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<h1><font size=4><b>Their crime was to be black at the wrong time in the
US</b></font></h1><font size=3>23/03/2010<br>
<a href="http://www.bigissuescotland.com/features/view/245" eudora="autourl">
http://www.bigissuescotland.com/features/view/245<br><br>
</a></font><h5><b>As a new film charts the story of the Angola 3, wrongly
imprisoned in America’s most notorious penitentiary for 37 years, the
documentary’s producer and Big Issue co-founder Gordon Roddick tells of
the campaign, started by his late wife Anita, to reverse the
injustice</b></h5><font size=3>Anita was never the most predictable of
people and this time I thought she had taken leave of her senses. She
came to me five years ago to enlist my support in the case of the Angola
3. She insisted I join her in Louisiana to meet Albert Woodfox and Herman
Wallace, who by then had each accumulated 34 years in solitary
confinement. The third member of the three, Robert King, had won his
liberty some four years earlier.<br><br>
I was more than a little nervous at the prospect of meeting the two men
and the whole prison-visiting experience did little to alleviate
that.<br>
Visitors have to go through a full body search and then a sniffer-dog
routine, then the wait for the bus that drops off visitors within the
huge 20,000-acre sprawl that is Angola, Louisiana’s biggest and most
forbidding State penitentiary. <br><br>
Herman and Albert were at that time being held within a closed cell
restriction block, which houses the solitary cases on two tiers, with
about 13 cells per tier. The cells are no more than nine by six feet;
they are kept in there for 23 hours a day, only getting out for a shower
or exercise in the yard, where again they are alone. Imagine for a minute
being forced to live in your bathroom for the rest of your life.<br><br>
They are constantly subjected to harassment of a petty and mean-minded
nature: Herman was put on a charge and spent three weeks in the dungeon
for having too many postage stamps in his cell. Both of them have been
subjected to torture over a prolonged period of time. <br><br>
The recommended time to be spent in Camp J, the punishment dungeon, is no
more than three weeks, as it can send strong men crazy. Herman was once
subjected to two years in Camp J. What kept him sane was the knowledge of
his innocence and a steady flow of Angola 3 visitors and
friends.<br><br>
Through the cacophony of shouting and the clanging of the steel doors, I
kept thinking – what kind of men am I on my way to meet? I had prepared a
list of questions and topics for discussion and sat down in the little
room they have for a non-contact visit. This is a very small room with
six cubicles, prisoners are separated by a wire mesh through which you
are visible. It is possible to talk without the aid of a telephone.
Herman was brought in first, with both legs shackled and with hands tied
to a waist belt. They released one hand so he could gesticulate and later
on he was allowed to use that hand to join us in eating lunch. <br><br>
My list of topics and questions was forgotten as we launched into
conversation with the ease of friends. Anita had got to know both of them
very well, through many visits and long monthly letters. The visit of
four hours seemed to fly past very quickly. What struck me most was their
quiet, perceptive intelligence and their concern with what was happening
in the outside world. <br><br>
Herman and Albert are very well read, there is no subject in terms of
current affairs or legal issues in which they are not well versed. They
have created a life for themselves that makes the most of their appalling
situation.<br><br>
Herman and Albert were adamant that while this was about the serial
injustice they had suffered, it was, more importantly, about the
thousands of black men and women still locked up following the wholesale
racist climate of the late ‘60s and early ‘70s. It is their determination
to lead this fight when they get out. They are outraged by the flagrant
disregard for the American constitution, that says all citizens are
entitled to be tried by a jury of their peers. On these grounds alone,
there should be at least a judicial review of all those unsafe
convictions.<br><br>
The visit was peppered with laughter and good humour and I left Angola
feeling uplifted by the few hours in their company, but shaken by the
thoughts of what Herman and Albert have to deal with on a daily basis. I
read most of the legal documents pertaining to their case; the more I
read the more I was convinced of their innocence and the more I was
determined to help Anita in her quest to set them free. These visits have
since become an important part of my life and I have formed a deep and
lasting friendship with Herman, Albert and Robert. <br><br>
Congressman John Conyers, chairman of the Congressional Judiciary
Committee, made a visit to see the two men. He was both moved and
impressed with the positive attitude they displayed and he came back to
Washington DC and gave a speech in support of them. He resolved not to
rest until they have been set free. Five days after his visit, Herman and
Albert were moved to a high security dormitory with 14 other prisoners
and for a few months had respite from the confines of solitary. After
about six months they were transferred back to solitary. The reason given
was “budget cuts”. Their torture continues, with constant harassment
focusing on accusations of minor infringements of petty rules. <br><br>
We suspect there is a move to provoke them as our legal efforts are
showing success. We must keep the spotlight on their cases. The best way
of helping is by writing to them offering moral support. Also, write to
the Attorney General, Buddy Caldwell, expressing disgust at their inhuman
treatment, and to Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal. In the meantime, we
await verdicts from the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, and Herman’s case
has moved to the federal courts with a new habeas corpus writ. <br><br>
<b><i>A documentary about the Angola 3, narrated by Samuel L Jackson, In
The Land Of The Free… premieres at Human Rights Watch Film Festival,
March 24, in New York. <br><br>
It goes on UK release from March 26. <br><br>
For more information:
<a href="http://www.inthelandofthefreefilm.com">
www.inthelandofthefreefilm.com</a><br><br>
<br><br>
</i></b></font><x-sigsep><p></x-sigsep>
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522 Valencia Street<br>
San Francisco, CA 94110<br><br>
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