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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
The Jena Six: Mychal Bells case to be opened to the
public
By Hiram Lee
30 November 2007
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the author
Judge Thomas Yeager of Louisianas 9th District Court
ruled November 21 that all proceedings in the juvenile court case
of Mychal Bell are to be made public. Bell is one of six black
teenagers from Jena, Louisiana to have been arrested and charged
in connection with the beating of a white student, Justin Barker,
in December 2006, following the hanging of nooses at the local
high school and months of racial tensions in the small Louisiana
town.
The November 21 ruling came as the result of a lawsuit filed
by more than 20 media groups including CNN, the Associated Press
and the New York Times. In most juvenile cases media are
barred, lawyers are banned from making public comments and the
defendants identity is protected. According to Louisiana
law, however, cases involving children charged with violent crimes
are public. Judge Yeager apparently relied on this law to open
up the case.
Given the repeated violations of democratic rights by authorities
acting behind closed doors, defense attorneys for the Jena Six
have supported opening proceedings to public scrutiny. In
this case the more light in the proceedings, the more justice,
David Utter, the lawyer for Jesse Ray Beard, the youngest of the
Jena Six defendants, told the WSWS.
Don Wilson, an attorney representing J.P. Mauffray, the judge
who has presided over both the adult and juvenile cases of Mychal
Bell and has kept the juvenile case closed to the public, sought
to keep Bells proceedings in secrecy, arguing that Judge
Yeager did not have the authority to overrule a judge of equal
standing. Yeager nevertheless did rule to open future proceedings
in Bells case and allowed for the examination by the media
of court transcripts from prior hearings in the case. Gag orders
preventing attorneys involved with Bells case from speaking
to the media will also now be lifted. Mauffrays attorney
has made clear his intentions to appeal the decision.
This is just the latest hurdle to be crossed in the case of
Mychal Bell, who has been caught up in a legal nightmare since
his arrest almost one year ago. The teenager was initially charged
with attempted murder in 2006 in connection with the beating of
a white classmate, Justin Barker, who was briefly knocked unconscious
in the melee but remained well enough to attend a school function
the very same evening. Bells charges were later reduced
to aggravated second-degree battery and conspiracy to commit the
same. Though he was only 16 years old at the time of his arrest,
Bell was tried in adult court and convicted by an all-white jury.
While awaiting sentencing in September, Bells convictions
were overturned by the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled
the teenager should not have been tried as an adult. The decision
to throw out Bells convictions did not, however, set the
young man free.
Left with the option to appeal to the Louisiana Supreme Court
or retry Bell as a juvenile, LaSalle Parish District Attorney
Reed Walters chose to take the case into the juvenile court system,
charging Bell once again with battery and conspiracy. Bell, who
had spent 9 months in jail awaiting his first trial due to his
familys inability to meet his $90,000 bail, was forced to
remain behind bars while Walters came to his decision.
Once the new charges were filed, another bail amount was set
at $45,000. This time Bell was released. Just two weeks after
this long-awaited release, however, came another shocking turn
in which Bell was suddenly ordered by Judge Mauffray to spend
18 months in a juvenile detention center. Bell was said to have
violated his probation for previous juvenile convictions unrelated
to the present case against him.
On November 8, Bells attorneys made yet another effort
to free their young client when they filed a motion for dismissal
of all charges on the grounds that Bell, already tried and convicted
in the adult court system, could not now be tried again for the
same crimes due to the double jeopardy clause. Mauffray denied
the motion and Bell remains in custody awaiting his new trial
scheduled to begin December 6.
The struggles of Mychal Bell and the other Jena Six studentsBryant
Purvis, Robert Bailey Jr., Carwin Jones, Theo Shaw, and Jesse
Ray Beardhave exposed to the entire world the inequality
in the criminal justice system in Louisiana and the rest of the
US. In the months leading up to the December 2006 incident at
Jena High School, the small town of Jena was plagued by a number
of incidents involving racially motivated threats and assaults
against black youths in which their white assailants faced no
significant consequences for their actions. This stands in sharp
contrast to the hostile and vindictive treatment of the Jena Six
students, all of whom are black.
In August 2006, black students chose to sit under a tree at
Jena High School known to be a spot where only white students
congregated. The following day, nooses were found hanging from
the tree. The white students found responsible for the racist
threat were given light punishments. Protests by black students
against this inadequate response brought more threats, this time
from LaSalle Parish DA Reed Walters who reportedly warned the
teenagers that with one stroke of his pen he could destroy their
lives. In the months that followed, there were further racially
motivated incidents including one in which a white man pulled
a gun on Robert Bailey Jr., one of the current Jena Six defendants.
No such attackers, however, faced the kind of severe treatment
from the DAs office that the Jena Six are faced with now.
The racist nature of the Jena Six prosecution has provoked
outrage across the country and the world. A number of protests
have taken place including a large September 20 rally in Jena,
Louisiana in which tens of thousands came to register their outrage.
Most recently, on November 16, roughly 5,000 protestors marched
to the Justice Department in Washington, DC. On hand at both of
these protests was Al Sharpton who, along with Jesse Jackson and
Democratic Congressman John Conyers, has worked to keep the anger
of the protesters within the confines of the Democratic Party
and to restore their faith in the federal government as a means
of addressing the social ills which plague them. But such appeals
to the Democratic Party for the defense of the Jena Six are ultimately
a political dead end and serve to obscure the social roots underlying
the prosecution against which these six teenagers and their families
struggle.
See Also:
US: New developments in the case of the
Jena Six
[13 November 2007]
US: Jena Six defendant Mychal
Bell sent back to prison
[17 October 2007]
Jena Six teen
still in prison after conviction dismissed
[24 September 2007]
Thousands demonstrate in support
of Jena Six
[21 September 2007]
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