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ckaihatsu
7th April 2009, 03:31
[email protected] <[email protected]> Mon, Apr 6, 2009 at 9:00 PM


This page will continue to be updated with new developments. Please help spread the word!

http://www.phillyimc.org/en/us-supreme-court-rejects-mumia-abu-jamals-appeal-new-guilt-phase-trial

Mumia's response available at Prison Radio:
http://www.prisonradio.org/mumia_interview_4_6_09.htm

Today, the US Supreme Court rejected Mumia Abu-Jamal's appeal for a new guilt-phase trial. The Supreme Court has not yet decided whether to consider the Philadelphia DA's separate appeal, which is attempting to execute Abu-Jamal WITHOUT a new sentencing hearing.

In response to today's rejection, Abu-Jamal's lead attorney Robert R. Bryan will be filing a "petition for re-hearing" at the US Supreme Court.

Please contact the White House to protest this unjust ruling: 202/456-1111
http://www.whitehouse.gov/CONTACT/

As reported this morning by CNN, Reuters, AP, and others, the US Supreme Court announced today t hat they have rejected death-row journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal's appeal for a new guilt phase trial (in official legal terms, they rejected his petition for a "writ of certiorari"). Abu-Jamal's appeal was based primarily on the US Supreme Court's 1986 "Batson v Kentucky" ruling which stated that a defendant deserves a new trial if it can be shown that the prosecutor used peremptory strikes to remove otherwise qualified jurors simply because of their race. At Abu-Jamal's 1982 trial, prosecutor Joseph McGill used 10 or 11 of his 15 strikes to remove otherwise acceptable black jurors.

The US Supreme Court has not yet decided whether it will further consider the Philadelphia DA's appeal of the 2001/2008 rulings of two lower courts, which ruled that Abu-Jamal deserves a new sentencing hearing if the death penalty is to be re-instated. Therefore, if the US Supreme Court rules in favor of the DA, Abu-Jamal can then be executed WITHOUT a new sentencing hearing!

J. Patrick O'Connor, author of The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal, responded to today's decision by telling me (direct quote below):

The U.S. Supreme Court's refusal to grant Mumia's request for a writ of Certiorari is incredibly surprising to me because it only takes four justices to grant the writ. Granting the writ would have allowed Mumia's Batson claim o f racism in jury selection to be brought before the entire court for consideration. Why I'm so surprised is that last year, in a 7-2 decision, the Supreme Court expanded Batson to order a new trial if the prosecution excluded just one potential juror on the basis of race. The prosecutor at Mumia's trial has stipulated he used 10 of his 15 peremptory challenges to exclude otherwise qualified black jurors. This high strike rate (66.6 percent) is itself a prima facie indication of racism. Denying Mumia's request for the writ cuts off any possible avenue of legal relief for Mumia. The Supreme Court was his last chance for judicial justice. Barring clemency by a future governor of Pennsylvania, the Supreme Court has incomprehensively condemned Mumia to spend the rest of his life in prison. **(END OF QUOTE)

--------------------------------------------------

Dave Lindorff, author of the 2003 book Killing Time: An Investigation into the Death Row Case of Mumia Abu-Jamal responded this morning to the ruling by telling me (direct quote below):

Once again, a court, in this case the highest court in the land, the US Supreme Court, has created what Philadelphia journalist and legal expert Linn Washington has dubbed "The Mumia Exception"--that is to say a precedent that applies only to one person: Mumia=2 0Abu-Jamal. The decision in this case, which involved the high court's refusal to consider and reverse last year's Third Circuit Court of Appeals ruling rejecting Abu-Jamal's claim that his jury was unconstitutionally purged of qualified black jurors by the prosecution's use of peremptory challenges to remove 10 or 11 blacks from the panel, was particularly offensive since it was Justice Samuel Alito, at the time a member of the Third Circuit Court, who wrote an opinion stating that if even one potential juror is removed from a panel for reasons of race or religion, that trial's verdict is fatally flawed and must be overturned. Alito's opinion in that case was soundly reasoned and important, but apparently now, in his exalted position as Supreme Court Justice, Alito thinks the precedent needn't apply to Abu-Jamal.

By simply not hearing Abu-Jamal's case, the Supreme Court, which itself has also already established the precedent that the tainting of a jury by even one racially motivated removal of a juror, has left intact its precedent on this issue, while at the same time leaving Abu-Jamal outside its protection. This is a shameful act of political cowardice on the part of all 9 justices and a betrayal of the fundamental promise of "equal justice under the law."

It is almost a certainty that the Third Circuit will revisit this issue on another death penalty case, and that it will re-affirm the precedent, already in place in the Third Circuit, that any racial motive in purging a juror cannot be tolerated. Then we well be left with the Mumia Exception again, where laws are temporarily suspended to keep this one man on death row, or in jail all his life.

The media reports on the court's latest decision in this case have all gotten it wrong. The court was not ruling that there was "no bias" in his jury, which was composed of two blacks and 10 whites. What the court was refusing to do was hear his appeal of a 2-1 Third Circuit opinion that Abu-Jamal had not objected soon enough or with adequate evidence to what he claimed was a concerted effort by Prosecutor Joseph McGill to remove over 10 qualified potential black jurors from his jury.

In a stinging minority opinion, Appellate Judge Thomas Ambro had criticized his two fellow jurists, asking why, for this one petitioner, they were raising the bar for demonstrating evidence of race-based jury selection, insisting that Abu-Jamal should have protested the removal of black jurors at the time it happened, despite the fact that it was only five years later that such actions were even found to be unconstitutional. He also asked why his two colleagues were ignoring the precedents of both the Supreme Court and the Third Circuit. As Judge Ambro wrote in his dissent: "The Supreme Court has never announced a rule requiring a contemporaneous objection...and I see no reason for us to do so now." He also wrote, "The US Third Circuit Court's own history bears witness against=2 0the use of a contemporary objection rule, signalling 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."

Judge Ambro's indictment of his two fellow judges now hangs over the reeking air of the Supreme Court Building in Washington, where placating the politically powerful police union and the right-wing death is seen to be more important than dispensing justice.

The Supreme Court did not rule on the appeal by the Philadelphia District Attorney of a federal district court's overturning of his death penalty. The High Court could still reverse that ruling, which would leave Abu-Jamal facing death with no more avenue of appeal. Alternatively, if the High Court were to leave standing the Third Circuit's unanimous decision supporting the district court's overturning of the death penalty, the DA could ask for a new trial on the penalty alone, in an effort to convince a new jury to reimpose a death sentence.

If the DA were not to seek a new penalty phase trial, Abu Jamal would face life in prison with no possibility of parole, and no more avenue of appeal of his sentence.
Philadelphia District Attorney Lynn Abraham, in a graphic illustration of the ugly politics that surround and continue to pollute this case, immediately grabbed the news of the Supreme Court's decision as an opportunity to trumpet20her own bloodthirsty credentials as a government execution-monger. Calling Abu-Jamal "nothing short of an assassin," Abraham once again repeated a fundamental lie of the Abu-Jamal death squad--that he was somehow gunning for Officer Faulkner as a rabid cop-hating Black Power advocate.

In fact, the prosecution never even attempted to make such a case. Even if one were to accept the story line created by Prosecutor Joe McGill for the jury at the trial at face value, with all the tortured and falsified testimony of prosecution witnesses, it was that Abu-Jamal, who happened to be at the scene of an altercation between his brother and Faulkner, came to his brother's aid and ended up shooting Faulkner. There was never any claim of premeditation or planning. which is part of the definition of an "assassination." As always, Abraham and her ilk keep attempting to portray Abu-Jamal not just as a killer of a police officer, but rather as a coldly-calculating political assassin bent on attacking not just Faulkner, but all cops.**(END OF QUOTE)

--------------------------------------------

Responding to today’s news, Michael Schiffmann, co-founder of Journalists for Mumia, and German author of the book Race Against Death. Mumia Abu-Jamal: a Black Revolutionary in White America, writes that (direct quote below):

According to a new CNN report, the US Supreme Court has turned down Mumia Abu-Jamal's petition for writ of certiorari, aiming to open the way for a new trial, as usual without giving a reason, while the court has still taken no decision on the prosecution's petition for writ of certiorari, which aims at reinstituting the death penalty against Mumia, which was thrown out by a federal court on December 18, 2001.

If true, as it appears to be, this report marks one of the darkest days in the history of the US judicial system. An innocent prisoner who was consecutively framed by the police, the prosecution, and a whole succession of courts has apparently just been denied the very least he can demand: not even a new trial, but a hearing about a new trial.

At the same time, this seems to mean that Mumia is in greater danger to be executed than ever before.

The US Court can now decide at any moment that it will grant the prosecution's petition for certiorari. And if so, it can decide within a relatively short time span - about this, one would have to ask experienced lawyers - that the prosecution's demand to reinstate the death penalty is justified and that the December 18, 2001 decision to throw out the death penalty for Mumia is null and void.

From that point on, the legal barriers against Mumia's execution would only be paper thin. Pennsylvania's govern or Ed Rendell (who served as the head of the District Attorney's office in Philadelphia when Mumia was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death for murder in 1982) has repeatedly made clear that should such a situation arise, he would loose no time in signing a new execution warrant.

In the light of what has been done to Mumia before, the courts decision to turn down his petition is not surprising. It's another application of what has been called the "Mumia Law." Mumia is singled out for the most unfair treatment imaginable, reserved for true opponents of the system.

In J. Patrick O'Connor's review of Mumia's latest book, 'Jailhouse Lawyers,' O'Connor mentions the fact noted by Mumia himself that of all the prisoners in the American Gulag of 2.5 million people, who are incarcerated in one or another form, the "jailhouse lawyers," the one fighting for the rights of other prisoners and their own rights, are singled out for the most brutal and inhumane treatment by the guards and the prison administration.

The same appears to be true for the courts. I have talked to lawyers, including people who have worked as clerks for State Supreme Court judges, and I was told that Mumia's brief to the US Supreme Court was extremely strong and convincing, but all the same, the brief was turned down, and the US Supreme Court rejects to even consider the case.

This d espite the fact that the brief cites a whole litany of precedents where the Supreme Court itself and the various federal appeals courts in the country have granted relief in exactly the same circumstances where the US Supreme Court now says it is not even ready to deal with the matter.

In sum: Here, too, Mumia is being punished for being who he is and acting like who he is, for being Mumia and acting like Mumia, which is exactly what has sparked such a strong international movement around this particular case over the years.

That said, I do believe it will have negative consequences and will weaken positive US Supreme Court decisions such as the ‘Snyder’ case, where even reactionary justices such as Sam Alito, took a clear stance against racism in jury selection. The message is: “Look, we can and are ready to grant you these rights, but only if you have the right posture, that of one who doesn't raise his/her head. If, on the other hand, you dare to speak out against injustice, all rights will be taken away from you.”

This is truly a horrible message.

From our side, I think that means we must step up the fight: The absence of racism in jury selection and during the trial as a whole can't be conditioned on some proper behavior of the defendant as defined by "the master." It is either a right that applies to everybody or20it doesn't offer a real guarantee to anybody.

On a separate point, the consequences are alarming, that, as reported by CNN and others, the court has already turned down Mumia's petition while it is still considering the prosecution's brief.

And by alarming I mean just that. "Alarming" doesn't and mustn't mean going into the shock mode - on the contrary, this is the point where we must raise hell and mobilize anything and everybody in our powers to prevent the ultimate injustice, Mumia's execution, from happening.

That said, the prosecution of course has a lot to fear from even a new sentencing hearing "for" Mumia. Facts would come out that would call their entire card-house of lies into question and in fact would bring it down in no time at all. So it's only too understandable that this is something they are fighting against in "tooth and nail" fashion.

To sum it all up, this is not the time to bow our heads in disappointed silence. On the contrary, at no point in this whole struggle is it more important to say that THE STRUGGLE FOR MUMIA'S LIFE AND FREEDOM CONTINUES!

Brave activists in Philadelphia have stood by Mumia right from the beginning, joined by others at the end of the eighties. Even in a far away country such as Germany, activists joined the fray already in 1989. Others all around the world joined, and this wou ld be exactly the wrong point to give up.

What we can do now - some speculations:

As far as I understand, even now the defense can ask the court to reconsider its decision. Our first and foremost task as a movement would be to support such a move with all that is within our powers. Apart from that, we must raise hell against the DA's countermove to have Mumia executed. And third, last but by no means least, we must not give up our struggle to finally free this innocent man, by any means possible and by any means necessary.

On this last point, we will need to have intense and open consultations about what to do next. As far as I can see, there are various options here, and apart from what lawyers can still do (for example, ask the court to reconsider), two things seem promising to me: 1) a massive campaign about the facts of the case, which show that Mumia is innocent of murder, and 2) a campaign for an amnesty for all the prisoners we consider "political," and who have already served such an incredibly long time.

[I think this latter point is necessary anyway, as will be evident to at least some of those who read the names Herman Bell, Veronza Bowers, Romaine "Chip" Fitzgerald, Jalil Abdul Muntaqim, Leonard Peltier, Ruchell "Cinque" Magee, Mondo we Langa, Hugo "Yogi" Pinell, Edward Poindexter, Russell "Maroon" Shoats, Herman Wallace, Alber W oodfox, and so many others whose names don't spring to mind so readily or who we haven't even heard about.]

The long and the short of all this is that this is a serious setback, but that the struggle continues.
Hasta la victoria siempre! **(END OF QUOTE)




-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
To: National Jericho <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]; Jericho Ten-Ten <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Sent: Mon, 6 Apr 2009 9:38 pm
Subject: Supreme Court Rejects Mumia's Appeal; Mumia's Response


This page will continue to be updated with new developments. Please help spread the word!

http://www.phillyimc.org/en/us-supreme-court-rejects-mumia-abu-jamals-appeal-new-guilt-phase-trial

Mumia's response available at Prison Radio:
http://www.prisonradio.org/mumia_interview_4_6_09.htm

Today, the US Supreme Court rejected Mumia Abu-Jamal's appeal for a new guilt-phase trial. The Supreme Court has not yet decided whether to consider the Philadelphia DA's separate appeal, which is attempting to execute Abu-Jamal WITHOUT a new sentencing=2 0hearing.
In response to today's rejection, Abu-Jamal's lead attorney Robert R. Bryan will be filing a "petition for re-hearing" at the US Supreme Court.

Please contact the White House to protest this unjust ruling: 202/456-1111
http://www.whitehouse.gov/CONTACT/

As reported this morning by CNN, Reuters, AP, and others, the US Supreme Court announced today that they have rejected death-row journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal's appeal for a new guilt phase trial (in official legal terms, they rejected his petition for a "writ of certiorari"). Abu-Jamal's appeal was based primarily on the US Supreme Court's 1986 "Batson v Kentucky" ruling which stated that a defendant deserves a new trial if it can be shown that the prosecutor used peremptory strikes to remove otherwise qualified jurors simply because of their race. At Abu-Jamal's 1982 trial, prosecutor Joseph McGill used 10 or 11 of his 15 strikes to remove otherwise acceptable black jurors.

The US Supreme Court has not yet decided whether it will further consider the Philadelphia DA's appeal of the 2001/2008 rulings of two lower court s, which ruled that Abu-Jamal deserves a new sentencing hearing if the death penalty is to be re-instated. Therefore, if the US Supreme Court rules in favor of the DA, Abu-Jamal can then be executed WITHOUT a new sentencing hearing!

J. Patrick O'Connor, author of The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal, responded to today's decision by telling me (direct quote below):

The U.S. Supreme Court's refusal to grant Mumia's request for a writ of Certiorari is incredibly surprising to me because it only takes four justices to grant the writ. Granting the writ would have allowed Mumia's Batson claim of racism in jury selection to be brought before the entire court for consideration. Why I'm so surprised is that last year, in a 7-2 decision, the Supreme Court expanded Batson to order a new trial if the prosecution excluded just one potential juror on the basis of race. The prosecutor at Mumia's trial has stipulated he used 10 of his 15 peremptory challenges to exclude otherwise qualified black jurors. This high strike rate (66.6 percent) is itself a prima facie indication of racism. Denying Mumia's request for the writ cuts off any possible avenue of legal relief for Mumia. The Supreme Court was his last chance for judicial justice. Barring clemency by a future governor of Pennsylvania, the Supreme Court has i ncomprehensively condemned Mumia to spend the rest of his life in prison. **(END OF QUOTE)

--------------------------------------------------

Dave Lindorff, author of the 2003 book Killing Time: An Investigation into the Death Row Case of Mumia Abu-Jamal responded this morning to the ruling by telling me (direct quote below):

Once again, a court, in this case the highest court in the land, the US Supreme Court, has created what Philadelphia journalist and legal expert Linn Washington has dubbed "The Mumia Exception"--that is to say a precedent that applies only to one person: Mumia Abu-Jamal. The decision in this case, which involved the high court's refusal to consider and reverse last year's Third Circuit Court of Appeals ruling rejecting Abu-Jamal's claim that his jury was unconstitutionally purged of qualified black jurors by the prosecution's use of peremptory challenges to remove 10 or 11 blacks from the panel, was particularly offensive since it was Justice Samuel Alito, at the time a member of the Third Circuit Court, who wrote an opinion stating that if even one potential juror is removed from a panel for reasons of race or religion, that trial's verdict is fatally flawed and must be overturned. Alito's opinion in that case was soundly reasoned and important, but apparently now, in his exalted position as Supreme Court Justice, Alito thinks the precede nt needn't apply to Abu-Jamal.

By simply not hearing Abu-Jamal's case, the Supreme Court, which itself has also already established the precedent that the tainting of a jury by even one racially motivated removal of a juror, has left intact its precedent on this issue, while at the same time leaving Abu-Jamal outside its protection. This is a shameful act of political cowardice on the part of all 9 justices and a betrayal of the fundamental promise of "equal justice under the law."

It is almost a certainty that the Third Circuit will revisit this issue on another death penalty case, and that it will re-affirm the precedent, already in place in the Third Circuit, that any racial motive in purging a juror cannot be tolerated. Then we well be left with the Mumia Exception again, where laws are temporarily suspended to keep this one man on death row, or in jail all his life.

The media reports on the court's latest decision in this case have all gotten it wrong. The court was not ruling that there was "no bias" in his jury, which was composed of two blacks and 10 whites. What the court was refusing to do was hear his appeal of a 2-1 Third Circuit opinion that Abu-Jamal had not objected soon enough or with adequate evidence to what he claimed was a concerted effort by Prosecutor Joseph McGill to remove over 10 qualified potential black jurors from his jury.

In a stinging minority opinion, Appellate Judge Thomas Ambro had criticized his two fellow jurists, asking why, for this one petitioner, they were raising the bar for demonstrating evidence of race-based jury selection, insisting that Abu-Jamal should have protested the removal of black jurors at the time it happened, despite the fact that it was only five years later that such actions were even found to be unconstitutional. He also asked why his two colleagues were ignoring the precedents of both the Supreme Court and the Third Circuit. As Judge Ambro wrote in his dissent: "The Supreme Court has never announced a rule requiring a contemporaneous objection...and I see no reason for us to do so now." He also wrote, "The US Third Circuit Court's own history bears witness against the use of a contemporary objection rule, signalling 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."

Judge Ambro's indictment of his two fellow judges now hangs over the reeking air of the Supreme Court Building in Washington, where placating the politically powerful police union and the right-wing death is seen to be more important than dispensing justice.

The Supreme Court did not rule on the appeal by the Philadelphia District Attorney of a federal district court's overturning of his death penalty. The High Court could still reverse that ruling, which would leave Abu-Jamal facing death with no more avenue of appeal. Alterna tively, if the High Court were to leave standing the Third Circuit's unanimous decision supporting the district court's overturning of the death penalty, the DA could ask for a new trial on the penalty alone, in an effort to convince a new jury to reimpose a death sentence.

If the DA were not to seek a new penalty phase trial, Abu Jamal would face life in prison with no possibility of parole, and no more avenue of appeal of his sentence.

Philadelphia District Attorney Lynn Abraham, in a graphic illustration of the ugly politics that surround and continue to pollute this case, immediately grabbed the news of the Supreme Court's decision as an opportunity to trumpet her own bloodthirsty credentials as a government execution-monger. Calling Abu-Jamal "nothing short of an assassin," Abraham once again repeated a fundamental lie of the Abu-Jamal death squad--that he was somehow gunning for Officer Faulkner as a rabid cop-hating Black Power advocate.

In fact, the prosecution never even attempted to make such a case. Even if one were to accept the story line created by Prosecutor Joe McGill for the jury at the trial at face value, with all the tortured and falsified testimony of prosecution witnesses, it was that Abu-Jamal, who happened to be at the scene of an altercation between his brother and Faulkner, came to his brother's aid and ended up shooting Faulkner. There was never any claim of premeditation or planning. which is part of the definition of an "assassination." As always, Abraham and her ilk keep attempting to portray Abu-Jamal not just as a killer of a police officer, but rather as a coldly-calculating political assassin bent on attacking not just Faulkner, but all cops.**(END OF QUOTE)

--------------------------------------------

Responding to today’s news, Michael Schiffmann, co-founder of Journalists for Mumia, and German author of the book Race Against Death. Mumia Abu-Jamal: a Black Revolutionary in White America, writes that (direct quote below):

According to a new CNN report, the US Supreme Court has turned down Mumia Abu-Jamal's petition for writ of certiorari, aiming to open the way for a new trial, as usual without giving a reason, while the court has still taken no decision on the prosecution's petition for writ of certiorari, which aims at reinstituting the death penalty against Mumia, which was thrown out by a federal court on December 18, 2001.
If true, as it appears to be, this report marks one of the darkest days in the history of the US judicial system. An innocent prisoner who was consecutively framed by the police, the prosecution, and a whole succession of courts has apparently just been denied the very least he can demand: not even a new trial, but a hearing abou t a new trial.

At the same time, this seems to mean that Mumia is in greater danger to be executed than ever before.
The US Court can now decide at any moment that it will grant the prosecution's petition for certiorari. And if so, it can decide within a relatively short time span - about this, one would have to ask experienced lawyers - that the prosecution's demand to reinstate the death penalty is justified and that the December 18, 2001 decision to throw out the death penalty for Mumia is null and void.

From that point on, the legal barriers against Mumia's execution would only be paper thin. Pennsylvania's governor Ed Rendell (who served as the head of the District Attorney's office in Philadelphia when Mumia was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death for murder in 1982) has repeatedly made clear that should such a situation arise, he would loose no time in signing a new execution warrant.

In the light of what has been done to Mumia before, the courts decision to turn down his petition is not surprising. It's another application of what has been called the "Mumia Law." Mumia is singled out for the most unfair treatment imaginable, reserved for true opponents of the system.

In J. Patrick O'Connor's review of Mumia's latest book, 'Jailhouse Lawyers,' O'Connor mentions the fact noted by Mumia himself that of all the prisoners in the American Gulag of 2.5 million people, who are incarcerated in one or another form, the "jailhouse lawyers," the one fighting for the rights of other prisoners and their own rights, are singled out for the most brutal and inhumane treatment by the guards and the prison administration.

The same appears to be true for the courts. I have talked to lawyers, including people who have worked as clerks for State Supreme Court judges, and I was told that Mumia's brief to the US Supreme Court was extremely strong and convincing, but all the same, the brief was turned down, and the US Supreme Court rejects to even consider the case.

This despite the fact that the brief cites a whole litany of precedents where the Supreme Court itself and the various federal appeals courts in the country have granted relief in exactly the same circumstances where the US Supreme Court now says it is not even ready to deal with the matter.

In sum: Here, too, Mumia is being punished for being who he is and acting like who he is, for being Mumia and acting like Mumia, which is exactly what has sparked such a strong international movement around this particular case over the years.

That said, I do believe it will have negative consequences and will weaken positive US Supreme Court decisions such as the ‘Snyder’ case, where even reactionary justices20such as Sam Alito, took a clear stance against racism in jury selection. The message is: “Look, we can and are ready to grant you these rights, but only if you have the right posture, that of one who doesn't raise his/her head. If, on the other hand, you dare to speak out against injustice, all rights will be taken away from you.”

This is truly a horrible message.

From our side, I think that means we must step up the fight: The absence of racism in jury selection and during the trial as a whole can't be conditioned on some proper behavior of the defendant as defined by "the master." It is either a right that applies to everybody or it doesn't offer a real guarantee to anybody.
On a separate point, the consequences are alarming, that, as reported by CNN and others, the court has already turned down Mumia's petition while it is still considering the prosecution's brief.

And by alarming I mean just that. "Alarming" doesn't and mustn't mean going into the shock mode - on the contrary, this is the point where we must raise hell and mobilize anything and everybody in our powers to prevent the ultimate injustice, Mumia's execution, from happening.

That said, the prosecution of course has a lot to fear from even a new sentencing hearing "for" Mumia. Facts would come out that would call their entire card-house20of lies into question and in fact would bring it down in no time at all. So it's only too understandable that this is something they are fighting against in "tooth and nail" fashion.

To sum it all up, this is not the time to bow our heads in disappointed silence. On the contrary, at no point in this whole struggle is it more important to say that THE STRUGGLE FOR MUMIA'S LIFE AND FREEDOM CONTINUES!

Brave activists in Philadelphia have stood by Mumia right from the beginning, joined by others at the end of the eighties. Even in a far away country such as Germany, activists joined the fray already in 1989. Others all around the world joined, and this would be exactly the wrong point to give up.

What we can do now - some speculations:

As far as I understand, even now the defense can ask the court to reconsider its decision. Our first and foremost task as a movement would be to support such a move with all that is within our powers. Apart from that, we must raise hell against the DA's countermove to have Mumia executed. And third, last but by no means least, we must not give up our struggle to finally free this innocent man, by any means possible and by any means necessary.

On this last point, we will need to have intense and open consultations about what to do next. As far as I can see, there a re various options here, and apart from what lawyers can still do (for example, ask the court to reconsider), two things seem promising to me: 1) a massive campaign about the facts of the case, which show that Mumia is innocent of murder, and 2) a campaign for an amnesty for all the prisoners we consider "political," and who have already served such an incredibly long time.

[I think this latter point is necessary anyway, as will be evident to at least some of those who read the names Herman Bell, Veronza Bowers, Romaine "Chip" Fitzgerald, Jalil Abdul Muntaqim, Leonard Peltier, Ruchell "Cinque" Magee, Mondo we Langa, Hugo "Yogi" Pinell, Edward Poindexter, Russell "Maroon" Shoats, Herman Wallace, Alber Woodfox, and so many others whose names don't spring to mind so readily or who we haven't even heard about.]

The long and the short of all this is that this is a serious setback, but that the struggle continues.
Hasta la victoria siempre! **(END OF QUOTE)



--
Free All Political Prisoners!
[email protected] • www.jerichony.org

MAVA
7th April 2009, 19:58
damn

brigadista
7th April 2009, 20:15
yeah double damn really bad shit

MarxSchmarx
12th April 2009, 05:53
Thanks for the post, Ckaihatsu.

There is still the penalty phase, though, and that will, I suspect, open new doors. In particular, there is a case to be made that if there is sufficient doubt to question whether the law should be imposed, it strains credulity to assume this doubt does not extend to the issue of guilt.

But appeals are notoriously tricky about these kinds of things, and I:m thus admittedly not terribly surprised, the SCOTUS ruled the way it did.

ckaihatsu
12th April 2009, 14:17
Thanks for the post, Ckaihatsu.

There is still the penalty phase, though, and that will, I suspect, open new doors. In particular, there is a case to be made that if there is sufficient doubt to question whether the law should be imposed, it strains credulity to assume this doubt does not extend to the issue of guilt.

But appeals are notoriously tricky about these kinds of things, and I:m thus admittedly not terribly surprised, the SCOTUS ruled the way it did.


That Mumia is still not free is atrocious -- this has always been a modern, legal lynching in slow-motion. I don't keep up with the legal twists and turns -- I just know that Mumia needs to be released immediately.

ckaihatsu
14th April 2009, 03:07
(petition to Supreme Court for Mumia) Fwd: [icffmaj] Counterpunch article by Annette Schiffman of Germans for Mumia


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, Apr 13, 2009 at 8:12 PM
Subject: [icffmaj] Counterpunch article by Annette Schiffman of
Germans for Mumia
To: [email protected]





New ONLINE PETITIONS for Mumia Abu-Jamal and Leonard Peltier –
Why Germans fervently support it

www.petitiononline.com/supreme

Within three weeks last month 3000 people signed a new online petition
for Mumia Abu-Jamal addressing the US Supreme Court – among them
voices from Mexico, Brazil, Sweden, Ireland, India, Japan,
Switzerland, Finland, Austria, Great Britain and the USA – but most of
them from Germany.

Among them famous linguist Noam Chomsky, Robert Meeropol – son of
Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, who both were executed in the fifties,
French activist Julia Wright, Britain’s favorite actor Colin Firth,
and former witness Veronica Jones who had been blackmailed not to give
her exonerating testimony at Abu-Jamal’s original trial.

The German voices include professors, publishing house editors,
writers, physicians, members of parliament, and just ordinary
people.They are all signing for African-American journalist Mumia
Abu-Jamal in his twenty seventh year on Pennsylvania’s death row,
asking the highest court of another country to hear the prisoner’s
case and hopefully grant him a new trial.

What has gotten into them? Why would they care?

It was in the late eighties when the director of a small German
publishing house by sheer accident stumbled over Abu-Jamal and his
writing and was immediately intrigued.

The sharp-wittedness as well as the style of the author, both serving
the vivid description of the – by Ger man standards – unimaginable
circumstances this inmate was living in struck him completely. So did
the ongoing horror of this case.

He decided to campaign for Abu-Jamal and to publish the author’s books
in German.

And people bought and read them and were totally stunned.

So this should be the prison system of the freest country of the
world? Cells without windows? Underground prisons? Male wardens for
women? Ongoing executions on a big scale? Come on! Not really. It must
be somewhat exaggerated, right? This simply can’t be happening.

While U.S. America’s reputation among Germans in general had suffered
badly from the war in Viet Nam, this was far worse than most people
had da red to imagine.

The extremely appalling death penalty system, the incredible racism
revealing itself in the grotesque disproportion of black and white
people in prison, the blatant injustice of so many cases, including
his own – Mumia’s eloquent way of showing the inhumanity of capital
punishment had a huge impact on both personal and political levels.

He rang a chord with many critical minded Germans – judging from our
own past we could imagine quite well how political repression and
racism in courts had worked in this particular case.

“The Germans” were the worst guys in history – and each and every
German school kid knows it. We weren’t and aren’t allowed to ever
forget what our grandparents did in the 1930s and early 1940 – and
rightly so.

We all grew up with the slogan: “Never again“ which referred to war
and the alleged right of the State to kill, as well as racism and its
inevitably cruel consequences.

That combined with the nagging and accusatory questions we all asked
our parents and grandparents: “Where were you in this? Did you support
it or did you resist? How come you went along with it?“ was a powerful
motivation for millions to stand up in the Sixties, Seventies and
early Eighties to challenge our post-war system that – instead of
thoroughly pulling out the roots of fascism – had been lulling us in
comfortable prosperity and in the ideology that now everything was
different.

It had been the United States of America that forced democracy on our
parents and grandparents – and we grew up in admiration for the world
of free speech and equality and the new great ideals, ideas, and t he
endless creativity it represented.

Enter the war against Viet Nam, enter the Civil Rights Movement from
Rosa Parks to Martin Luther King, the Black Panthers, the American
Indian Movement and the way they were treated by the state – what
disillusionment for so many of us about the real conditions in the
land of the free.

Mumia and his case – like the case of American Indian Movement leader
Leonard Peltier – for us captured everything the US was about ideally
and was not in real life: a country of wonderful people with open
minds, outspokenness, a strong sense for justice, equality and
freedom, courage and inspiration.

And on the other hand a system that seemed to be obsessed with and
corroded by its own unacknowledged history of brutal racism: the
silent destruction and wiping out of the native population, the
degradation of anothe r entire people to animal status by forcing
millions of human beings into slavery.

So these two cases held in a nutshell what we never wanted to allow
happen again – in Germany or any other country.

By the end of the 1990s there were huge demonstrations in support of
Mumia and Leonard in virtually every larger city in Germany. Beginning
as a political struggle conducted by leftists, these issues were
quickly picked up by Amnesty International and rapidly spread to
people from all walks of life, from actors to musicians to church
representatives to students and to teachers and politicians in the
German parliament.

The consensus was that this grave violation of legal standards needed
to be addressed urgently. This was reflected in a resolution
supporting Mumia by the German parliament in 2000, as well as a
similar one from the European Union parliament.20Both resolutions
demanded a new and fair trial for Mumia and called for a general stop
of the death penalty in the USA.

After US District Judge Yohn threw out Mumia’s death sentence while
uphelding his murder conviction in 2001, protests became less frequent
but many still follow the case to this day.

Now, in 2009 people are outraged by the apparent lack of interest in
basic human rights US American courts continue to display.

Twenty-seven years of living on death row hell for a courageous
journalist, who is one of the most audible and articulate independent
American voices heard abroad is a plight so far beyond of the
standards for the treatment of prisoners we have grown to take for
granted in Europe that people literally gasp when hearing it.

=0 A
Not to mention the monstrosity of 33 years in prison for Leonard
Peltier, who everybody who really wants to know does know to be the
victim of a malicious frame-up by the prosecution and the FBI, now
sanctioned by federal courts.

After the recent change of US government a lot of people harbor new
hopes about some self-healing process in the American system.

Whether or not that will materialize, though, is largely depending on
American activists and their public demands for righting the wrongs on
many levels – with the support of international solidarity.

Like former German Minister of the Interior, Gerhard Baum, of all
people, put it in his speech for Mumia Abu-Jamal at Berlin’s Akademie
der Künste (Academy of Arts) on March 29: “The execution of the right
of the stro ngest in the USA is changing now under Obama, and that is
giving us hope.“

The big event called for “Justice for Mumia Abu-Jamal” and starred
high ranking prominents like Mumia’s lawyer Robert R. Bryan and death
penalty foes such as Danielle Mitterand.

“Racism is something we will always be ashamed of,” Baum concluded.
“The fact that we as Germans didn’t conquer our basic rights ourselves
but had to be given them by others is the very reason for our special
responsibility to interfere.“

Please sign the petition for Mumia Abu-Jamal:
www.petitiononline.com/supreme

And the one for Leonard Peltier:
www.PetitionOnline.com/balpsg01/petition.html

The first 3000 signatures for Mumia have already been sent to the Supreme Court.


Annette Schiffmann – German Network Against the Death Penalty and
TFF-Transnational Peace & Future Research
www.transnational.org/Resources_Treasures/2009/Schiffmann_AppealMumia.html

April 3, 2009


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
To: National Jericho <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]; Jericho Ten-Ten
<[email protected]>; [email protected]
Sent: Sun, 12 Apr 2009 8:48 pm
Subject: Counterpunch article by Annette Schiffman of Germans for Mumia

New ONLINE PETITIONS for Mumia Abu-Jamal and Leonard Peltier –
Why Germans fervently support it

www.petitiononline.com/supreme

Within three weeks last month 3000 people signed a new online pe
tition for Mumia Abu-Jamal addressing the US Supreme Court – among
them voices from Mexico, Brazil, Sweden, Ireland, India, Japan,
Switzerland, Finland, Austria, Great Britain and the USA – but most of
them from Germany.

Among them famous linguist Noam Chomsky, Robert Meeropol – son of
Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, who both were executed in the fifties,
French activist Julia Wright, Britain’s favorite actor Colin Firth,
and former witness Veronica Jones who had been blackmailed not to give
her exonerating testimony at Abu-Jamal’s original trial.

The German voices include professors, publishing house editors,
writers, physicians, members of parliament, and just ordinary
people.They are all signing for African-American journalist Mumia
Abu-Jamal in his twenty seventh year on Pennsylvania’s death row,
asking the highest court of another country to hear the prisoner’s
case and hopefully grant him a new trial.

What has gotten into them? Why would they care?

It was in the late eighties when the director of a small German
publishing house by sheer accident stumbled over Abu-Jamal and his
writing and was immediately intrigued.

The sharp-wittedness as well as the style of the author, both serving
the vivid description of the – by German standards – unimaginable
circumstances this inmate was living in struck him completely. So did
the ongoing horror of this case.

He decided to campaign for Abu-Jamal and to publish the author’s books
in German.

And people bought and read them and were totally stunned.

So this should be the prison system of the freest country of the
world? Cells without windows? Underground prisons? Male wardens for
women? Ongoing executions on a big scale? Come on! Not really. It must
be somewhat exaggerated, right? This simply can’t be happening.

While U.S. America’s reputation among Germans in general had suffered
badly from the war in Viet Nam, this was far worse than most people
had dared to imagine.

The extremely appalling death penalty system, the incredible racism
revealing itself in the grotesque disproportion of black and white
people in prison, the blatant injustice of so many cases, including
his own – Mumia’s eloquent way of showing the inhumanity of capital
punishment had a huge impact on both personal and political levels.

He rang a chord with many critical minded Germans – judging from our
own past we could imagine quite well how political repression and
racism in courts had worked in this particular case.

“The Germans” were the worst guys in history – and each and every
German school kid knows it. We weren’t and aren’t allowed to ever
forget what our grandparents did in the 1930s and early 1940 – and
rightly so.

We all grew up with the slogan: “Never again“ which referred to war
and the alleged right of the State to kill, as well as racism and its
inevitably cruel consequences.

That combined with the nagging and accusatory questions we all asked
our parents and grandparents: “Where were you in this? Did you support
it or did you resist? How come you went along with it?“ was a powerful
motivation for millions to stand up in the Sixties, Seventies and
early Eighties to challenge our post-war system that – ins tead of
thoroughly pulling out the roots of fascism – had been lulling us in
comfortable prosperity and in the ideology that now everything was
different.

It had been the United States of America that forced democracy on our
parents and grandparents – and we grew up in admiration for the world
of free speech and equality and the new great ideals, ideas, and the
endless creativity it represented.

Enter the war against Viet Nam, enter the Civil Rights Movement from
Rosa Parks to Martin Luther King, the Black Panthers, the American
Indian Movement and the way they were treated by the state – what
disillusionment for so many of us about the real conditions in the
land of the free.

Mumia and his case – like the case of American Indian Movement leader
Leonard Peltier – for us captured everything the US was about ideally
and was not in real life: a country of wonderful people with open
minds, outspokenness, a strong sense for justice, equality and
freedom, courage and inspiration.

And on the other hand a system that seemed to be obsessed with and
corroded by its own unacknowledged history of brutal racism: the
silent destruction and wiping out of the native population, the
degradation of another entire people to animal status by forcing
millions of human beings into slavery.

So these two cases held in a nutshell what we never wanted to allow
happen again – in Germany or any other country.

By the end of the 1990s there were huge demonstrations in support of
Mumia and Leonard in virtually every larger city in Germany. Beginning
as a political struggle conducted by leftists, these issues were
quickly picked up by Amnesty International and rapidly spread to
people from all walks of life, from actors to musicians to church
representatives to students and to teachers and politicians in the
Germ= an parliament.

The consensus was that this grave violation of legal standards needed
to be addressed urgently. This was reflected in a resolution
supporting Mumia by the German parliament in 2000, as well as a
similar one from the European Union parliament. Both resolutions
demanded a new and fair trial for Mumia and called for a general stop
of the death penalty in the USA.

After US District Judge Yohn threw out Mumia’s death sentence while
uphelding his murder conviction in 2001, protests became less frequent
but many still follow the case to this day.

Now, in 2009 people are outraged by the apparent lack of interest in
basic human20rights US American courts continue to display.

Twenty-seven years of living on death row hell for a courageous
journalist, who is one of the most audible and articulate independent
American voices heard abroad is a plight so far beyond of the
standards for the treatment of prisoners we have grown to take for
granted in Europe that people literally gasp when hearing it.

Not to mention the monstrosity of 33 years in prison for Leonard
Peltier, who everybody who really wants to know does know to be the
victim of a malicious frame-up by the prosecution and the FBI, now
sanctioned by federal courts.

After the recent change of US government a lot of people harbor new
hopes about some self-healing process in the Ame= rican system.

Whether or not that will materialize, though, is largely depending on
American activists and their public demands for righting the wrongs on
many levels – with the support of international solidarity.

Like former German Minister of the Interior, Gerhard Baum, of all
people, put it in his speech for Mumia Abu-Jamal at Berlin’s Akademie
der Künste (Academy of Arts) on March 29: “The execution of the right
of the strongest in the USA is changing now under Obama, and that is
giving us hope.“

The big event called for “Justice for Mumia Abu-Jamal” and starred
high ranking prominents like Mumia’s lawyer Robert R. Bryan and death
penalty foes such as Danielle Mitterand.

“Racism is something we will always be ashamed of,” Baum concluded.
“The fact that we as Germans didn’t conquer our basic rights ourselves
but had to be given them by others is the ve ry reason for our special
responsibility to interfere.“

Please sign the petition for Mumia Abu-Jamal:
www.petitiononline.com/supreme

And the one for Leonard Peltier:
www.PetitionOnline.com/balpsg01/petition.html

The first 3000 signatures for Mumia have already been sent to the Supreme Court.


Annette Schiffmann – German Network Against the Death Penalty and
TFF-Transnational Peace & Future Research
www.transnational.org/Resources_Treasures/2009/Schiffmann_AppealMumia.html

April 3, 2009



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ckaihatsu
17th April 2009, 00:07
SIGN MUMIA ONLINE INTERNATIONAL APPEAL & April 20 Action to Stop Cliffside

Action Center For Justice <[email protected]> Thu, Apr 16, 2009 at 2:32 PM


PLEASE POST WIDELY!
International Campaign for
Constitutional Justice for Mumia Abu-Jamal
Free Mumia Coalition

Tell the Obama Administration you demand Constitutional Justice Now for Mumia Abu-Jamal
Initiated by the Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition (NYC)
SIGN THE ONLINE PETITION AT http://www.iacenter.org/mumiapetition

On April 6, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal asking for a new trial for death row political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal, based on evidence of racist prosecutorial misconduct during his original 1982 trial in Philadelphia. An important aspect of this misconduct is based on the 1986 Batson issue—a legal decision that says that prospective jurors cannot be selected or unselected based on their race.

In Mumia’s 1982 trial, the white prosecutor used 11 of his 15 strikes to remove Black jurors from the jury. In the end, Mumia’s case was tried before a jury of ten whites and two Blacks. On top of the strikes made by prosecutors, there was also a well-documented culture of racial discrimination by the Philadelphia District Attorney’s office.

Please take a few minutes to read, sign and circulate widely the important letter below to the various departments of the U.S. government on behalf of defending Mumia’s civil rights, which have been clearly violated. Only a powerful, international campaign can win long, overdue freedom for this outspoken, award-winning journalist and stop a 27 year-old conspiracy to silence him with legal lynching or life in prison without parole. Both options are unacceptable. Mumia needs our movement and our movement needs Mumia.
SIGN THE ONLINE PETITION AT http://www.iacenter.org/mumiapetition

Let President Obama, Vice President Biden, Attorney General Holder, Homeland Security Secretary Napolitano, Secretary of State Clinton, the Senate and House Judiciary Committees, Congressional Leaders, the Congressional Black Caucus, U.N. Secy General Ban, and members of the media know you want the Obama administration to correct the decades of constitutional injustice in Mumia's case NOW!

The petition text follows:

Urgent Appeal to the Obama administration: correct the constitutional injustice in Mumia's case NOW!

To: Attorney General Holder

cc: President Obama, Vice President Biden, Homeland Security Secretary Napolitano, Secretary of State Clinton, the Senate and House Judiciary Committees, Congressional Leaders, the Congressional Black Caucus, U.N. Secy Gen Ban, and members of the media

I write to you with a sense of grave concern and outrage about the U.S. Supreme Court's denial of a hearing to Mumia Abu-Jamal on the issue of racial bias in jury selection, that is, the "Batson issue". Inasmuch as there is no other court to which Abu-Jamal can appeal for justice, I turn to you for remedy of a 27-year history of gross violations of U.S. constitutional law and international standards of justice as documented by Amnesty International and many other legal groups around the world.

I call on you and the Justice Department to immediately commence a civil rights investigation to examine the many examples of egregious and racist prosecutorial and judicial misconduct dating back to the original trial in 1982 and continuing through to the current inaction of the U.S. Supreme Court. The statute of limitations should not be a factor in this case as there is very strong evidence of an ongoing conspiracy to deny Abu-Jamal his constitutional rights.

I am aware of the many differences that exist between the case of former Senator Ted Stevens and Mumia Abu-Jamal. Still, I note with great interest the actions you have taken with regard to Senator Stevens' conviction to assure that he not be denied his constitutional rights. You were specifically outraged by the fact that the prosecution withheld information critical to the defense's argument for acquittal, a violation clearly committed by the prosecution in Abu-Jamal's case. Mumia Abu-Jamal, though not a U.S. senator of great wealth and power, is a Black man revered around the world for his courage, clarity, and commitment and deserves no less than Senator Stevens.

Cordially,
(Your signature will be appended here based on the contact information you enter in the form above)

SIGN THE ONLINE PETITION AT http://www.iacenter.org/mumiapetition

International Campaign for Constitutional Justice for Mumia Abu-Jamal

Sponsored by:
Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition (NYC)
P.O. Box 16, College Station
New York, N.Y. 10030
(212) 330-8029
www.freemumia.com

International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal
Philadelphia, PA
www.freemumia.com
(215) 476-8812

Millions for Mumia
www.millions4mumia.org

International Action Center
www.iacenter.org
c/o Solidarity Center
55 West 17th St 5C
New York, NY 10011
For further information call: (212) 633-6646




*****************************
Call to Conscience - Cliffside Climate Action
Peaceful Rally and Nonviolent Civil Disobedience
To Stop Construction of Duke Energy’s Cliffside Coal Plant
April 20, 2009 – Charlotte, NC

We are pleased to welcome Gloria Reuben as our
Keynote/Featured Speaker!

Join a broad range of public interest groups at 10am in downtown Charlotte to insist that Duke Energy CEO Jim Rogers cancel construction of the new but unnecessary Cliffside power plant. If built, Cliffside would emit 6 million tons of CO2 each year from coal extracted through mountaintop removal mining.

"This plant is a relic before it's even built, a leftover from the days before we realized that coal is filthy in every way. It's hard to imagine that the technologically savvy Tarheel State really wants to get stuck with yesterday's technology."

~Bill McKibben

"Stopping Cliffside is the best thing NC can do to stop global warming."

~Dr. James Hansen, Director, NASA's Goddard Institute


The rally will take place at Marshall Park, corner McDowell and Second Street, beginning 10 a.m. with speakers. We will then walk to the Governor's Office to deliver a message to Governor Perdue, and then to Duke Headquarters, 526 S. Church Street.

We cannot be silent as Duke poisons our air, destroys the Appalachian mountains, and fans the flames of climate change for the sake of profit.

The United Nations’ climate panel now warns that we have only six years at current pollution levels before passing a “point of no return.” We must insist on clean energy, climate justice and a livable planet.

This Earth Day, bring your children and join us as we speak out to stop the construction of Cliffside and all new coal-fired power plants. The future is up to us. The time to act is now!

If you wish to consider risking arrest, we will be offering trainings in peaceful civil disobedience, Sunday, April 19th. Come early, learn new skills and meet new friends!

For more info see http://www.stopcliffside.org/page.php?29 or call 704-342-9161.

*********************
May Day Rally for Jobs, Housing, Healthcare, Education, Workers, & Immigrants Rights at Bank Of America National Headquarters

YES to: Jobs, Housing, Pro-Worker Immigration Reform, Employee Free Choice Act, & Money for the People!

NO to: Raids, Deportations, 287(g), Imprisonment, Forced migration, Labor export, Racism, Foreclosures, & Bank Bail Outs!

Friday, May 1, 2009
Noon
Bank Of America HQ
Trade St & Tryon St
Charlotte, NC

March to Charlotte Mecklenburg Government Center & Mecklenburg Co Jail - Central around 6:00pm

On May 1st, join us and help build a movement to fight for the rights of working people. Join billions around the world who also demonstrate on May Day to build a powerful global movement that fights against the dire economic and social crisis people face here and around the world.

To endorse, volunteer, or for more info email [email protected] or call (704) 492-5226.

Immigrant & Workers Rights Project
http://immigrantworkers.blogspot.com
*******************
Action Center For Justice
www.charlotteaction.blogspot.com

To be removed from the Action Center For Justice email list send an email to
[email protected] To be added send an email to [email protected]

MarxSchmarx
17th April 2009, 05:00
Mumia appeared on American journalist Amy Goodman's show yesterday. It is chilling with all the interruptions from the jail computer system. Here is his take on the latest:


http://www.democracynow.org/2009/4/16/without_struggle_there_is_nothing_mumia