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<h1><b>Abu-Jamal asks appeals court to reconsider
ruling</b></h1><font size=3>The Associated Press<br>
Article Last Updated: 07/07/2008 10:12:29 PM EDT<br><br>
PHIADELPHIALawyers for death-row inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal on Monday asked
a federal appeals court to reconsider its decision not to grant him a new
trial. <br><br>
Abu-Jamal was convicted and sentenced to death in the slaying of a
Philadelphia police officer more than 25 years ago, a case that gained
worldwide attention as the former Black Panther and radio reporter
maintained he was the victim of a racist justice system. <br><br>
In March, a three-judge panel of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled that Abu-Jamal, 54, must be given a new sentencing hearing. But the
court did not throw out his conviction. <br><br>
Robert R. Bryan, one of Abu-Jamal's lawyers, on Monday asked the panel
and the full court to take another look. In his filing, he said the panel
should have ordered a hearing on Abu-Jamal's contention that prosecutors
intentionally excluded blacks from his jury in violation of a later 1986
U.S. Supreme Court decision. <br><br>
Prosecutors are also appealing the appeals court's ruling. <br><br>
Since Abu-Jamal's trial, activists in the United States and Europe have
rallied around him as he has kept his case in the spotlight through books
and radio broadcasts. <br><br>
A Philadelphia jury convicted Abu-Jamal, who is black, of killing white
police Officer Daniel Faulkner in 1981 after the patrolman pulled over
Abu-Jamal's brother in an overnight traffic stop. <br><br>
Prosecutors say Faulkner, 25, managed to shoot Abu-Jamal during the
confrontation. A wounded Abu-Jamal, <br>
his own gun lying nearby, was still at the scene when police arrived, and
authorities consider the evidence against him overwhelming. <br><br>
Abu-Jamal, born Wesley Cook, has argued in numerous appeals that racism
by the judge and prosecutors corrupted his 1982 conviction at the hands
of a mostly white jury. <br><br>
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court upheld his conviction and death sentence
in 1989. It also rejected three other appeals. <br><br>
<br><br>
Information from: The Philadelphia Inquirer,
<a href="http://www.philly.com">http://www.philly.com<br><br>
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