
Jones’ treatment, even the Philadelphia Daily News, certainly
no fan of Abu-Jamal, reported: “Such heavy-handed tactics
can only confirm suspicions that the court is incapable of giving
Abu-Jamal a fair hearing. Sabo has long since abandoned any pretense
of fairness.”
Jones’ account was given further credibility a year
later. At the 1997 PCRA hearing, former prostitute Pamela Jenkins
testified that police had tried pressuring her to falsely testify
that she saw Abu-Jamal shoot Faulkner. In addition, Jenkins testified
that in late 1981, Cynthia White (whom Jenkins knew as a fellow
police informant) told Jenkins that she was also being pressured
to testify against Abu-Jamal, and that she was afraid for her life.
As part of a 1995 federal probe of Philadelphia police
corruption, Officers Thomas F. Ryan and John D. Baird were convicted
of paying Jenkins to falsely testify that she had bought drugs from
a Temple University student. Jenkins’ 1995 testimony in this probe,
helped to convict Ryan, Baird, and other officers, and also to dismiss
several dozen drug convictions. At the 1997 PCRA hearing, Jenkins
testified that this same Thomas F. Ryan was one of the officers
who attempted to have her lie about Abu-Jamal.
More recently, a 2002 affidavit by
former prostitute Yvette Williams described police coercion of Cynthia
White. The affidavit reads: “I was in jail with Cynthia White in
December of 1981 after Police Officer Daniel Faulkner was shot and
killed. Cynthia White told me the police were making her lie and
say she saw Mr. Jamal shoot Officer Faulkner when she really did
not see who did it…Whenever she talked about testifying against
Mumia Abu-Jamal, and how the police were making her lie, she was
nervous and very excited and I could tell how scared she was from
the way she was talking and crying.” Explaining why she is just
now coming out with her affidavit, Williams says “I feel like I’ve
almost had a nervous breakdown over keeping quiet about this all
these years. I didn’t say anything because I was afraid. I was afraid
of the police. They’re dangerous.” Williams’ affidavit was rejected
by Philadelphia
Judge Pamela Dembe in 2005, the PA Supreme
Court in February 2008, and in October 2008, by the US Supreme
Court.
Further
supporting the contention that police had made a deal with White,
author J. Patrick O’Connor writes, “Prior to her becoming a prosecution
witness in Abu-Jamal’s case, White had been arrested 38 times for
prostitution…After she gave her third statement to the police, on
December 17, 1981, she would not be arrested for prostitution in
Philadelphia ever again even though she admitted at Billy Cook’s
trial that she continued to be ‘actively working.’” Amnesty International
reports that later, in 1987, White was facing charges of armed robbery,
aggravated assault, and possession of illegal weapons. A judge granted
White the right to sign her own bail and she was released after
a special request was made by Philadelphia Police Officer Douglas
Culbreth (where Culbreth cited her involvement in Abu-Jamal’s trial).
After White’s release, she skipped bail and has never, officially,
been seen again.
At the 1997 PCRA hearing, the DA announced that Cynthia
White was dead, and presented a death certificate for a “Cynthia
Williams” who died in New Jersey in 1992. However, Amnesty International
reports, “an examination of the fingerprint records of White and
Williams showed no match and the evidence that White is dead is
far from conclusive.” Journalist C. Clark
Kissinger writes, a Philadelphia police detective “testified
that the FBI had ‘authenticated’ that Williams had the same fingerprints
as White.” However, Kissinger continues, “the DA’s office refused
to produce the actual fingerprints,” and “the body of Williams was
cremated so that no one could ever check the facts! Finally, the
Ruth Ray listed on the death certificate as the mother of the deceased
Cynthia Williams has given a sworn statement to the defense that
she is not the mother of either Cynthia White or Cynthia Williams.”
Dave Lindorff reports further that the listing of deaths by social
security number for 1992 and later years does not include White’s
number.
Gary Wakshul’s Testimony Blocked
On the final day of testimony, Abu-Jamal’s lawyer
discovered Police Officer Gary Wakshul’s official statement in the
police report from the morning of Dec. 9, 1981. After riding with
Abu-Jamal to the hospital and guarding him until treatment for his
gunshot wound, Wakshul reported: “the negro male made no comment.”
This statement contradicted the trial testimony of prosecution witnesses
Gary Bell (a police officer) and Priscilla Durham (a hospital security
guard), who testified that they had heard Abu-Jamal confess to the
shooting, while Abu-Jamal was awaiting treatment at the hospital.
When the defense immediately sought to call Wakshul
as a witness, the DA reported that he was on vacation. Judge Sabo
denied the defense request to locate him for testimony, on grounds
that it was too late in the trial to even take a short recess so
that the defense could attempt to locate Wakshul. Consequently,
the jury never heard from Wakshul, nor about his contradictory written
report. When an outraged Abu-Jamal protested, Judge Sabo replied:
“You and your attorney goofed.”
Wakshul’s report from December 9, 1981 is just one
of the many reasons cited by Amnesty International for their
conclusion that Bell’s and Durham’s trial testimonies were not credible.
There are many other problems that merit a closer look if we are
to determine how important Wakshul’s 1982 trial testimony could
have been.
The alleged “hospital confession,” in which Abu-Jamal
reportedly shouted, “I shot the motherf***er and I hope he dies,”
was first officially reported to police over two months after the
shooting, by hospital guards Priscilla Durham and James LeGrand
(February 9, 1982), police officer Gary Wakshul (February 11), officer
Gary Bell (February 25), and officer Thomas M. Bray (March1). Of
these five, only Bell and Durham were called as prosecution witnesses.
When Durham testified at the trial, she added something
new to her story which she had not reported to the police on February
9. She now claimed that she had reported the confession to her supervisor
the next day, on December 10, making a hand-written report. Neither
her supervisor, nor the alleged handwritten statement was ever presented
in court. Instead, the DA sent an officer to the hospital, returning
with a suspicious typed version of the alleged December 10 report.
Sabo accepted the unsigned and unauthenticated paper despite both
Durham’s disavowal (because it was typed and not hand-written),
and the defense’s protest that its authorship and authenticity were
unproven.
Gary Bell (Faulkner’s partner and self-described
“best friend”) testified that his two month memory lapse had resulted
from his having been so upset over Faulkner’s death that he had
forgotten to report it to police.
Later,
at the 1995 PCRA hearings, Wakshul testified that both his contradictory
report made on December 9, 1981 (“the negro male made no comment”)
and the two month delay were simply bad mistakes. He repeated his
earlier statement given to police on February 11, 1982 that he “didn’t
realize it [Abu-Jamal’s alleged confession] had any importance until
that day.” Contradicting the DA’s assertion of Wakshul’s unavailability
in 1982, Wakshul also testified in 1995 that he had in fact been
home for his 1982 vacation, and available for trial testimony, in
accordance with explicit instructions to stay in town for the trial
so that he could testify if called.
Just days before his PCRA testimony, undercover police
officers savagely beat Wakshul in front of a sitting Judge, in the
Common Pleas Courtroom where Wakshul worked as a court crier. The
two attackers, Kenneth Fleming and Jean Langen, were later suspended
without pay, as punishment. With the motive still unexplained, Dave
Lindorff and J. Patrick O’Connor speculate that the beating may
have been used to intimidate Wakshul into maintaining his “confession”
story at the PCRA hearings.
Regarding Abu-Jamal’s
alleged confession, Amnesty International concluded: “The likelihood of two police officers
and a security guard forgetting or neglecting to report the confession
of a suspect in the killing of another police officer for more than
two months strains credulity.”
Conclusion: the DA Still Wants to Execute
“The urgent need for a civil rights investigation
is heightened because the DA is still trying to execute Mumia,”
emphasizes Dr. Suzanne Ross, an organizer of the campaign seeking
an investigation. This past April, the US Supreme Court declined
to hear Abu-Jamal’s appeal for a new guilt-phase trial, but the
Court has yet to rule on whether to hear the appeal made simultaneously
by the Philadelphia District Attorney’s office, which seeks to execute
Abu-Jamal without granting him a new penalty-phase trial.
In March, 2008, the Third Circuit Court affirmed
Federal District Court Judge William Yohn’s 2001 decision “overturning”
the death sentence. Citing the 1988 Mills v. Maryland precedent,
Yohn had ruled that sentencing forms used by jurors and Judge Albert
Sabo’s instructions to the jury were potentially confusing, and
that therefore jurors could have mistakenly believed that they had
to unanimously agree on any mitigating circumstances in order to
consider them as weighing against a death sentence. According to
the 2001 ruling, affirmed in 2008, if the DA wants to re-instate
the death sentence, the DA must call for a new penalty-phase jury
trial. In such a penalty hearing, new evidence of Abu-Jamal’s innocence
could be presented, but the jury could only choose between execution
and a life sentence without parole.
The DA is appealing to the US Supreme Court against
this 2008 affirmation of Yohn’s ruling. If the court rules in the
DA’s favor, Abu-Jamal can be executed without benefit of a new sentencing
hearing. If the US Supreme Court rules against the DA’s appeal,
the DA must either accept the life sentence for Abu-Jamal, or call
for the new sentencing hearing. Meanwhile, Mumia Abu-Jamal has never
left his death row cell.
How You Can Help
Actions are being organized throughout the summer
to support the campaign for a federal civil rights investigation,
including at the upcoming NAACP convention in New York City, July
11-16. Organizers are focusing particularly on July 13, the day
that Attorney General Holder will address the convention. Supporters
will then be in Washington, D.C., on July 22 to lobby their elected
officials and, in mid-September, they’ll return to Washington, D.C.,
for a major press conference.
For more information on how you can support the campaign
for a federal civil rights investigation, and to sign the online
letter and petition to Attorney General Holder, please visit: http://freemumia.com/civilrights.html.
[This article was originally published by the SF
Bay View Newspaper on June 16, 2009.]
BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, Hans Bennett is an independent
multi-media journalist (www.insubordination.blogspot.com)
and co-founder of Journalists for Mumia Abu-Jamal (www.abu-jamal-news.com)
Click here
to contact Mr. Bennett. |