The Politics of Death: Throwing Mumia Abu-Jamal Under the Bus

by: Dave Lindorff  |  This Can't Be Happening | Op-Ed

"I would unite with anybody to do right and with nobody to do wrong." -Frederick Douglass

On the evening of February 25, participants at the Fourth World Congress Against the Death Penalty in Geneva, Switzerland had assembled from all over the globe for a dramatic Voices of Victims evening. It got more dramatic than they had anticipated though, when suddenly a cell phone rang and Robert R. Bryan, lead defense attorney for Mumia Abu-Jamal, jumped up on the stage to announce that his client had called him from death row in Pennsylvania.

The audience sat in rapt silence as the emcee held the phone up to the microphone. Abu-Jamal, on death row for 28 years after a widely disputed conviction for the murder of Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner, greeted the delegates and then, as he has done on many occasions before, described to them the horrors of life in prison for the 20,000 people around the world who are awaiting execution.

A small group of American death penalty abolitionist leaders, led by Renny Cushing, executive director of Murder Victims' Families for Human Rights, stalked out of the hall. Two members of MVFHR, however, remained in the hall: Bill Babbitt, whose brother Manny, a Vietnam vet suffering acute post-traumatic stress disorder, was executed in California; and Bill Pelke, whose grandmother was murdered by a girl whom he later befriended and helped to spare from execution. Babbitt even joined Bryan onstage during Abu-Jamal's brief address.

What neither Babbitt nor Pelke, nor Abu-Jamal and his attorney, Bryan, knew at the time was that way back in December, leaders and individual board members of several of the organizations in the US abolitionist movement had signed--without their full boards’ or their memberships’ knowledge--a “confidential” memorandum, which they then sent to the French organizers of the World Congress, stating bluntly that, “As international representatives of the US abolition movement, we cannot agree to the involvement of Abu-Jamal or his lawyers in the World Congress beyond attendance.”

Purporting to be from “the US members of the Steering Committee” of the World Coalition Against the Death Penalty (though hardly an inclusive list of that committee’s membership) and titled, “Involvement of Mumia Abu-Jamal endangers the US coalition for abolition of the death penalty,” the memo claimed that the French organizers of the World Congress, Together Against the Death Penalty (ECPM), had arranged to have Abu-Jamal speak “over objection.” The memo further further asserted that the abolitionist movement in the US is trying to “cultivate” the support of the ultra-conservative and staunchly pro-death penalty Fraternal Order of Police (FOP), an organization representing some 35,000 police officers in the US that advocates the execution of Abu-Jamal and all other prisoners convicted of killing of police officers. The FOP, said the memo, has “announced a boycott of organizations and individuals who support Abu-Jamal,” and therefore anything done by the Congress to aid his cause would be “dangerously counter-productive to the abolition movement in the US.”

ThisCantBeHappening! this past week obtained a copy of that secret memorandum.

When we showed it to some other members of the boards of the organizations whose officers or individual board members had signed their names to it, responses ranged from consternation to outrage. Babbitt’s brother Manny was killed as a direct result of a corrupt law enforcement system in California that pressed for execution, even though it was clear from medical testimony that the elderly grandmother he allegedly killed actually died of shock when she discovered him breaking and entering her apartment. Left in the dark about the memo despite his being on the MVFHR board, Babbitt said, “My brother Manny’s last words to me were to always take the high road, and to me that means telling the truth and being open and transparent.” He added, regarding the content of the memo, “I think throwing Mumia under the bus is not the way to go in the abolitionist movement. You don’t make bargains with a wolf whose motive is to devour.”

Robert Meeropol, a son of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, who were executed as spies in 1953, is also a member of the MVFHR board. Currently traveling on behalf of the organization in Asia, he said through a staffer in the US that he did not know about the memo, and added that he still stands “fully in support of a new trial for Mumia Abu-Jamal.”

Several calls seeking a comment from Cushing or Lowenstein remain unanswered, though a staffer at the MVFHR Boston office, Susanna Sheffer, said, “This is a complicated thing. You need to understand the depth and texture of this.”

Also surprised at the memo was actor Michael Farrell, president of the California abolitionist group Death Penalty Focus. Farrell, a long-time supporter of the call for a new trial for Abu-Jamal, said he had never seen the memo, though it was signed by a member of the DPF board, attorney Elizabeth Zitrin.

Other signers of the memo were Thomas H. “Speedy” Rice of the National Association of Criminal Defense Attorneys, Kritsin Houlé of the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty and Juan Matos de Juan of the Puerto Rican Bar Assn.

Bryan, a veteran death penalty defense lawyer who served 10 years on the board of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty--three of them as the organization’s chair--says, “In all my years as an activist opposing the death penalty, I have never heard of any individual or group in that fight singling out anyone as an exception to our campaign to abolish capital punishment. Everyone is treated equally. To single someone out and say they don’t count is chilling. Where do you draw the line? At people accused of killing cops? At people accused of killing old ladies? People accused of killing children? Where does it stop? It’s appalling!”

Heidi Beghosian, executive director of the National Lawyers Guild, an organization that has long been in the forefront of the campaign to end the death penalty in the US, and which was not advised of the plan to circulate the memo on behalf of the US Steering Committee to the World Coalition, despite the NLG's being a member of the WCADP, roundly condemned the secret effort to silence Abu-Jamal at the March event.

“Mumia Abu-Jamal’s case is emblematic of the inherent flaws in the capital punishment system,” she said. “That he is castigated by leaders in the abolitionist movement shows precisely what is wrong with the system—it is a system enslaved to the whims and personal biases of police, prosecutor, judge, and jury. While cultivating certain voices of law enforcement may assist in efforts to achieve abolition, it should not be at the expense of exposing a case that embodies some of the most reprehensible actions on the part of the police, the district attorney and the judiciary. The powerful FOP, and their heavy-handed efforts to vilify Abu-Jamal and his supporters, should not be the barometer by which abolitionist leaders gauge their strategic priorities. Members of the abolitionist movement should be working together and not further censoring and ostracizing a death row inmate.”

What makes the American abolitionists’ petulant and manipulative behavior as expressed in the secret memo and their cynical threat to withdraw from the Congress particularly outrageous is that Abu-Jamal’s arrest, trial and appeals process has been, as Beghosian notes, a textbook case of police and prosecutor corruption, malfeasance and abuse. From the beginning, even before his arrest, Abu-Jamal’s case was poisoned by a police lust for vengeance. Although he had been shot through the lung and liver by a bullet fired from Officer Faulkner’s service revolver, and was in danger of dying of internal bleeding that was filling his lungs with blood, Abu-Jamal was left lying in a police wagon for almost half an hour before he was finally delivered to a hospital emergency room, where hospital staff and at least one police officer on the scene observed him being kicked and punched by the officers delivering him.

During the jury selection process at the beginning of his trial, the presiding judge, Albert Sabo, who as a county sheriff’s deputy was an FOP member before he was made a judge, was overheard by a second judge and his court stenographer saying to his own court clerk, as he exited the courtroom through the jurdge’s robing room, “Yeah and I’m gonna help them fry that nigger!”

During the tortuous appeals process, both the state and federal courts have shamelessly bent their rules and violated precedents to deny Abu-Jamal the benefits of precedents that have been routinely accorded other appellants. Third Circuit Appeals Court Judge Thomas Ambro filed a stinging dissent to a decision by his two colleagues, who effectively created new law from the bench in rejecting Abu-Jamal’s well-founded Batson claim of racial bias by the prosecution during jury selection at his trail. Scarcely concealing his outrage, Judge Ambro wrote: "Our Court has previously reached the merits of Batson claims on habeas review in cases where the petitioner did not make a timely objection during jury selection--signaling that our Circuit does not have a federal contemporaneous objection rule--and I see no reason why we should not afford Abu-Jamal the courtesy of our precedents." He added, "Why we pick this case to depart from that reasoning I do not know."

Abu-Jamal himself, interviewed by phone last Friday from his cell at the super-max death row facility SCI-Greene in western Pennsylvania, blasted the attempt to silence him at the Congress, and to ostracize him from the American abolitionist movement. “They are really making deals with the devil,” he said, of claims that the US abolitionist movement was trying to gain the support of the FOP. “My instinct, being from Philadelphia, is that money was passed, though I have no evidence to prove it.” He added, “This secret action is a threat to the entire abolitionist movement. They are saying that because the opposition (to abolition) is so strong, we should not fight. If you have that attitude, why have an abolitionist movement at all?”

Abu-Jamal, whose death penalty was lifted by a federal judge in 2001, only to have the US Supreme Court remand that decision back to the Third Circuit, where it could be reimposed, and who continues, in no small part thanks to pressure from the Pennsylvania FOP, to be held in solitary confinement on death row, where he maintains his innocence, calls the signers of the memo “co-conspirators,” and says they are “naive” to believe they can win over the FOP by abandoning him to his fate.

“If the slavery abolitionists had taken this approach back in 1860,” he says, “and said okay let’s free the slaves, except those uppity ones with prices on their heads like Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass, we’d still have slavery today.” Abu-Jamal said it appeared that the abolitionist movement appeared to have lost its way, and said that it needed to be broadened to more closely reflect the population of the nation’s death rows. where nearly everyone is poor, and where 53% of the doomed inmates are non-white. 

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really interesting article,

really interesting article, thanks a lot for posting it. I really enjoy the wide variety of sources that are posted on Truthout



“Mumia Abu-Jamal’s case

“Mumia Abu-Jamal’s case is emblematic of the inherent flaws in the capital punishment system,”

I agree 100%. Waiting over 28 years to meet up with old sparky is absurd, he should have been executed within 28 minutes. What's the point in having a death penalty if the ambulance chasers can crawl out from under their rock and delay things for decades?



This argument is typical of

This argument is typical of the bloody-minded capital punishment advocates, who don't give a damn about justice and making sure an innocent person isn't executed.

Only 10% of death penalty cases have DNA evidence potential, and yet more than 100 people have been fully exonerated by DNA testing, many of them after having come within days or even hours of execution, and after having spend over a decade on a death row, waiting for execution for something they didn't do. That's an error rate of 25%!!!

Yet the reasons these 100+ people were wrongfully convicted were such things as police lying, prosecutorial misconduct, such as hiding exculpatory evidence, juror bias, judicial bias or judicial error, witness lying, false identification, etc.

There is every reason to suspect that the same error rate applies to the other 90 percent of death row cases, which cannot be discovered through a DNA test. That means that roughly 900 of the people on death row today are probably wrongly convicted.

Kill 'em in 28 days?

Sure. That's frontier "justice." Not real justice.

And remember, if the wrong guy was convicted, it means the real killer is free. This is where the bloodlust of the death penalty crowd is truly seen for the nonsense that it really is.

Abu-Jamal's case illustrates most of the problems of the justice system, with examples of police lying, prosecutor lying, prosecution hiding of evidence that would tend to prove innocence, witness lying, some of it clearly coached, a biased judge, a racially stacked jury, a biased appellate court at both the state and federal level, and an incompetent defense lawyer who was a crack addict.

Execute him?

No.

Give the guy a fair trial with an impartial jury and a real defense lawyer for a change.

David Lindorff
www.thiscantbehappening.net



When it comes to the death

When it comes to the death penalty there are no exceptions, no instances where we can look the other way. A deal with the devil in black robes is not justice. It is the attitude of "just us", there are no comfort zones in the quest for peace and social justice. I remember the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. I was just a child and I kept thinking this is insane. Why can't someone stop it? I still feel the same way. As Mark Twain wrote "Forgiveness is the fragrance of a rose left upon the heel that just crushed it". There can be no myopia. Mumia is innocent. The evidence is overwhelming yet there are those who choose to ignore it. Prosecutors in Philadelphia were taught how to exclude African-Americans from juries. At every level of the court system there have been conflicts of interest in Mumia Abu-Jamal's case. Mumia carries a bullet that not only can't be removed, it can not be from Officer Faulkner's gun given the path of entry. And yes Mumia had a gun, he had been robbed as a cab driver, but the caliber was different than that of the weapon which took Faulkner's life. It could not have fired the fatal bullet. I will not simply settle for a new trial for Mumia, I want a full and exhausting probe into how the trial was conducted, along with the original police investigation, and subsequent hearings. Pennsylvania and Philadelphia have a long sordid history of corruption and it isn't just Mumia's case. Everyone who prosecuted or testified against Mumia is tainted. Mumia must be free.



You are right about the

You are right about the corrupt performance of the courts from bottom to top in Abu-Jamal's case, but you do him no favor by saying things that are not correct about the evidence. You claim that the bullet in Mumia cannot be from Faulkner's gun, yet it is in fact quite possible that the downward course of the projectile could have occurred if Faulkner fired first, while Jamal was running across the street to his brother's aid--an important point because it would mean that Faulkner, not Abu-Jamal or anyone else fired the first shot. You also say that the bullet that killed Faulkner was not the same caliber as Abu-Jamal's .38, but that is only partially correct. There was ambiguity in the testimony about that, and the point is that Abu-Jamal was not provided with funds by the court to allow him to hire his own ballistics expert to weigh into the controversy. The other point about the gunshots is that the prosecution story--that Jamal stood over Faulkner, who was supposedly lying on his back on the sidewalk, and fired four shots directly down at the cop. Three completely missed him, somehow, and one, they said, hit him between the eyes, killing him. Trouble is, a digital analysis of the sidewalk where Faulkner lay, marked out by the blood from his head would, had no bullet marks in it. So where did those other three shots, fired point blank, go? Not into Faulkner's body. Not into the sidewalk. Into the fifth dimension? Nobody asked at the trial. The answer lies in the fact that the story came from two witnesses, neither of whom was actually present at the scene. One was induced to lie because she was a prostitute, and got a deal--she'd be allowed to streetwalk in peace and safety if she said what the cops wanted her to say. The other, a cab driver, was parked on another street, facing away from the scene, but was induced to lie and say he had been parked directly behind Faulkner's car and saw the shooting because he was driving his cab illegally on a DWI-revoked license, while out on five year's probation for a felony arson conviction (torching an elementary school), none of which facts were made available to either the defense or the jurors during the trial. Without these two witnesses (one of whom is now dead), there is no case at all.

I would commend you to my book on the case, "Killing Time" (Common Courage, 2003), or to several others written since, which all confirm your main point, which is that the one certain thing in this case is that we don't know what happened because the original trial was so rife with prosecution witness lying, withheld evidence that would have argued against conviction, prosecution lying, a biased judge, and an inept lawyer.

Abu-Jamal deserves a real trial, not the kangaroo court to which he was subjected. If he gets one, he will go free.

Dave Lindorff
www.thiscantbehappening.net



Please check this

Please check this out:

"(The) Case for Obama’s Impeachment", by Dave Lindorff:

http://impeachforpeace.org/impeach_bush_blog/?p=6039

IMPEACH BARACH HUSSEIN OBAMA, ALSO KNOWN AS (AKA) BARRY SOTOERO, NOW!!!!!