Note: BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member Chuck Turner is writing this
column from the U.S. Federal Prison in Hazelton, West Virginia
where he is serving a three year term for a bribery conviction.
In
last week's first installment of Anatomy of a Frame Up,
I outlined my background and lifetime of service. My purpose
was to put US Attorney Sullivan's sting and frame up in
the context of my life's work. This week I will focus on
the day of the arrest and my reflections on it. Each of
the remaining installments will have three segments. The
first will be a narrative describing what happened in that
particular segment of the experience and my reflections
on it. The second will be an analysis examining what we
may� learn from my experience regarding the method of operation
of US prosecutors; their police force, the FBI, and the
court system. The third will focus on proposals for actions
in our ongoing fight against prosecutorial terrorism.�
A)
Narrative:
On
November 21, 2008, at 6:16 a.m. I was confronted in my office
at City Hall by 10 white men and women, some in police uniforms.
One of them barked at me, "Hang up the phone".
I had been talking with my wife, Terri, who had called me
10 minutes earlier, saying that the FBI had just come to
our house to arrest me. My first response was "Well
it finally happened" and we both laughed since Terri
had been saying for years that my political work would result
in my being killed or put in jail.
My
second response was "Why are they going to arrest me."
She said she didn't know and went on to say that they forced
their way into the house when she told them that I had left
for work. She was still relating her experience with them
when the FBI accompanied by Boston Police burst into my
office and ordered me to hang up the phone.
The
large officer at the edge of my desk who had told me to
hang up the phone, then ordered me to stand up and put my
hands behind my back. As I followed his instructions, I
started to laugh which infuriated him. "What are you
laughing at?", he shouted. I replied, "You would
never understand".
The
situation was obviously a serious one. At the same time
these ten "public safety officers" standing around
me in my small office getting ready to handcuff a 68 year
old, black, 9 year City Councilor, and lifelong activist
seemed so ludicrous that I couldn't help but laugh. It seemed
that somehow I was playing a part in a grade C detective
movie or perhaps even a Keystone Cops movie.
At
that point, the leader of the group said move and I and
the pack of "public safety officials" began to
move out the door, some in front of me and some behind.
As we walked down the hall to the elevators, I wanted to
ask how much each of them earned per hour because it seemed
like a tremendous waste of tax payer money. Did they think
I was going to make a break for it and they needed ten officers
to take me down? Even if they thought I was going to perform
an act of civil disobedience, they wouldn't need ten officers.
When
the elevator arrived, it seemed that they all wanted to
ride with me so most of us crowded into the elevator and
rode to the first floor level where we walked out to the
parking area where I saw a traditional red Ford parked and
waiting for us. The young, male FBI agent who had interviewed
me three weeks before said "Get in the car". I
turned my back to him so he could take the cuffs off, when
he again barked "Get in the car". I then realized
that they were playing "We've caught the dangerous
criminal who will make a run for it, if we take the handcuffs
off". Or maybe it was the "Now that we have arrested
this arrogant, loudmouth "Negro" politician, lets
show him whose in charge and how difficult we are going
to make life for him".
Regardless
which scene they (the young female agent who had also interviewed
me was by then standing beside him) were playing, the best
thing to do was to try to make myself as comfortable as
possible, hand cuffs and all in the back seat of their car.�
As I listened to them talk, it became apparent that they
were getting ready to take me on a 45 minute ride to Worcester,
MA. Apparently US Attorney Sullivan had scheduled my arrest
to take place on the day that the judge magistrate who would
arraign me was at the Courthouse in Worcester.
After
about twenty minutes of trying to get comfortable with my
hands cuffed behind my back, I started to have the urge
to ask if they could at least loosen the cuffs. However,
it occurred to me that their objective was to make me as
uncomfortable as possible. So it was clear that the best
thing to do was to suck it up and understand that my discomfort
was miniscule compared to what others endure at the hands
of "public safety officers" every day.
Unfortunately,
when we arrived in Worcester, they couldn't find their way
to the court house. They kept asking questions of the person
on the other end of their radio unit but it didn't seem
to do any good. However, after what seemed to be a half
an hour, finally we arrived at the Worcester federal court
house and parked in the back. The� female officer opened
the rear door and said "Get out". I thought for
a moment about resisting and forcing them to have the court
officers carry me out of the car into the jail. But then
an internal voice said what would be the point or value
of an act of resistance at this point.
Sitting
in the barren jail cell, with no idea of my crime, I felt
very alone. I had no idea what time I would go before the
judge. However, I knew I had to find some way to keep myself
calm until that moment. Remembering Nichiren Daishonen,
the Buddhist monk who had been imprisoned for his views,
I began to chant "Nam Myo Ho Renge Kyo" the powerful
chant he had developed. After a few minutes I would pause
and then begin again.
After
about an hour or so, I began to hear this strange clanging
against the bars and realized that I was not alone.� I assumed
that the clanging was a message to stop chanting.� At that
moment, I was in no mood to take his or her feelings into
consideration. I rationalized that whether s/he realized
it, my chanting was helping� both of us.
Eventually,
I dozed off and was awakened by a guard saying that my lawyers
had arrived.� It was now two thirty. I was told that in
a half hour, I would be led into court to begin the most
difficult ordeal of my life. While I was being moved to
Worcester, Terri had been contacted by Kazi Toure and Steve
Kirshbaum, political allies, who when they heard I had been
arrested secured legal assistance.�
Kazi
worked as an investigator for Barry Wilson, a local criminal
lawyer, who agreed to represent me at the arraignment. Steve,
a steward of the School Bus Drivers Union, asked John Pavlos,
also a criminal lawyer, to join Barry. Also through the
bus drivers union and the International Action Center, Steve
organized a group of men to provide security on the porch
of our house bringing a sense of relief to Terri who was
being barraged by the ever present, ever insistent press.
In
the short time we had before going before the magistrate,
John and Barry showed me the affidavit that the prosecutor
had given them.� The affidavit said that I was being charged
with extortion, three counts of lying to the FBI officials
who had interviewed me three weeks before, and conspiracy
with Senator Dianne Wilkerson, the first Black female state
senator. There were also two pictures of a black hand putting
something in my hand. I couldn't see the person's face but
the picture on the wall led me to believe that it had been
taken in my district office.
The
affidavit identified the hand as belonging to US Attorney
Sullivan's cooperating witness who they only identified
as a community business person. The senator and I were accused
of being in a conspiracy to extort money from him.� The
charges of lying to FBI agents were based on the fact that
when I was interviewed three weeks earlier on the day of
the Senator's arrest for taking bribes, I was asked three
questions by the officers. Did I know a local businessman,
Ron Wilburn? Did Mr. Wilburn ever offer to give me a fund
raiser? Did Mr. Wilburn ever give me money? To which I answered
No, No, and definitely Not. How could I been given money
by a person that I didn't even know. My answers to these
questions increased the number of my crimes (counts) from
two to five.
After
talking briefly about the procedures of the court process
and agreeing to meet the following Sunday, the three of
us proceeded to court. When the court officer opened the
door to the court room, what I saw almost brought tears
to my eyes. The court room was filled. There were my wife
and one of my daughters in the front row. Around them and
back of them were a myriad of other friends and supporters.
Despite the fact that Sullivan had arranged that the session
would be held 45 miles away from Boston, my family, friends,
and supporters were still there with me in my time of need.
The moment just confirmed what I have always said, "Our
greatest asset in the struggle for justice is the love and
support of each other".
As
I turned to look at the judge and prosecutor, I was amazed
by the smirk on the face of the person who would be presenting
the government's case, Asst US Attorney McNeil. I assumed
he was thinking, "Now we've got you!"� I said
to myself "But you're not going to keep me without
the fight of your life" and smiled back. The formalities
went quickly. The prosecutor read the charges. I plead not
guilty. The judge said some other things that I don't remember
and released me on my own recognizance with the reminder
that if I broke any of the conditions, I would not only
go to jail but forfeit a $50,000 bond which meant to me
that I would have to give the government $50,000 which would
have been an impossibility.
Moving
out of the court room surrounded by friends and family,
someone said that the Boston City Council President Maureen
Feeney had announced at noon that she was stripping me of
my Council Committee seats and inviting me to meet with
the Council on Monday, the next working day, to decide what
they would do. I said to myself, "It's amazing, a year
ago, I went to Maureen as a representative of Team Unity,
the four Boston City Councilors of color, and said that
if she ran for President, we would support her because we
thought she would be a fairer Council President than Councilor
Flaherty. Now that's she President, she's tried me before
I have even been indicted. Looks like we made a bad assumption
about fairness."
Before
I could think any more about the irony of her actions, the
doors to the outside were opened and in front of us were
lights, cameras, and reporters shouting, "Do you have
a statement. What have you got to say". Understanding
that to say nothing would be taken as an admission of guilt,
I went to the battery of mikes, thinking that it was amazing
that during my nine years as a Councilor, I would be lucky
if any reporters showed up to cover what I thought were
important news stories. Now that I am accused of being a
corrupt politician, they all want to hear what I have to
say.
So
I made it short and sweet. "Let me be clear. I am not
guilty of any of the charges. I have served the people of
my district with integrity over the last nine years and
intend to continue. And Council President Feeney has no
right to take away my Council powers, I haven't even been
indicted." Then it all became a blur as we moved to
get into the car and drive to Boston to prepare for Monday's
confrontation with Council President Feeney and the Council.
B)
Analysis:
1)
Psychological Warfare:
The
first piece of advice that my lawyers gave me was that the
objective of those who I was fighting, the US Attorney and
the FBI, was winning - not justice, not truth, not honest
evidence - winning by any means necessary. As I talk with
the men with whom I'm incarcerated, they say that their
experience confirms that fact. I've heard estimates of the
federal conviction rate that run from 92% to 98% with the
vast majority of the convictions coming through the accused
pleading guilty to try to get a lower sentence because of
the fear of trying to fight.
One
of the reasons, I believe, that there is a fear of fighting
is that the key strategy employed is to convince the person
that they have accused that there is no way to win so why
even try. Even the way that I was arrested was designed
to psychologically intimidate me and establish their power
in my mind. It was also racist because it was not used with
white elected officials arrested in Boston in the past.
In
the cases of both the Senator and I, the FBI came to our
houses a little before 6 in the morning, at a time when
people are either still asleep or just waking up. Their
purpose is to conduct the arrest at a time when the person
is not fully conscious. This enables them to more easily
implant the thought that they are too powerful a force to
resist and creates a fear that further weakens resistance.�
Since
I was at the office when the FBI came to my house to arrest
me and was warned by Terri that they were on the way to
the office, they did not have the psychological advantage
of surprise and disorientation when they arrived. However,
their arrest strategy had other elements designed to psychologically
intimidate. Sending 10 "public safety officers"
to arrest a 68 year old City Councilor is absurd unless
the point is to psychologically intimidate through a "show
of force". Then to have me stand up and be handcuffed
made no sense unless their objective was to reinforce the
thought that regardless of what position I held before they
came, now I am a criminal and under their complete control.
The
fact that they initiate the arrests at such an early hour
also creates an additional psychological advantage for them.
The wait between arrival at the courthouse jail at 6:30
or 7:00 o'clock in the morning and the arraignment that
will probably occur in the late afternoon is also psychologically
disruptive. The person therefore has to cope with a long
period of time without support during which anxiety is bound
to develop with a psychologically weakening effect.
The
staging of the arrest on a day when the judge was in Worcester,
45 miles away from Boston, I believe, was also part of their
psychological design. Having me arraigned in a City a significant
distance from Boston, they thought would cut down on the
number of people who could come to support me as well as
give me psychological strength. The implied message of this
action was, "You might have support but we can find
ways to cut you off from that support, anytime that we choose."
The
other crucial element of their strategy is to begin a process
of convincing the public that the person is guilty before
there can be any possibility of defense. This element is
put into action through their ally, the media. Less than
2 hours after my arrest, the media locally and nationally
were carrying the story of my arrest with pictures allegedly
showing the crime taking place.
To
reinforce the psychological imprint of the early news release,
US Attorney Sullivan called an early morning press conference
at which he told what I call "The Big Lie" (which
I will explain in detail in my next installment). The purpose
of the lie was to hide the fact that the criminal scenario
had been arranged by him not the Senator and me,I as he
alleged in the affidavit and press conference.
If
Sullivan had told the truth in the press conference, I couldn't
have been charged with conspiracy. How could the Senator
and I be conspiring to extort money from Ron Wilburn, when
Sullivan had been paying Wilburn, the alleged extorted businessman,
for over a year to carry out a sting to entrap both of us.
As I said earlier, the objective is not justice but winning.
To tell the truth would have exposed his plot to frame me.
But more about the "Big Lie" in the next installment.
2)
Media: The Storm Troopers of Federal Prosecutors' Psychological
Warfare:
While
the US prosecutors have direct control over the FBI to aid
their efforts, they have indirect control over the media
whose hunger for breaking news leads them to publicize the
stories of the prosecutors without critical analysis. After
the "reporters' write what they have been given by
the prosecutors to convict the defendant in the court of
public opinion, the columnists follow up by giving their
views to further convince the public that the FBI "Got
the right man" or "woman". All of this often
before there has even been an indictment, as in my case.
The
other role played by the media in the terror process is
to incessantly hound the person and their family. It is
hard to describe the feelings caused by having tv trucks
and reporters' cars outside your house from early in the
morning to late at night. The incessant knocking on the
door. The hounding while at work to answer their questions
as if you owe them. The knocking on neighbors' doors to
get their opinions. In�my case, reporters even called relatives
in my home town to get their reaction before I could talk
with them.
For
me, it was particularly galling because in the past when
there were important issues I wanted the media to cover,
they acted as if I didn't exist. However, now having an
opportunity to ridicule and harass me, they were constantly
at the door. The effect is a emotional wearing down not
only through the intensity of their presence but also through
the negative stories put in the press as well as on tv and
radio.� All of this takes place before the defense lawyers
even have an opportunity to see the evidence. I believe
this barrage of negative energy and coverage is one of the
reasons why the federal prosecutors have such a high percentage
of those accused taking a plea rather than going to court.�����
3)
The Counts (Charges):
The
charges themselves play a key role in the psychological
warfare, through the number of counts and the description
of the counts. For example, I was charged with extortion
which made people think that I was being accused of threatening
or coercing, Mr. Wilburn in some way. However, on the first
day of the trial, the Judge explained to the jury that to
find me guilty they did not have to find that I had put
any pressure on Mr. Wilburn. In fact, I didn't even have
to ask him for anything (which I didn't). All that was needed
under the extortion law for me to be found guilty was for
me to have been given something with the understanding that
it was being given for me to take a particular action. When
I heard the judge's statement, I assumed that the law and
its name had been designed by J. Edgar Hoover so that he
could take down any elected� official he didn't like.
As
I said above, the conspiracy charge would have been exposed
as a lie if the truth about Ron Wilburn had been told by
the US Attorney at the press conference. By keeping the
conspiracy charge alive for two and a half years, they were
able to cover the lie but by the time I went to trial, that
charge had been dropped. So when the prosecutor admitted
on the first day of the trial that Wilburn had been paid
$30,000 by them to operate a sting, the fact that they had
lied about the conspiracy was irrelevant because there were
only four charges and extortion was not one of them. One
of the four charges of course was� extortion for allegedly
accepting a thousand dollars in return for calling a hearing
regarding discrimination in the distribution of liquor licenses.
This was a hearing that the FBI admitted on the stand they
did not want to take place because of the fear that it would
embarrass the members of the Licensing Commission.
The
other three counts (charges) related to the visit by the
FBI agents on the day of the Senator's arrest. Since I had
nothing to fear as far as I knew, I agreed to meet with
them. If I had exercised good judgment I would have refused
to meet with them until I had consulted with an attorney.�
It is obvious now and should have been obvious then that
the only reason the FBI would visit me on the morning of
the Senator's arrest would be to tie me into her case. The
fact that I didn't exercise good judgment I have to admit
is one of the key reasons why I am writing this from a federal
prison. Let that be a warning to all. If the FBI come calling,
immediately call your lawyer.
The
essence of the meeting was their asking me three questions.
Do you know Ron Wilburn? Did Ron Wilburn offer you a fund
raiser? Did you accept money from him. As I said earlier
in this installment my answers were no, no, and certainly
not.� Even today I don't remember the twenty five minutes
we spent together as he carried out his instructions from
his FBI handler. Yes, I've seen the pictures. Yes, I've
listened to recordings of two conversations that lasted
about 25 minutes and I've seen the transcript of our five
minute conversation on the day that it is alleged that he
gave me a $1000. But I still don't remember meeting him.
Even he admitted at trial that we had never met before he
initiated contact at the request of the FBI.� However, those
three responses to their questions led to my being convicted
for four felonies rather than one and added to their ability
to put me in jail for 36 months. The judge also added another
unofficial count by saying that he knew I had committed
perjury when I testified in my own defense and used that
"unofficial count" to add to my time of incarceration.
C)
Actions:
I
recommend six actions that needed to counteract the prosecutorial
terrorism practiced by the prosecutors and the FBI.�
First,
the most important action to stop prosecutorial terrorism
is to start a national campaign to create a law that makes
it legal for prosecutors to be criminally charged as well
sued for misconduct. At the present time prosecutors can
Not be sued for conscious or unconscious acts of misconduct.
The rampant prosecutorial terrorism is a logical consequence,
I believe, of the desire of prosecutors at the federal,
state, and local level to win by any means necessary and
the inability to take legal action against them. "Power
corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely".�
Even
federal judges are relatively powerless to punish federal
prosecutors for their misconduct. In Massachusetts, Mark
Wolfe, Chief Justice of the Federal Bench, a former federal
prosecutor, in 2007 asked the Bar Counsel of the Massachusetts
Board of Bar Overseers to take disciplinary action against
Jeffery Auerhahn. a veteran federal prosecutor.� Asst US
Attorney Auerhahn had withheld key evidence in a Mafia case
in the 1990s. The panel established by the Bar Counsel took
no action until the end of 2010 when they recommended that
he be suspended. I am not sure whether that recommendation
was approved.
In
January 2009, two months before Sullivan resigned to become
a law partner with John Ashcroft, former US Attorney General,
Chief Justice Wolfe wrote a 42 page memorandum to Sullivan
threatening to censure Asst US Attorney Susan Sullivan (no
relation) or the US Attorney's office or both based on her
failure to disclose that a Boston police officer gave testimony
in court in a Dorchester drug case that contradicted what
the officer had told her on many occasions.
Expressing
his frustration with continuous prosecutorial misconduct,
he stated in the memo, "The egregious failure of the
government to disclose plainly material exculpatory evidence
in this case extends a dismal history of intentional and
inadvertent violations of the government's duties to disclose
in cases assigned to this court".
To
reinforce his frustration, he listed nine major cases he
presided over during the last two decades in which prosecutors
working for US Attorney Michael Sullivan and his predecessors
allegedly withheld important evidence. In several cases,
he said the misconduct led to mistrials and convictions
that were overturned (Boston Globe, January 27, 2009).
Interviewed
by Johnathan Saltzman of the Glove after the memorandum
was issued, Wolfe said that his only successful sanction
in cases of prosecutorial misconduct over two decades occurred
in 2002, when he ordered an inexperienced prosecutor to
attend a seminar on wrongful convictions after the lawyer
repeatedly withheld critical evidence.
It
seems clear that if the Chief Justice of the Massachusetts
Federal Bench has not been able to appropriately sanction
misconduct on the part of prosecutors working for US Attorney
Sullivan and previous US Attorneys, we can not expect federal
judges in general to stop prosecutorial misconduct. We have
to demand justice.� We have to demand that prosecutors not
be allowed to be above the law; that they be held accountable
for their actions. The only way to accomplish this is to
pass a law making it legal to criminally charge them as
well as sue them for prosecutorial misconduct such as the
lie that US Attorney Sullivan sent around the country on
November 21, 2008 regarding my arrest.
Second,
I think we need a campaign to require federal prosecutors
to present to the court at the time of arraignment a statement
of the procedures used in the arrests and an explanation
of why those procedures were used. I believe this is a critical
element in curtailing the government's use of psychological
warfare as well as racism in handling arrests. Forcing them
to expose to the court and the public how they conduct the
business of arrests, I believe, will force them to end the
double standards as well as the terror tactics that we have
seen practiced in Boston and elsewhere.
Third,
we need to require that affidavits which give the information
regarding the crimes that led to the arrests be sealed until
the trial begins and that similar action be taken regarding
indictments based on grand jury proceedings. The public
has a right to know the charges leading to the arrest. However,
if there is any validity in the concept that� a person should
be viewed as innocent until s/he has been convicted by a
jury of peers, the prosecutors and media have to be stopped
from trying the defendant in the court of public opinion.
Also, the sealing of the documents will stop prosecutors
from using the pre trial media as a way of building their
public image, heightening the possibilities for career advancement.
This law would also have to carry criminal penalties for
anyone distributing or publishing information from sealed
court documents.�
Fourth,
the area of compiling the counts (charges) needs to be carefully
examined for possible reforms. As said above, I believe,
the counts are used as part of the psychological warfare
process. I couldn't understand why the prosecutor and FBI
kept searching for the book in which Ron Wilburn said he
had written his telephone number on the day that he allegedly
gave me $1000. I thought that if it could be found, it would
actually support my contention of innocence since the jury
would question why I was asking for his telephone number
if I had called him four hours earlier to give him the signal
to bring me $1000. Later, I realized they would have used
it to give me another count which they believed would strengthen
the public view of the credibility of their case as well
as increase the time that I would have to spend in jail
if found guilty.
Fifth,
we need to consider reforming the grand jury process that
leads to the indictments which move the court process to
the pre trial stage. As now structured, particularly at
the federal level, the prosecutors are in complete control
of the process and spend months working with the grand jury.
This naturally builds a strong relationship between the
prosecutor and the grand jury which strengthens their willingness
to support the government's perspective. At the very least
a person summoned to testify need to be allowed to have
h/er lawyer present. At this time, only the person summoned
is not allowed to bring anyone with them into the jury room.
Sixth,
we need to begin to train activists to understand psychological
warfare; how it's used; and how to fight against it. It
is understandable that our educational institutions don't
prepare us to develop our mental capabilities so that we
are not susceptible to their psychological terror� tactics.
We have to appreciate that we are at war with those who
use their power to create psychological havoc and mentally
coerce people into a mindset where they are afraid to fight
back against oppression. We have to arm ourselves with a
science of the mind that will enable us to control our emotions
even in the face of tactics designed to destroy our psychological
stability.
Clearly,
the fight to end prosecutorial terrorism will be long and
hard. However, if America is to be strengthened as a democracy
where the people, in reality, are in control, we have to
develop a criminal justice system that focuses on justice
and not on winning by any means necessary.
A
Luta Continua - The Struggle Continues,
Chuck
Click here to
read any part in this BC series.
Next
week chapter 3:� The Big Lie
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board Member Chuck
Turner - Served as a member of the Boston City Council
for ten years and eleven months. He was a member and founder
of the Fund the Dream campaign and was the Chair of the
Council�s Human Rights Committee, and Vice Chair of the
Hunger and Homelessness Committee. Click here to
contact Mr. Turner. Your email messages will be passed on
to Mr. Turner by BC. You may also visit SupportChuckTurner.com.
You
may also write to Mr. Turner. The address is:
Charles
Turner #80641038
Hazelwood Penitentiary, P.O. Box 2000
Bruceton Mills, West Virginia 26525
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