At critical moment
D.C. protest demands ‘Justice for Mumia’
By
Betsey Piette
Washington, D.C.
Published Nov 18, 2009 10:11 PM
Over 25,000 letters calling on U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to conduct a
civil rights investigation of the 28-year conspiracy to execute death row
political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal were delivered to the doors of the
Department of Justice in Washington at the end of a spirited march and rally on
Nov. 12.
The letter campaign took on worldwide momentum earlier this year after Holder
called for the dismissal of charges against Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska on the
basis that prosecutors in that case withheld evidence favorable to the
defense.
Protest in Washington, D.C.
WW photos: Joseph Piette
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The letters to Holder on Mumia’s behalf make it clear that in addition to
a similar pattern of evidence being withheld in his case, courts on local,
state and federal levels have all violated their own rules to keep Abu-Jamal on
death row. The letters make a point that rules that apply for a powerful,
wealthy U.S. senator like Stevens should apply as well to an African-American
political activist.
Despite a December 2001 ruling by Federal District Court Judge William Yohn
that converted the death sentence in Abu-Jamal’s case to life in prison,
he remains on death row and his life in jeopardy because of efforts by the
Philadelphia district attorney’s office to appeal Yohn’s decision.
Abu-Jamal has exhausted other federal appeals seeking a new trial in his
case.
Meanwhile Seth Williams, who was elected earlier in November as the first
African American to hold the position of Philadelphia district attorney,
campaigned on the basis of support for reinstating the death sentence in
Abu-Jamal’s case.
Evidence withheld
Dr. Suzanne Ross of the Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition, who chaired the press
conference and indoor rally at the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, told
how for 13 years the prosecution withheld evidence that a driver’s
license belonging to a passenger in the car driven by Mumia’s brother,
William Cook, was found in the pocket of slain police officer Daniel
Faulkner.
Attorney Thomas Ruffin, in outlining the legal issues in Abu-Jamal’s
case, told of photos taken by independent photographer Pedro Polakoff, who had
arrived at the scene of the Dec. 9, 1981, shooting before the police forensics
team. These pictures exposed the lies told by key prosecution witnesses during
the trial. The prosecution, which had access to these pictures, never shared
information of their existence with the defense.
Ruffin noted that there was no proof that Abu-Jamal had his gun in his hand
when he arrived on the scene, or that he had fired it. The prosecution never
presented paraffin tests for gunshot residue. The prosecution claimed that this
standard test administered to a defendant’s hands in cases when a gun was
the murder weapon had not been performed in Abu-Jamal’s case.
Solidarity with Muslim political prisoners
The press conference and protest expressed open solidarity with victims of the
state’s Cointelpro-like campaign that has targeted over 400 Muslims and
recently resulted in FBI agents gunning down Imam Luqman Ameen Abdullah in
Detroit on Oct. 31.
Several family members and supporters of the Fort Dix Five from N.J. attended
the events. Lejla Duka, the 11-year-old daughter and niece of three of these
Muslim political prisoners, spoke to the media. Two family members of another
Muslim prisoner, Shifa, came from Atlanta to take part, and organizers with
Project Salam, an organization that works to draw attention to these and other
cases, attended from Albany, N.Y.
In an important act of solidarity, plans for a separate protest at the Justice
Dept. on Nov. 21 to demand that Holder investigate the growing human rights
violations against Muslims in the U.S. were changed in order to join forces on
Nov 12.
Impressive international solidarity
Fignole Saint-Cyr, president of the Autonomous Unions of Haiti, delivered 986
signed letters collected on Abu-Jamal’s behalf and flew into Washington
to attend a press conference earlier in the day. Saint-Cyr stated, “Right
now the world should observe American justice because the U.S. is supposed to
stand for democracy. Justice should not be two-faced. Justice for Black people
and for white people should be equal.”
Thousands of signed letters were also gathered in Germany, where the city
council in Munich passed a resolution demanding justice and a new trial for
Mumia and the abolition of the death penalty in the U.S.
Letters were sent from South African labor and political groups that had
engaged in their own fight to overturn the racist apartheid system and
recognized Abu-Jamal as a victim of racist injustice in the U.S. Other letters
came from Japan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Spain and throughout Latin America.
From the U.S. there were letters and resolutions from unions, churches,
national organizations including the NAACP and the National Lawyers Guild,
Congressperson Charles Rangel and progressive politicians like Cynthia
McKinney. Representatives of the NAACP, Amnesty International, the Campaign to
End the Death Penalty, the International Action Center, the National Congress
of Puerto Rican Rights and the Riverside Church Prison Ministry also spoke.
In closing the indoor event, Pam Africa, with the MOVE organization and
International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal, stated,
“Mumia was railroaded and the evidence is there. Mumia is not on trial
here—the movement is. It’s up to us to stand up for what’s
right.”
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