[Ppnews] Analysis of Mumia court ruling & 4/19 Phila Demo
Political Prisoner News
ppnews at freedomarchives.org
Mon Mar 31 10:48:03 EDT 2008
http://phillyimc.org/en/node/66348 (Philadelphia Independent Media Center)
THE DEMONSTRATION IN PHILADELPHIA WILL BE ON
APRIL 19! (NOT ON APRIL 26, AS WAS ORGINALLY ANNOUNCED)
--The reason we moved it is to maximize on the
publicity in Philadelphia leading up to the PA
democratic primaries. The primaries will be the
following week, so by holding our demonstration
on the 19th we may be able to make use of the
press. Thank you for your understanding, and
please help us clarify this matter by spreading the word.
**************************************
STATEMENT FROM PAM AFRICA, Coordinator of the
International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal (March 29, 2008):
Last week's court decision was not a
victory. While we obviously prefer to have Mumia
alive, instead of executed, life in prison
without parole is an unacceptable sentence for an
innocent man that was convicted with a blatantly
unfair trial. Further, there is still no
guarantee that he will not be executed. Also,
even if the overturning of the death penalty is
eventually finalized, there is no guarantee that
he will be moved into the general prison
population, because the government has always
found ways to make "exceptions" for political prisoners like Mumia.
Once again the courts have held Mumia's case to
different standards than other cases. At the 1982
trial Prosecutor McGill used 10 of his 15
peremptory strikes to remove otherwise acceptable
black jurors, yet the court ruled that there was
not even the appearance of discrimination against
just one of these black jurors!
Judge Thomas Ambro has noted this blatant
double-standard with the court's rejection of the
"Batson" claim regarding racist jury selection,
and he states in his dissenting opinion that the
court's ruling "goes against the grain of our
prior actionsI see no reason why we should not
afford Abu-Jamal the courtesy of our precedents."
We have absolutely no faith in the judicial
system, but if Mumia does have a court
proceeding, we will continue to mobilize to pack
the courtroom and the streets in support of
Mumia, just like we have always done whenever
there was a courtroom proceeding for Mumia,
whether he was present or not. However, we know
that if Mumia gets justice, it will not come from
the courts, but only from the pressure generated by the people.
Therefore, we will take to the streets with a
mass-demonstration in Philadelphia on April 19
demanding Mumia's release based on the evidence
of both innocence and judicial misconduct from
the City of Philadelphia all the way up to the
federal level. In response to the recent court
decision, numerous demonstrations have already
been organized internationally and inside the US.
On April 19, with the media spotlight on
Pennsylvania's Presidential Primary Election,
supporters from around the world will gather in
Philadelphia to take a constitutional stand and
show our outrage with this unjust court decision.
***************************************************
LINN WASHINGTON ON 3RD CIRCUIT DECISION ON MUMIA
IMPORTANT AND POWERFUL ARTICLE BY LINN WASHINGTON
The following article analyzing the recent
decision by the Third Circuit to deny Mumia a new
trial, is written by Philadelphia journalist and
long time friend of Mumia, Linn Washington. It is
an excellent piece, asserting straight up that
there is NO victory in this decision as Mumia is
not even granted life in prison without parole,
horrific and unacceptable as that alternative
is. The prosecution still has the right to fight
for and potentially win the execution of
Mumia. Also, in describing all the violations of
their own precedents that the Third Circuit
committed in making this decision, based on the
minority position (remember it was a 2-1
decision), Linn provides us, through that
dissenting voice, a means for challenging the
legitimacy, if not the legality, of this whole
process. We must publicize this information
while asserting the total unacceptability and
viciousness of this decision. Read this
article. And let's together fight like crazy to
defeat all those forces that are determined to
silence, execute, and forever imprison our
Brother Mumia. ONTO PHILADELPHIA ON APRIL
19TH!!! FREE MUMIA AND ALL OUR POLITICAL PRISONERS.
Suzanne Ross, for the Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition
*********************
Observations and analysis of Linn Washington Jr.
on the federal Third Circuit ruling in the Mumia
Abu-Jamal case issued on March 27, 2008.
Washington, is a journalist and university
professor in Philadelphia who has written
extensively about the contentious case since
Abu-Jamal's arrest in December 1981.
OVERVIEW
The long awaited ruling by the Third Circuit
Court of Appeals in the Mumia Abu-Jamal case
released on March 27, 2008 again displays the
dismaying pattern of US courts ignoring precedent
to deny relief to this death row journalist whose
plight generates international support.
Precedent in American law means courts following
previous court rulings when determining specific legal issues.
Precedent is the bedrock of American law.
America law requires courts to follow precedent
unless significant evidence and/or compelling
rationales necessitate changing precedent.
This Third Circuit ruling changes precedent. This
ruling changes precedent by applying legal
procedures in a highly questionable manner to
dismiss compelling evidence of injustice against Abu-Jamal.
The Third Circuit did uphold the elimination of
Abu-Jamal's death sentence. This is no victory
because the ruling upheld his conviction thus
condemning Abu-Jamal to life in prison.
This ruling refused to grant Abu-Jamal a new
hearing or new trial on three compelling issues:
prosecutors using racism to exclude African
Americans from the jury during Abu-Jamal's 1982
trial; the prosecutor making improper comments to
that '82 jury at the end of the trial; and
pro-prosecution bias by the '82 trial judge during a 1995 appeals hearing.
The Third Circuit previously granted relief to
persons convicted of murder in Philadelphia after
ruling that Philadelphia prosecutors had
illegally excluded African Americans from juries.
However, in this Abu-Jamal case ruling, the court
found no fault in evidence of exclusion of
African Americans from the jury in his 1982 trial.
Curiously, the evidence of exclusion at
Abu-Jamal's trial is of equal or greater
magnitude than proof of exclusion previously
found acceptable for relief by the Third Circuit.
These previous rulings on jury discrimination
formed the precedent on that issue for the Third Circuit.
That precedent stated it is wrong for prosecutors
to discriminate against even one black potential
juror. Additionally, that precedent stated
defendants did not have to object to jury
selection discrimination by prosecutors immediately when it occurred.
Yet, this ruling reversed precedent on those two points of legal procedure.
A week before this Abu-Jamal ruling, the US
Supreme Court granted relief to a death row
inmate in Louisiana because of a discriminatory
jury selection process. That Supreme Court ruling
was written by a Justice on that court who
formerly served on the Third Circuit.
That Justice, Samuel Alito, had approved relief
to Philadelphia murder defendants due to
discriminatory jury selection practices by
prosecutors. Alito, in a February 2005 Third
Circuit ruling, stated prosecutors commit a
violation by removing "any black juror because"
of their race - a position similar to the
position contained in that recent US Supreme Court ruling he authored.
THIRD CIRCUIT RULING
The Third Circuit's ruling rested on a procedural
finding by two of the three judges on this
appeal's court panel. This finding stated that
lawyers for Abu-Jamal during the 1982 trial and
the 1995 appeal hearing failed to follow the
procedures legally required to properly raise the
issue of prosecutors improperly using racism during the jury selection process.
The panel's majority asserted that "Abu-Jamal has
forfeited his Batson claim by failing to make a
timely objection" to improper procedures by
prosecutors referencing the US Supreme Court's
1986 Batson ruling that outlaws the exclusion of
black jurors for reasons rooted in racism.
Philadelphia area author and investigative
reporter Dave Lindorff notes the absurdity of
holding Abu-Jamal's lawyer responsible for not
strictly following procedures during the 1982
trial that the US Supreme Court did not create
until four years later in that 1986 Batson case.
No lawyer (or judge) in the United States could
predicted what procedure the US Supreme Court
would order four years in the future observes
Lindorff, author of the seminal 2003 book on the
Abu-Jamal case: "Killing Time"
In reaching this conclusion against Abu-Jamal's
jury discrimination claim, that Third Circuit
panel's majority created a new standard for
persons raising Batson claims in that court.
This standard requires that a Batson violation
claim must be raised at the time of jury
selection -- a contemporaneous objection.
Interestingly, in reaching this conclusion of
procedural errors by Abu-Jamal's attorney, the
panel's majority failed to note that this lawyer
at 1982 trial was unfairly thrust into the jury
selection process after that process was underway
without the opportunity to do any preparation.
The trial judge granted the prosecutor's request
to remove Abu-Jamal from selecting his own jury,
a decision without merit that unfairly benefited
the prosecutor and stripped Abu-Jamal of his
right to represent himself. Plus, this action
aggravated tensions between Abu-Jamal and his attorney.
Further, the panel's majority faulted an
Abu-Jamal lawyer for not properly raising the
jury selection racism issue during Abu-Jamal's
first appeal in the late 1989s to the Pa Supreme
Court without acknowledging a major error
committed by the lawyer who filed that appeal.
That attorney prepared that appeal without ever reviewing the trial transcript.
There is no way that attorney could have prepared
a legally valid appeal without knowing what
specifically had happened at trial. (That appeal
attorney was also suffering from what proved to
be a fatal brain tumor, a medical condition that
impaired that attorney's cognitive abilities.)
In creating this new standard, the panel's
majority makes it harder to prove Batson
violations. Plus, this standard changes that
court's precedent on procedures needed to raise Batson claims.
The judge who dissented from his two colleagues
faulted them for creating this new standard, a
standard not ordered by the US Supreme Court.
"This case's newly created contemporaneous
objection rulegoes against the grain of our
prior actions, as our Court has addressed Batson
challenges on the merits without requiring that
an objection be made during jury selection in
order to preserve" future appellate review, the dissenter said.
This judge, speaking specifically to changing
precedent, said since Third Circuit precedent did
"not have a federal contemporaneous objection
ruleI see no reason why we should not afford
Abu-Jamal the courtesy of our precedents."
Additionally, this dissenter stated that jury
discrimination practices displayed in a now
infamous video-taped training session at the
Philadelphia DAs Office gave "a view of the
culture" of that office during the 1980s when Abu-Jamal was tried.
This dissenter criticized his two colleagues for
failing to make the obvious connection between
the discrimination instruction given at the taped
session and discriminatory practices used by
Philadelphia prosecutors before, during and after the 1980s.
"Indeed, given that Abu-Jamal's trial preceded
Batson, it is not far-fetched to argue that the
culture of discrimination was even worse," the dissenter declared.
Previously, the Third Circuit ordered new federal
trial court hearings to collect more evidence to
enable full and fair determinations on jury discrimination claims.
The Third Circuit's ruling rejected that procedure for Abu-Jamal.
MAJOR FLAWS IN COURT RULINGS
This practice of creating new court standards to
only apply to Abu-Jamal was criticized in an
Amnesty International report of the Abu-Jamal
case controversy released in 2001.
AI criticized the Pa Supreme Court for altering
its prior rulings - precedents - to reach results against Abu-Jamal.
In 1986, for example, the Pa Supreme Court
overturned a Philadelphia death sentence after
ruling that a prosecutor named Joseph McGill made
improper comments to the jury during a trail
presided over by Judge Albert Sabo.
McGill prosecuted Abu-Jamal in a 1982 trial presided over by Judge Sabo.
Abu-Jamal's attorneys had alleged that McGill
engaged in jury selection discrimination - a
claim documented by evidence but a claim that the
Third Circuit panel's majority rejected. Sabo's
rulings during that 1982 trail aided this documentable discrimination.
During Abu-Jamal's '82 trial, McGill made the
same comments to the jury that the Pa high court
faulted in its 1986 ruling. But when the Court
upheld Abu-Jamal's conviction in 1989 it refused
to find any fault with McGill making the same
comments it had faulted him for in its ruling three years before.
Then, in 1990, the Pa Supreme Court reinstated
its 1986 standard regarding prosecutors making
improper comments like McGill made.
The Pa Supreme Court's flip-flopping on this form
of prosecutorial misconduct led Amnesty
International to state in its 2001 report that:
"This contradictory series of precedents leaves
the disturbing impression that the Court invented
a new standard of procedure to apply it to one
case only: that of Mumia Abu-Jamal."
McGill's improper comments to the jury faulted by
the Pa Supreme Court in 1986 were an appeal issue
before the Third Circuit Court. That federal
court panel found no fault in McGill's comments,
denying Abu-Jamal relief he should have received
if those federal appeals judges fairly followed established law.
The Third Circuit panel also rejected allegations
that Judge Sabo was biased during a major 1995 appeals hearing.
Sabo's biased antics during that 1995 proceeding
were so outrageous this misconduct provoked
strong, caustic criticisms from even
Philadelphia's normally anti-Abu-Jamal media. An
August 1995 editorial in the Philadelphia
Inquirer blasted Sabo's "injudicious conduct"
that included verbally badgering Abu-Jamal's
attorneys and even briefly jailing one of those
attorneys for objecting to one of his improper rulings.
Scores of newspaper articles from the New York
Times to the ultra-conservative/law-&-order
Washington Times reported on Sabo's
pro-prosecution bias at that '95 appeal hearing.
The Pa Supreme Court curtly dismissed this
widespread journalistic criticism by contending
that the "view of a handful of journalists" did
not convince that Court of Sabo's bias.
Five of the seven Pa Supreme Court justices that
upheld Abu-Jamal's conviction in 1998 received
campaign contributions from the lead group
seeking Abu-Jamal's execution, Philadelphia's
police union, the Fraternal Order of Police
(FOP). One of those '98 justices was the ex-DA of
Philadelphia who as DA fought to execute Abu-Jamal.
The Third Circuit agreed with the Pa Supreme
Court's 1998 ruling that no evidence exists
showing a "settled bias" by Sabo against
Abu-Jamal. The Third Circuit panel made this
assertion despite noting Sabo making a series of
"intemperate remarks" against Abu-Jamal and his
defense attorneys during that 1995 appeal hearing.
In another flip-flop ruling, the Pa Supreme Court
in March 1988 found that a single statement
uttered by the judge during the murder trial of a
former Pa State Trooper "was extremely
prejudicial" to this Trooper who killed a woman inside a judge's office.
Where the Pa Supreme Court granted a new trial to
that killer cop because of that judge's one
improper comment, one year later the same Court
found no fault in numerous opinion laden
statements Judge Sabo made during the Abu-Jamal trial.
Sabo rejected requests to remove himself from
hearing that '95 appeal made by Abu-Jamal
attorneys citing his pro-prosecution during the
1982 trial. News articles, editorials and
commentaries all faulted Sabo for not removing
himself stating his failure recuse himself
graphically displayed unfairness in a proceeding
where fairness was desperately needed.
Journalistic watch-dogs normally hostile to
Abu-Jamal sought the face of fairness in that '95
proceeding both to follow established law and to
quell critics claiming Sabo's unfairness against Abu-Jamal undermined fairness.
The federal panel's majority employed a legal
procedure to sidestep Sabo's clear and illegal
bias - an Achilles Heel of that federal ruling and this entire case.
It is incredible to contend that the widely
condemned Judge Sabo who presided during most
trial court proceedings in the Abu-Jamal's case
did not violate any of Abu-Jamal's rights at any
time - despite his history of violating rights in this case and other cases.
Judge Sabo handled 32 murder trials that ended in
death sentences before his retirement. But 24 of
those sentences in Sabo's courtroom had been
vacated for errors as of June 2007 according to
the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Some
of those death sentences were reverse due to
misconduct and/or mistakes by Sabo.
Sabo had once ordered prosecutors to pursue a
death penalty when the death penalty had been
ruled illegal in Pennsylvania. Sabo's ordering
that illegal procedure led to overturning that death sentence.
WHAT NEXT?
This March 2008 Third Circuit ruling leaves
Abu-Jamal with few legal options to challenge his conviction.
Abu-Jamal can appeal the panel's ruling to the
entire Third Circuit Court hoping for that full
Court to overturn the panel's ruling. Further, he
can appeal any Third Circuit ruling to the US Supreme Court.
There is a slight prospect of new action in Pa state courts.
The Third Circuit issued an order stating
Abu-Jamal will receive a life-sentence unless
Philadelphia prosecutors hold a new penalty phase
hearing seeking to reinstate his death sentence within six months.
This mini-trial style hearing would allow
Abu-Jamal to present evidence, including new
evidence of innocence that has emerged like a flood since his first trial.
But it is unclear if prosecutors will pursue this
route that could create evidence and procedure
that could secure a new round of federal appeals for Abu-Jamal.
OVERLOOKED CRUX OF CASE
Sadly, the federal judges at the trial and
appellate court levels, like judges in Pa state
courts, have refused to uphold the most
fundamental issue in the contentious Abu-Jamal case: the right to a fair trial.
Critics of Abu-Jamal's conviction from
Philadelphia's Francisville section to France all
feel he was denied a fair trial.
Police and prosecutors blatantly engaging in
misconduct to secure a conviction destroys fair
trial rights. A trial judge openly biased towards
police and prosecutors destroys fair trial
rights. Court applying the law in the Abu-Jamal
case differently from applied in other cases destroys equal justice rights.
The Pa Supreme Court declared in a 1959 ruling
involving a Philadelphia murder case that every
defendant is entitled "to all the safeguards of a
fair trialeven if evidence of guilt piles as high a Mt Everest"
Abu-Jamal was four-years-old when the Pa Supreme
Court issued that 1959 ruling against judges and
prosecutors cutting-corners during a trial.
Abundant evidence documents that corners-cut by
the prosecutor and judge during Abu-Jamal's trial
and by judges during his appeals corrupted his
rights to a fair trial and equal justice - rights
guaranteed by the US Constitution.
In June 2007, state courts in Pennsylvania
overturned the 200th death penalty case since
1978 when that state reinstated executions, the ACLU stated.
It is incredible to contend that 200 death
penalty cases contained errors egregious enough
to be vacated but not a single element in the
Abu-Jamal case warrants either a new hearing or a new trial.
Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
415 863-9977
www.Freedomarchives.org
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