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WSWS : News
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America : Mumia
Abu-Jamal
Mumia Abu-Jamal supporters arrested in Washington anti-death
penalty protest
By Kate Randall
1 March 2000
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About 500 people demonstrated outside of the US Supreme Court
in Washington, DC Monday, protesting the death penalty and demanding
a new trial for political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal. Jamal has
been incarcerated on Pennsylvania's death row for 18 years after
being framed up for the December 9, 1981 murder of Philadelphia
police officer Daniel Faulkner. The protest was organized by the
Free Abu-Jamal Coalition.
Eighteen people have been put to death in the US so far this
year. Since the death penalty was reinstated in by the US Supreme
Court in 1976, 616 executions have been carried out.
Police detained about 150 protesters, who were taken into custody
for civil disobedience. A similar protest of about 400 outside
a federal appeals court building in San Francisco resulted in
164 arrests. The Washington demonstrators were arrested for sitting
down in the street between the Supreme Court and the US Capitol,
and for crossing police barricades to go on to the Supreme Court
plaza, which was blocked off because of the demonstration.
Abu-Jamal's case is currently at a critical stage before the
federal Third Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia where Jamal
is appealing for a new trial before Judge William H. Yohn Jr.
Last October Pennsylvania Governor Tom Ridge signed a death warrant
for Abu-Jamal, setting December 2, 1999 as the date of execution.
Jamal's lawyers applied for and were granted a stay of execution
pending appeals. They have filed a petition for a new trial citing
29 constitutional violations in his case. The US Supreme Court
rejected appeals filed on Abu-Jamal's behalf in 1990 and 1999.
The campaign for Abu-Jamal has been gaining international support.
On February 17 Amnesty International issued a 35-page report,
"A Life in the Balance: The Case of Mumia Abu-Jamal,"
which documents the human rights organization's research into
his case and calls for a new trial. On February 5, 8,000 people
demonstrated in Berlin calling for Jamal's freedom and for an
end to the death penalty.
The Washington demonstration was timed to coincide with the
Supreme Court hearing arguments in the case of Williams v. Taylor.
Virginia death row inmate Terry Williams is appealing a Fourth
Circuit ruling that a state prisoner seeking relief in federal
court on the basis of ineffective counsel must demonstrate that
all 12 jurors would have imposed a lesser sentence had the inmate
received adequate representation. The case challenges tenets of
the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, signed
into law by Bill Clinton, which severely restricts the right of
death row prisoners to file federal habeas corpus petitions.
The state of Texas has scheduled the execution of Odell Barnes
Jr. for March 1. Barnes has spent eight years on death row after
being convicted of the robbery and murder of Helen Bass. If carried
out, it would be the tenth execution in the state so far this
year. According to Barnes's attorneys, newly uncovered evidence
in his case creates reasonable suspicion that others robbed and
murdered Mrs. Bass. They also argue that prosecutors in the case
had secret deals with some suspects and other witnesses in return
for their testimony against Barnes. Odell Barnes's attorneys are
calling for Texas Governor and Republican presidential candidate
George W. Bush to grant a 30-day reprieve of the execution.
On February 24 Texas put to death 62-year-old Betty Lou Beets
after Governor Bush refused to grant her a reprieve. The US Supreme
Court refused to hear Beets's case, despite arguments by her current
attorneys that she received inadequate defense counsel at her
1985 trial. It has also been revealed that she suffered physical,
sexual and emotional abuse both as a child and by her husbands.
See Also:
TV documentary presents case
of political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal
[23 February 2000]
Amnesty International calls
for new trial for Mumia Abu-Jamal
[19 February 2000]
Thousands demonstrate in Berlin
in support of Mumia Abu-Jamal
[17 February 2000]
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