Sentencing Hearing for Mumia Abu Jamal
Interview by Scott Harris | 01.01.2002 20:03
Sentencing Hearing for Mumia Abu Jamal
a Result of Flawed Trial and Growing Worldwide Protest
* An interview with Steve Hawkins,
an attorney who worked with Mumia Abu Jamal's
legal team for six years and now serves
as the executive director of the National
Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty.
a Result of Flawed Trial and Growing Worldwide Protest
* An interview with Steve Hawkins,
an attorney who worked with Mumia Abu Jamal's
legal team for six years and now serves
as the executive director of the National
Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty.
Sentencing Hearing for Mumia Abu Jamal
a Result of Flawed Trial and Growing Worldwide Protest
http://www.wpkn.org/wpkn/news/hawkins010402.ram
Interview by Scott Harris.
* An interview with Steve Hawkins,
an attorney who worked with Mumia Abu Jamal's
legal team for six years and now serves
as the executive director of the National
Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty.
In a major development in one of the nation's most closely watched
capital punishment cases, federal Judge William Yohn announced his
decision to throw out the death sentence against Mumia Abu Jamal,
convicted of the1981 murder of Philadelphia police officer Daniel
Faulkner. Jamal, an award-winning journalist on Pennsylvania's death row
for 20 years, has drawn attention to his case through radio commentaries
and the publication of several books critical of the U.S. justice
system. Thousands of supporters across the globe have demanded that the
47-year-old former Black Panther be freed or receive a new trial.
Judge Yohn's decision issued Dec. 18, upholds Jamal's first degree
murder conviction, but ruled that the state must conduct a new
sentencing hearing within six months, or a life sentence without parole
would be imposed. Jamal's supporters have vowed to appeal the judge's
decision and press their demand for a new trial that would include the
testimony of Ronald Beverley, who recently confessed that he, not Jamal
killed Daniel Faulkner. Officer Faulkner's wife and many police
officials have bitterly condemned the judge's ruling.
Between The Lines' Scott Harris spoke with Steve Hawkins, an attorney
who worked with Mumia Abu Jamal's legal team for six years and now
serves as the executive director of the National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty. Hawkins analyzes the latest developments in Jamal's
case and how they may affect the movement to end capital punishment.
Steve Hawkins: Judge Yohn has only overturned Mumia's death sentence,
not the underlying conviction and because of that, Mumia is now entitled
to a new sentencing hearing. What the judge found is that the jury in
the initial sentencing hearing was not allowed to individually consider
mitigating evidence, evidence that would allow the jury to vote for a
sentence less than death. The jury was led to believe that -- and this
was a big error -- that they had to agree unanimously on anything that
was of mitigating value. So that's really the sum of Judge Yohn's
ruling.
Between The Lines: What is allowed to be introduced in such a hearing?
Supporters of Mumia Abu Jamal, of course want the issue of guilt or
innocence to come up. Can it happen in such a sentencing hearing?
Steve Hawkins: Is it possible to get the jury to focus on the question
of, is the right person before them for sentencing? Yes, there is a
narrow window because of something called "lingering doubt" about guilt,
which has been in the law for awhile. But we have seen in Virginia, for
example, where several governors have commuted death sentences. Even
though the person has been convicted, the governor has said, "I have a
lingering doubt as to whether the system got it right." The attorneys
may very well argue to the jury that the system has the wrong man, and
make that part of their argument as to why a sentence of death should
not be imposed. It would be very critical to Mumia's whole defense if
the jury was to come back and say, "We refuse to sentence this man to
death because we still believe there is a lingering doubt about his
guilt." I phrase it that way because there were several egregious errors
-- major constitutional violations -- that happened at Mumia's trial.
The judge should have granted him a new trial for a complete
determination of guilt or innocence and that has not happened. Mumia's
lawyers will appeal the decision of the federal court.
Between The Lines: Could you describe the wider significance of this
judge's decision in Mumia Abu Jamal's case for those advocating
abolition of the death penalty?
Steve Hawkins: Mumia's case represents very clearly how difficult it is
for people who have credible claims of innocence to get that evidence
heard in federal court. We have heard of people who have been released
from death row on grounds of innocence. Most of those people have been
incredibly lucky, frankly, to get released. DNA has cleared perhaps a
quarter of them now. Others have been able to get critical evidence
heard. But we all -- someone like myself, who's been involved in death
penalty defense for 13 years now -- we all know of cases where people
were executed when there were serious doubts about their guilt. Mumia is
in that situation where he is fighting for his life to get his evidence
heard. So it underscores for those of us who are opposed to the death
penalty, the difficulties that exist and why it is so important that
these cases get heard. (These cases) help to reveal all of the problems
that underlie how the death penalty is used in the United States.
Mumia's attorney, for example, at the original trial had no experience
with any death penalty trials. He was only given $150 to hire a
investigator, which is completely unrealistic. That is how poor people,
time and again, are subject to the death penalty in the United States.
The other issue of course, is racial bias. Philadelphia had a very clear
history of keeping black people off of capital juries. It was furthered
by having someone like Judge Sabo send more people to death row than any
other judge in the country. Of all the people he sent to death row, all
but two of the people were African American or Latino.
I do not think that Mumia would have gotten the relief that he did, a
new sentencing hearing, without the kind of activism that has taken
place nationally and internationally. There have been hundreds of people
on the streets in Philadelphia, thousands of people in the streets in
Paris and other parts of the world, and all of that pressure has
certainly helped to make his case well-known, but also, I think, to
further his chances in court.
Many people believe Mumia was very much specifically targeted by the
Philadelphia police. He was well-known, he was writing about the
injustices and the police brutality in Philadelphia at the time it
happened. I frankly have found that most people who get relief from
death row in the United States get relief because somebody makes known
what is happening in their case. I don't think that most people get
relief silently because the courts just work out the problems in the
case.
Contact the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty by calling
(888) 286-2237 or visit their Web site at http://www.ncadp.org
See related links and listen to an excerpt of this interview in a
RealAudio segment or in MP3 on our Web site at: www.btlonline.org
for the week ending 1/4/02.
=============================
Scott Harris is the executive producer of Between The Lines. This
interview excerpt was featured on the award-winning, syndicated weekly
radio newsmagazine, Between The
Lines, for the week ending Jan. 4, 2002.
To subscribe to Between The Lines Q&A, e-mail btlqa-subscribe@topica.com
To subscribe: Send an email from the subscriber account to
btlqa-subscribe@topica.com
To unsubscribe: Send an email from the subscriber account to
btlqa-unsubscribe@topica.com
For all other questions, send email to: betweenthelines@snet.net
_______________________________________________
a Result of Flawed Trial and Growing Worldwide Protest
http://www.wpkn.org/wpkn/news/hawkins010402.ram
Interview by Scott Harris.
* An interview with Steve Hawkins,
an attorney who worked with Mumia Abu Jamal's
legal team for six years and now serves
as the executive director of the National
Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty.
In a major development in one of the nation's most closely watched
capital punishment cases, federal Judge William Yohn announced his
decision to throw out the death sentence against Mumia Abu Jamal,
convicted of the1981 murder of Philadelphia police officer Daniel
Faulkner. Jamal, an award-winning journalist on Pennsylvania's death row
for 20 years, has drawn attention to his case through radio commentaries
and the publication of several books critical of the U.S. justice
system. Thousands of supporters across the globe have demanded that the
47-year-old former Black Panther be freed or receive a new trial.
Judge Yohn's decision issued Dec. 18, upholds Jamal's first degree
murder conviction, but ruled that the state must conduct a new
sentencing hearing within six months, or a life sentence without parole
would be imposed. Jamal's supporters have vowed to appeal the judge's
decision and press their demand for a new trial that would include the
testimony of Ronald Beverley, who recently confessed that he, not Jamal
killed Daniel Faulkner. Officer Faulkner's wife and many police
officials have bitterly condemned the judge's ruling.
Between The Lines' Scott Harris spoke with Steve Hawkins, an attorney
who worked with Mumia Abu Jamal's legal team for six years and now
serves as the executive director of the National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty. Hawkins analyzes the latest developments in Jamal's
case and how they may affect the movement to end capital punishment.
Steve Hawkins: Judge Yohn has only overturned Mumia's death sentence,
not the underlying conviction and because of that, Mumia is now entitled
to a new sentencing hearing. What the judge found is that the jury in
the initial sentencing hearing was not allowed to individually consider
mitigating evidence, evidence that would allow the jury to vote for a
sentence less than death. The jury was led to believe that -- and this
was a big error -- that they had to agree unanimously on anything that
was of mitigating value. So that's really the sum of Judge Yohn's
ruling.
Between The Lines: What is allowed to be introduced in such a hearing?
Supporters of Mumia Abu Jamal, of course want the issue of guilt or
innocence to come up. Can it happen in such a sentencing hearing?
Steve Hawkins: Is it possible to get the jury to focus on the question
of, is the right person before them for sentencing? Yes, there is a
narrow window because of something called "lingering doubt" about guilt,
which has been in the law for awhile. But we have seen in Virginia, for
example, where several governors have commuted death sentences. Even
though the person has been convicted, the governor has said, "I have a
lingering doubt as to whether the system got it right." The attorneys
may very well argue to the jury that the system has the wrong man, and
make that part of their argument as to why a sentence of death should
not be imposed. It would be very critical to Mumia's whole defense if
the jury was to come back and say, "We refuse to sentence this man to
death because we still believe there is a lingering doubt about his
guilt." I phrase it that way because there were several egregious errors
-- major constitutional violations -- that happened at Mumia's trial.
The judge should have granted him a new trial for a complete
determination of guilt or innocence and that has not happened. Mumia's
lawyers will appeal the decision of the federal court.
Between The Lines: Could you describe the wider significance of this
judge's decision in Mumia Abu Jamal's case for those advocating
abolition of the death penalty?
Steve Hawkins: Mumia's case represents very clearly how difficult it is
for people who have credible claims of innocence to get that evidence
heard in federal court. We have heard of people who have been released
from death row on grounds of innocence. Most of those people have been
incredibly lucky, frankly, to get released. DNA has cleared perhaps a
quarter of them now. Others have been able to get critical evidence
heard. But we all -- someone like myself, who's been involved in death
penalty defense for 13 years now -- we all know of cases where people
were executed when there were serious doubts about their guilt. Mumia is
in that situation where he is fighting for his life to get his evidence
heard. So it underscores for those of us who are opposed to the death
penalty, the difficulties that exist and why it is so important that
these cases get heard. (These cases) help to reveal all of the problems
that underlie how the death penalty is used in the United States.
Mumia's attorney, for example, at the original trial had no experience
with any death penalty trials. He was only given $150 to hire a
investigator, which is completely unrealistic. That is how poor people,
time and again, are subject to the death penalty in the United States.
The other issue of course, is racial bias. Philadelphia had a very clear
history of keeping black people off of capital juries. It was furthered
by having someone like Judge Sabo send more people to death row than any
other judge in the country. Of all the people he sent to death row, all
but two of the people were African American or Latino.
I do not think that Mumia would have gotten the relief that he did, a
new sentencing hearing, without the kind of activism that has taken
place nationally and internationally. There have been hundreds of people
on the streets in Philadelphia, thousands of people in the streets in
Paris and other parts of the world, and all of that pressure has
certainly helped to make his case well-known, but also, I think, to
further his chances in court.
Many people believe Mumia was very much specifically targeted by the
Philadelphia police. He was well-known, he was writing about the
injustices and the police brutality in Philadelphia at the time it
happened. I frankly have found that most people who get relief from
death row in the United States get relief because somebody makes known
what is happening in their case. I don't think that most people get
relief silently because the courts just work out the problems in the
case.
Contact the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty by calling
(888) 286-2237 or visit their Web site at http://www.ncadp.org
See related links and listen to an excerpt of this interview in a
RealAudio segment or in MP3 on our Web site at: www.btlonline.org
for the week ending 1/4/02.
=============================
Scott Harris is the executive producer of Between The Lines. This
interview excerpt was featured on the award-winning, syndicated weekly
radio newsmagazine, Between The
Lines, for the week ending Jan. 4, 2002.
To subscribe to Between The Lines Q&A, e-mail btlqa-subscribe@topica.com
To subscribe: Send an email from the subscriber account to
btlqa-subscribe@topica.com
To unsubscribe: Send an email from the subscriber account to
btlqa-unsubscribe@topica.com
For all other questions, send email to: betweenthelines@snet.net
_______________________________________________
Interview by Scott Harris