Legal:
Death Penalty Again Looms Over Mumia's Head
July
5, 2004
On June 29,
2004, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit lifted its
stay in the case of Mumia Abu-Jamal, and ordered briefing. At issue
is whether the death judgment should stand. Also pending is the
prosecutions unconstitutional use of racism in jury selection.
Robert R. Bryan,
Mumias lead attorney, has summed up the impact of the latest
developments:
Mumia's
case is now moving forward. He is in extremely grave danger. The
authorities want to silence his voice and pen. They thought this
could be accomplished by convicting this innocent man and placing
him on death row. However, his voice against injustice and oppression
is now stronger then ever, and is heard and read throughout the
world. The government knows that the only way to stop Mumia is
to murder him in the name of the law, to execute him. In over
three decades of litigating death-penalty cases, I have not seen
one in which the government wants so badly to kill a client. We
must not rest until Mumia is free!
The Court of
Appeals briefing order came on the heels of a U.S. Supreme Court
decision in Beard v. Banks, ___ U.S. ___, 2004 WL 1402567 (June
24, 2004). The issue is whether this ruling should apply to the
case of Mumia. The prosecution is contending that the order for
Mumias execution must remain and be carried out. However,
it is the view of Mr. Bryan that this tragically unfair decision
in the Banks case should not have an effect on Mumia.
Mr. Bryan explained
that Beard v. Banks is a complicated case. The Supreme Court ruled
on the appeal by Pennsylvania stemming from a Court of Appeals decision
that invalidated the death sentence of George Banks, who has been
on death row over 20 years for multiple murder. Mr. Banks' death
sentence had been overturned on the grounds that the jury instructions
violated a Supreme Court ruling which held that jurors did not have
to agree unanimously on the existence of mitigating circumstances
in order to vote against death. The issue in the Banks appeal was
whether Mills v. Maryland, 486 U.S. 367 (1988) could be applied
retroactively, as the Court of Appeals
for the Third Circuit had held.
On June 24 the
Supreme Court reversed in a 5-4 decision written by Justice Clarence
Thomas. He concluded that the Mills case, which held unconstitutional
capital sentencing schemes that require juries to disregard mitigating
factors not found unanimously, did not apply retroactively. It was
determined that the Banks conviction became final in 1987, thus
the 1988 Mills decision did not affect his case even though what
had occurred was unconstitutional. Hence, Mr. Banks and others similarly
situated could not benefit from the Mills decision and his death
judgment will stand. It is understood that about 30 other Pennsylvania
death sentences are at stake for
similar concerns.
Mr. Bryan pointed
out that Justice Stevens, joined by Justices Souter, Ginsburg, and
Breyer, strongly dissented. Justice Stevens said that the use
of such a procedure is unquestionably unconstitutional today, and
I believe it was equally so in 1987 when respondents death
sentence became final. He further explained that Mills
simply represented a straightforward application of our longstanding
view that the Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendments cannot tolerate the infliction of a sentence
of death under [a] legal syste[m] that permit[s] the unique penalty
to be . . . wantonly and . . . freakishly imposed. Justice
Souter said that a death sentence based upon a verdict of
11 jurors who would have relied on a given mitigating circumstance
to spare a defendants life, and a single holdout who blocked
them from doing so, would surely be an egregious failure to express
the public conscience accurately. He found that too much importance
is given to the finality of capital sentences and not enough
to their accuracy.
There are other
legal developments concerning the legal fight to free Mumia. Robert
Bryan is awaiting a ruling on a petition he filed in the trial court,
the Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia, concerning new evidence
of innocence and prosecutorial fraud. He will also be attempting
to go back into the U.S. District Court regarding the statement
by the trial judge, who said during the trial in reference to Mumia:
"Yeah,
and I'm going to help'em fry the nigger.
Mumia Abu-Jamal is an award winning author and broadcast journalist.
He has been languishing on Pennsylvanias death row for over
23 yrs. Writing from a solitary confinement cell, his essays have
reached a worldwide audience. Mumia is the author of five books
including "Live From Death Row", "Death Blossoms",
"All Things Censored", Faith of Our Fathers
and the recently released We Want Freedom. They have
sold over 150,000 copies and been translated into seven languages.
His 1982 murder trial and subsequent conviction have been the subject
of great debate.
Mumia's insightful
essays and melodic baritone breathe life into the numbing statistic
5.1 million people under correctional control. Whether Mumia
Abu-Jamal's voice will reach the airwaves, and ultimately whether
he lives or dies, will be a true test of the strength of our struggle.
It will also depend on our independence, the depth of our courage,
and our will to organize.
Legal Overview:
The governments quest to murder in the name of the law
is based upon its desire to silence Mumias voice and pen.
This case has been riddled with racism and fraud since his arrest
1981. The trial was a travesty of justice. Mumia is innocent.
Robert R. Bryan, Esq.
A decision in
Mumias first and only federal habeas corpus appeal was issued
on Dec. 18, 2001 by Judge William Yohn, U.S. District Court. In
that ruling, Mumias death sentence was reversed, but his conviction
was upheld. Both the Philadelphia DA and Mumias lawyers appealed.
The Court granted the DAs motion to keep Mumia on death row.
If the appeal panel grants relief on Mumias death sentence,
the case will go back for a re-trial on whether Mumia is again sentenced
to death, or is to spend the remainder of his life in prison. Mumia's
attorneys are seeking a completely new trial, and have issues pending
in both state and federal courts. In order for Mumia to be
released from prison he must first have a new trial. For legal updates
and to see an excellent summary of the case visit click
here.
Health Crisis
Update: In the past year Mumia has had two serious bouts of
inflammation of his ankle and leg with discoloration, caused by
his many years on death row. Mumia needs to be seen by an outside
doctor for a diagnosis and a health care plan. He is housed in isolation
at a supermax security control unit on death row.
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I
have never seen a case where the government wanted so desperately
to kill
one of my clients. Mumia Abu-Jamal is in grave danger." Robert
R. Bryan,
Esq., Lead Attorney