Note:
BC is pleased to welcome Chris Stevenson as a Columnist.
Point Blank will appear on a regular basis.
"It's
a political case and no one wants to touch it. And in Philadelphia
if you touch Mumia, you don't have a job for the rest of
your life. You are blackballed"- Johanna Fernandez
Most
guys on Death Row spend their decades saying "I'm innocent
I tell ya," or they just give up. Not Mumia Abu-Jamal,
he writes really good books, he cans attorneys, he adds
drama. So it was, one day before his hearing Abu-Jamal fired
his attorney Robert Bryan. 'Didn't I just speak with Bryan
a couple weeks ago,' I asked myself? Of course if you followed
this case for any length of significant time, you know this
is Mumia's 5th lawyer booting after Anthony Jackson, Leonard
Weinglass, Eliot Grossman and Marlene Kamish (this doesn't
include the resignation of pro-bono lawyers Rachel Wolkenstein
and Jonathan Piper). And his 2nd just short of a pivotal
hearing. Maybe his next book should be titled 'Fire All
the Lawyers.'
I'm
kicking myself because it took me this long to figure out
why Mumia is still alive, many of you think it's public
pressure, what can't be discounted is his 'you can't kill
me, I just fired my lawyer' strategy. And it's not like
I haven't been through it myself throughout my own life.
Lawyer-searching makes for a good delay tactic.
Seriously
I really can't tell you whether Mumia is guilty or innocent,
I wasn't there. But there are enough questions about how
this case has been handled by the police and prosecution
to warrant a 2nd look at the trial and verdict. I also know
how badly they want to execute Mumia or at the very least
keep him locked up for the rest of his life even in light
of the Philadelphia Police-corruption scandal that brought
down many of their officers and freed a lot of suspects;
some of those same evidence-tampering cops are the officers
who handled Mumia's investigation. Did those officers take
a rare departure from their norm and call only Abu-Jamal's
case down the middle?
When
Mumia was sentenced back in '82 the computer-era was just
jumping out of cards and into programming languages. Now
in the age of high-speed Internet we find his case dragging
through the Tea Party era, and invariably Tea Party cops.
When Mumia was on trial for shooting officer Daniel Faulkner,
the Governor of PA was then a typical white District Attorney
bent on seeing him fry. Today Philadelphia's District Attorney
is a typical black conservative (Seth Williams) bent on
seeing him fry.
According
to author/film producer Johanna Fernandez during a recent
public debate between her and Defense Attorney Michael Coard
vs. Tigre (Tigger?) Hill; the maker of the anti-Mumia film
"Barrel of a Gun" and Williams: "They had
a theory of what happened and they had to cook up the crime
scene to match the theory." Abu-Jamal evidently wasn't
the only victim of this cook-the-books mentality pervasive
with so many Philly cops, 15 officers were cited for habitual
tampering and corruption in order to obtain a conviction
back in '81. There was the bravery and sacrifice of William
Singletary (btw never allowed to testify at the trial),
a storefront owner Philly police tried to intimidate to
the point of vandalizing his family's business. There is
the most basic discrepancy; the gun that killed officer
Faulkner was a .44 caliber and Abu-Jamal was registered
to have a .38. The prosecution was both unable to connect
Mumia's gun to the murder or that he even fired a gun that
night. There is the relatively new evidence of photographs
taken by photojournalist Pedro Polakoff with pictures showing
how Police Officer James Ford was evidence-tampering; "mishandling
guns, moving Officer Faulkner's hat around. I first saw
those pics a couple years ago. No doubt Professor Fernandez
has details about this in her own new Mumia documentary
"Justice On Trial," Mumia needs all he can get
because there won't be a retrial.
The
appellate court established 3-years-ago that Mumia will
never get another trial or retrial. If you are a righty-whitey
the first trial completely satisfies you. The most recent
hearing actually deals with the issue of whether or not
the late Judge Albert Sabo's instructions to the jury in
'82 were valid or did he mislead the jury as to aggravating
or mitigating circumstances. Sabo is the (putting it mildly)
extremely biased judge with less credibility on the bench
than Sarah Palin had as Governor of Alaska. Unless of course
"I gonna help them fry the nigger" is Ok by you,
as it no-doubt is with Hill and Willliams.
Strange
that Hill would title his documentary after the very quote
that was used to get the guilty verdict for Mumia. He said
the film is based on his comparison of the JFK shooting
and the Abu-Jamal case. Hill also said even though he was
in 9th grade and failing algebra during the 1981/82 school
year, he became assured of Mumia's guilt by reading the
leaflets. What an astute young man. Some things just don't
add up I say. lol. So I welcome Mumia to the age of angry
middle-class, poor and dumb whites and gullible blacks who
actually think they're conservatives. It is to laugh, if
I weren't crying so hard. Williams words during this debate
should leave you gasping for air at the very least: "I
recognize there's no one here who's mind will be changed
tonight... this isn't a debate to talk about the facts."
Oh excuse me, can't let any "facts" get in the
way of a whole state trying to execute what is possibly
the wrong man for shooting a cop. "I can't just sit
here and refute every type of situation when the prosecution
didn't make it's case up and tell people what facts to go
get." Pssst... Seth, then what the hell are you doing
sitting in the DA's chair?
The
11/9 hearing was presented before the same 3 judges who
sat during '07; Anthony Sirica (a Reagan appointee), Robert
Cowan (Bush-41) and Thomas Ambro (Clinton). All originally
agreed with Judge William Yohn that the jury ballot had
been poorly worded and instructions from previous trial
Judge (the late Albert Sabo) were
flawed ("Remember again, your verdict must be unanimous").
Initially this was good news for Abu-Jamal. It either meant
he would avoid execution-possibly leaving him open for clemency-or
the Philadelphia DA had to order a new penalty-phase trial.
Once again these people are trying to avoid a new trial
of any kind regarding Abu-Jamal.
Then
came a US Supreme Court (SC) ruling on an unrelated case;
Smith v. Spizak. Frank Spizak; a burned-out Ohio neo-Nazi
originally sentenced to death for killing Jews and Blacks.
It was then determined that a lower court order nullifying
his death sentence due to what was seen as the same erring
jury ballot and Judge instructions was in error in itself
according to the land's highest court. Since the SC had
a pending appeal in front of them for the Philly DA on Abu-Jamal's
case, they sent his case back down to the 3rd Circuit no-doubt
hoping Abu-Jamal's case would be in compliance with the
Spizak decision.
The
3 Judges bone of contention is that there are no similarities
between Spizak and Abu-Jamal. In fact Mumia's new lead attorney
Judith Ritter successfully argued the similarities while
an assistant counsel to Bryan during the '07 hearing. It
seems the words unanimous was uttered and posted all over
the jury ballots (and probably on the doors of restroom
toilets) during Mumia's original hearings and trial in '82,
whereas they weren't during Spizak's trial.
In
short this new 11/9 decision was more indecision than a
ruling. All 3 judges dismissed any question of Abu-Jamal's
innocence (just as they did in '07). Judge Sirica said he
would "take the matter under advisement," and
the only issue with the 3rd Circuit would be whether or
not Abu-Jamal gets life without parole or is sentenced to
death. A final ruling on that won't come for months. Remember
how long it took these 3 to make a ruling back in '07.
Can
it be that vitriol from a historically race-combustive city
is strong enough to influence the decision making in the
two most powerful courts in the USA? If so that makes the
Justices on the US. Supreme Court and the 3rd Circuit Court
of Appeals look pretty weak. Perhaps we should look to Virginia
for cohones. Not the southern state, but the wife of the
notoriously silent conservative SC Justice Clarence Thomas
to intervene. She would have enough nerve to make one of
her infamous 7am calls to the 3rd Circuit triumvirate to
get them to actually look honestly at the case on it's own
judgmental merits and render a decision based on it's own
inconsistencies.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist Chris Stevenson
is a syndicated columnist, his articles also appear on his
blog; the Buffalo
Bullet. Follow him on Twitter(pointblank009) and Facebook (pointblank009 ) Click here to contact Mr. Stevenson.
|