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Brutal Society
1,700 at New York rally to defend Mumia Abu-Jamal
By David Walsh
3 March 1999
Some 1,700 people filled
Town Hall in midtown Manhattan last Friday night to oppose the
execution of former Black Panther and MOVE supporter Mumia Abu-Jamal.
Framed up because of his political convictions and activism, Abu-Jamal
has been on death row in a Pennsylvania prison for more than 16
years. His motion for a new trial was rejected by the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court in October. Governor Thomas Ridge is expected to
set a new execution date within the next few months.
Abu-Jamal's case has become a focal point in the struggle against
capital punishment and in defense of democratic rights. The former
radio journalist from Philadelphia has spoken out articulately
from behind bars on the inhuman treatment meted out to death row
prisoners. Many of those in attendance February 26 were students
and young people angered by the law-and-order hysteria of the
political establishment. The meeting took place three weeks after
the brutal slaying of African immigrant Amadou Diallo by New York
City police, who fired 41 shots at the unarmed man.
Addressing Friday night's gathering, Abu-Jamal's attorney Leonard
Weinglass outlined the present state of the legal case. Weinglass
and his legal team are currently petitioning the US Supreme Court
for a writ of certiorari, a legal device by which the high court
may elect to review an issue. Abu-Jamal has until April 24 to
file the petition. In the motion he is asking the court to review
violations of his Sixth Amendment rights. Abu-Jamal was denied
the right to defend himself and have the legal representative
of his choosing. For most of his trial, he was barred from the
court by Judge Albert Sabo.
If the Supreme Court rejects the application for a writ of
certiorari, which is likely, Abu-Jamal's lawyers will proceed
through the normal appeal process by seeking a writ of habeas
corpus from the federal district court in Philadelphia.
At the rally Weinglass noted that key witnesses in the case
had recanted previous testimony, wrung out of them by police pressure,
implicating Abu-Jamal in the December 1981 shooting death of police
officer Daniel Faulkner. He further explained that Abu-Jamal's
original lawyer was inexperienced and has subsequently been disbarred.
The court-appointed attorney called no experts to testify and,
lacking the necessary funds, did not hire a pathologist to examine
the evidence. This attorney has acknowledged that he did not interview
any of the witnesses.
Weinglass observed that the October 1998 ruling by the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court justices, all elected officials, rejecting the motion
for a new trial was "a career decision." They were afraid
for their jobs, he suggested.
Abu-Jamal's attorney condemned the Effective Death Penalty
Act of 1996, signed into law by Bill Clinton, which severely restricts
the right of federal courts to overturn decisions in state trials.
Weinglass explained that before this law went into effect 38 percent
of state death penalty cases had been reversed by federal judges.
Without these reversals, he said, there would now be 5,000 individuals
on death row in the US. The attorney saluted those in attendance,
suggesting that there was increased support and interest in Abu-Jamal's
case. He told the crowd that the next 12 to 18 months would be
decisive.
Robert Meeropol, the younger son of executed political prisoners
Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, sent a message to the February 26
rally. It read in part: "During the 1990s I have spoken frequently
about my parents' case, the death penalty and my work to help
the children of progressive activists who are under attack in
our country. But I have been speaking about my parents' case since
the 1970s. During the 1970s a radio journalist interviewed me
while I was in Philadelphia. He gave me a platform to spread the
word of my parents' frame-up. During that interview he asked if
something like what happened to my parents could happen again
in this country. And we agreed that given the courts and racism,
it could. And now that interviewer, Mumia Abu-Jamal, faces execution!
He is the first political prisoner in this country to face execution
since my parents."
Novelist E.L. Doctorow also sent a message to the gathering,
indicating his deep skepticism about the police testimony. He
noted that most industrial nations "have forsworn the death
penalty" and termed it "inconceivable" that Abu-Jamal
should be executed.
Others who addressed the rally included Monica Moorehead of
the Workers World Party, C. Clark Kissinger of Refuse & Resist!,
Dennis Rivera of hospital workers' union 1199, Michael Tarif Warren,
another of Abu-Jamal's attorneys, former US Attorney General Ramsey
Clark, and Geronimo Ji Jaga (Pratt), the former Black Panther
freed recently after 27 years in prison. Actor Ossie Davis served
as one of the moderators of the rally, and singer Pete Seeger
performed.
Mass demonstrations in support of Abu-Jamal are planned for
April 24 in Philadelphia and San Francisco.
See Also:
The political issues in the
fight to defend Mumia Abu-Jamal
[26 February 1999]
New date to be set for execution
of Mumia Abu-Jamal
[30 January 1999]
The Case
of Mumia Abu-Jamal
Political prisoner denied new trial after 16 years on death row
[18 November 1998]
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