On Dec. 28, one day after the
decision by Judge Leon Tucker opening the door to further appeals by
Mumia Abu-Jamal, employees of the Philadelphia District Attorney’s
office “found” six boxes in a storage space, while allegedly
looking for office furniture. Five of the six boxes are marked with
the name McCann, the name of a former head of the Philadelphia
District Attorney’s Office Homicide Unit. Five of the boxes were
also marked with Mumia’s name. This discovery was revealed to the
public more than a week later in press reports.
At a Jan. 15 news conference in
Philadelphia, attorney Rachel Wolkenstein, a supporter of Mumia and
member of a previous legal team for Mumia, said: “What these
missing boxes represent is confirmation of what we’ve known for
decades: There’s hidden, exculpatory evidence in Mumia’s case,
and that is evidence that Mumia’s guilt was intentionally
manufactured by the police and prosecution, and the truth of his
innocence was suppressed.”
Wolkenstein told the press that
“every single witness in the case was coerced and encouraged to
lie. … There is police and prosecutorial misconduct throughout this
case.” She pointed out that if Krasner chooses to appeal Tucker’s
decision, Mumia would be tied up for years awaiting justice.
Supporters believe that the hidden
boxes hide evidence of Mumia’s innocence; in essence, it is a
cover-up of a frame-up. The contents of the boxes should be released
to the public, and all charges against Mumia should be dismissed.
Judge Tucker has asserted his jurisdiction over the boxes and the
case; Mumia’s attorneys have said that they will inspect the
contents of the boxes as soon as they can.
A history of suppressing
evidence
The Philadelphia District
Attorney’s office has a history of suppressing evidence and is
known for the infamous training video that taught Assistant DAs how
to keep Blacks off juries. The sudden release of the boxes
demonstrated the systematic denial of due process in Mumia’s case.
Mumia was denied justice at every turn, with no right to
self-representation and no jury of his peers.
In the case of Jimmy Dennis, who
spent 25 years in prison for a murder he did not commit, Philadelphia
DAs withheld information about a witness who identified others as the
killers, failed to reveal the existence of a receipt that confirmed
Dennis’ alibi, and failed to provide the statement of a witness who
said she recognized the shooter from high school. Even after a
federal court decision in Dennis’ favor, the DA’s office
continued to drag its feet, delaying his release for years.
The notion that the “finding”
of boxes of material from Mumia’s case is the result of their
having been “misplaced” seems particularly suspicious in light of
earlier efforts to tamper or withhold evidence in the case. The
ballistics evidence was very questionable, for example. The bullet
that police recovered was too damaged to be matched to Mumia’s gun.
A forensics report from the medical examiner noted that the bullet
was a .44 caliber—but Mumia’s pistol was a .38 caliber.
Similarly, crime scene photos taken
by photojournalist Pedro Polokoff showed cops holding guns taken in
evidence with their bare hands and showed the hat of deceased Officer
Daniel Faulkner placed on top of Mumia’s brother Billy
Cook’s Volkswagen,
though it appears on the sidewalk in the official police photos.
Mumia has been in the sights of law
enforcement, from local cops to the FBI, for his youthful role in the
Black Panther Party, and for his later role as an award-winning
journalist. As a reporter, Mumia covered the 1978 Philadelphia police
attack on the MOVE house in the Powelton Village neighborhood, after
a 50-day siege in which no one was allowed in or out of the property.
Police bulldozed the house almost immediately after the standoff was
over, destroying any evidence of police misconduct.
During a press conference following
the Powelton Village assault, then Mayor Frank Rizzo singled out
Mumia’s “new breed” of journalism as responsible for the death
of Police Officer James Ramp, saying that Mumia would be “held
accountable and responsible.” The MOVE 9 were convicted and
imprisoned for the death of Ramp despite his having been killed by
“friendly” police fire.
On Jan. 5, activists for the
Mobilization4Mumia delivered 4227 signed petitions asking District
Attorney Larry Krasner not to appeal the Tucker decision, as well as
labor movement statements of support for Mumia. This included letters
from International Longshore and Warehouse Union International
Executive Secretary-Treasurer Edwin R. Ferris and Japanese rail
workers.
The petitions were handed to a
Krasner assistant as the DA passed through the lobby. Krasner,
however, did not stop to speak with activists, some of whom had
supported his campaign for the office. District Attorney’s Office
Director of Communications Ben Waxman, a former Occupy Philadelphia
activist, spoke briefly with activists, but refused to address any
specifics of the case as “above [his] pay grade.”
Speaking at the Philadelphia press
conference on Jan. 15, Pam Africa, a leading organizer for Mumia’s
defense, demanded Mumia’s freedom, saying, “After almost four
decades in prison suffering from cirrhosis of the liver, Hepatitis C
and related ailments, years of court delays will be nothing less than
a death sentence and a denial of justice for Mumia. The evidence is
here! Our job is to stop the conspiracy to torture and murder Mumia.
After 37 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit, we are
demanding that the charges be dismissed and he should be freed.”
Earlier, at a Jan. 12 meeting at
the People’s Forum in New York City, Pam Africa said that the
recent court victory and the “discovery” of the boxes must be
credited to the “power of the people.” She went on to point out
,“We must organize as if the death warrant was signed, ’cause if
it was left up to them, Mumia would’ve been dead a long time ago.
There’s a whole lot of other boxes that’s missing. Now that the
appeal is in, the following day they find the boxes?”
Africa continued, “There’s
still a lot of work that needs to be done. Radio stations, churches,
subways, communities—letting people know what is going on ’cause
every minute, second, Mumia’s closer to death. We’re doing what
they said we’d never be able to do, and that’s bring Mumia home.”
Mumia also addressed the New York
meeting, via telephone. Moderator Robyn Spencer asked him, “How are
you feeling now with the potential of the doors opening?” Mumia
responded, “This is probably the first time I’ve been before a
state judge in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania who was not paid by
the FOP, and that means something.”
Spencer then asked, “What can we
take away from this [meeting]?” Mumia answered, “Resistance,
organizing, movements, work. To quote John Africa: ‘When you’re
committed to doing that which is right, the power of righteousness
will never betray you” (quoted in the New York Amsterdam
News, Jan. 17, 2019).
All out on April 20!
Supporters of Mumia are projecting
a mass action in Philadelphia on April 20 to demand his release. That
will be followed by a student walkout on Mumia’s birthday, April
24.
We must keep the pressure on the
“progressive” District Attorney Larry Krasner. Krasner, formerly
a defense attorney, was known in activist circles for defending
protesters in court. Those credentials inspired liberal and left
activists, including the local Democratic Socialists of
America, to get active in his campaign. In office, Krasner has
offered up some reforms and promised to review wrongful convictions.
However, in Mumia’s case, it appears that Krasner has hesitated
because of his relations with the Fraternal Order of Police.
Now is the time to re-energize the
fight to free Mumia— a man who was railroaded to death row solely
for his political beliefs and actions; a man who was innocent of the
charges against him but was framed-up because he dared to tell the
truth about the corrupt and racist police and the court system.
We cannot rely on politicians or
their courts to win a victory. To win we need to build a
powerful, united movement
to free Mumia. We need to reach out to and to energize new forces in
the movement—above all in the Black community, and in the labor
movement, among students, and among all of the oppressed. It was the
mass struggle in the streets by supporters of justice that stopped
previous attempts to execute Mumia.
For decades the working class and
its organizations have been under attack. Our unions have been
decimated. Hard-won civil rights have been destroyed. The left
and the Black liberation movement continue to suffer the
aftereffects of COINTELPRO. The national security state has expanded
and spying is rampant. The incarceration of radicals like Mumia, the
MOVE 9, Leonard Peltier, and the almost two-dozen former Black
Panther Party members who remain in America’s prisons points to the
fundamental injustice of the system.
Together we can fight to free all
political prisoners! Now that, after 37 years of struggle in the
courts and in the streets, victory is finally within our grasp, we
need to redouble our efforts to bring Mumia home! Free Mumia! Free
the MOVE 9 and all political prisoners!
>> The article above was written by John Leslie, and is reprinted from Socialist Action newspaper.
1 comment:
Yes, free Mumia. In Africa!
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