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Mumia Abu-Jamal Case: DA Dropping Death Penalty Against Former Black Panther Convicted Of Shooting Philadelphia Cop

Mumia

KATHY MATHESON   12/ 7/11 04:29 PM ET   AP

PHILADELPHIA — Prosecutors on Wednesday abandoned their 30-year push to execute convicted cop-killer Mumia Abu-Jamal, the former Black Panther whose claim that he was the victim of a racist legal system made him an international cause celebre.

Abu-Jamal, 58, will instead spend the rest of his life in prison.

Flanked by police Officer Daniel Faulkner's widow, Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams announced his decision two days short of the 30th anniversary of the white patrolman's killing.

He said that continuing to seek the death penalty could lead to "an unknowable number of years" of appeals, and that some witnesses have died or are unavailable after nearly three decades.

"There's never been any doubt in my mind that Mumia Abu-Jamal shot and killed Officer Faulkner. I believe that the appropriate sentence was handed down by a jury of his peers in 1982," said Williams, the city's first black district attorney. "While Abu-Jamal will no longer be facing the death penalty, he will remain behind bars for the rest of his life, and that is where he belongs."

Abu-Jamal was originally sentenced to death. His murder conviction was upheld through years of appeals. But in 2008, a federal appeals court ordered a new sentencing hearing on the grounds that the instructions given to the jury were potentially misleading.

After the U.S. Supreme Court declined to weigh in two months ago, prosecutors were forced to decide whether to pursue the death penalty again or accept a life sentence without parole.

Williams said he reached the decision with the blessing of Faulkner's widow, Maureen.

"Another penalty proceeding would open the case to the repetition of the state appeals process and an unknowable number of years of federal review again, even if we were successful," the district attorney said.

Widener University law professor Judith Ritter, who represented Abu-Jamal in recent appeals, welcomed the move.

"There is no question that justice is served when a death sentence from a misinformed jury is overturned," Ritter said. "Thirty years later, the district attorney's decision not to seek a new death sentence also furthers the interests of justice."

According to trial testimony, Abu-Jamal saw his brother scuffle with the patrolman during a 4 a.m. traffic stop in 1981 and ran toward the scene. Police found Abu-Jamal wounded by a round from Faulkner's gun. Faulkner, shot several times, was killed. A .38-caliber revolver registered to Abu-Jamal was found at the scene with five spent shell casings.

Over the years, Abu-Jamal challenged the predominantly white makeup of the jury, the instructions given to the jurors and the accounts of eyewitnesses. He also complained that his lawyer was ineffective, that the judge was racist and that another man confessed to the crime.

His writings and radio broadcasts from death row put him at the center of an international debate over capital punishment and made him the subject of books and movies. The one-time journalist's own 1995 book, "Live From Death Row," depicts prison life and calls the justice system racist.

He garnered worldwide support from the "Free Mumia" movement, with hundreds of vocal supporters and death-penalty opponents regularly turning out for court hearings in his case.

His message resonated on college campuses and in Hollywood. Actors Mike Farrell and Tim Robbins were among dozens of luminaries who used a New York Times ad to call for a new trial, and the Beastie Boys played a concert to raise money for Abu-Jamal's defense.

Faulkner's widow labored to ensure her husband was not forgotten.

"My family and I have endured a three-decade ordeal at the hands of Mumia Abu-Jamal, his attorneys and his supporters, who in many cases never even took the time to educate themselves about the case before lending their names, giving their support and advocating for his freedom," she said Wednesday. "All of this has taken an unimaginable physical, emotional and financial toll on each of us."

Amnesty International, which maintains that Abu-Jamal's trial was "manifestly unfair and failed to meet international fair trial standards," said the district attorney's decision does not go far enough. Abu-Jamal still has an appeal pending before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court over the validity of ballistics evidence.

"Amnesty International continues to believe that justice would best be served by granting Mumia Abu-Jamal a new trial," said Laura Moye, director of the human rights group's Campaign to Abolish the Death Penalty.

Members of Philadelphia's police community stood with Williams and Maureen Faulkner as the decision was announced. Former police union president Rich Costello blasted the courts for ordering a new sentencing hearing.

"Where do Maureen and the Faulkner family go for a reduction in their sentence?" Costello said. "For 30 years now, they have been forced to suffer grief, anguish, abuse, insults, intimidation, threats and every other sort of indignity that can be visited on a family already in grief."

Faulkner lashed out at the judges who overturned the death sentence, calling them "dishonest cowards" who, she said, oppose the death penalty. The widow also vowed to fight any special treatment for Abu-Jamal behind bars, saying he should be moved to the general population after being taken off death row.

"I will not stand by and see him coddled, as he has been in the past," Faulkner said. "And I am heartened that he will be taken from the protective cloister he has been living in all these years and begin living among his own kind – the thugs and common criminals that infest our prisons."

___

Associated Press writer Maryclaire Dale contributed to this story.

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PHILADELPHIA — Prosecutors on Wednesday abandoned their 30-year push to execute convicted cop-killer Mumia Abu-Jamal, the former Black Panther whose claim that he was the victim of a racist lega...
PHILADELPHIA — Prosecutors on Wednesday abandoned their 30-year push to execute convicted cop-killer Mumia Abu-Jamal, the former Black Panther whose claim that he was the victim of a racist lega...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GrumpyinAZ
My opinion is worth every penny you paid for it
07:46 PM on 12/17/2011
As long as he dies in jail, it is still a death sentence. That is good enough for me
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
twinkie1cat
01:35 AM on 12/13/2011
Where does the family go for a reduction in sentence? They go to God. They ask God to forgive them for allowing this man to be sentenced to death, for playing God. They forgive Mumia and he appeals until he gets out. Life sentences should rarely last more than 20-30 years. I can only think of Charles Manson who needs to stay for life because he said he would do it again.

I get really tired of hearing these families claiming to be Christian and totally lacking in forgiveness and gnashing their teeth as they demand the death penalty. It is hypocrisy in the worst sense. A lot of people probably don't know about this, but Martin Luther King's children did not want the killer of their grandmother executed because it was not in accordance with their relationship with God. They talked to the man and got him off of death row. You will also notice that the killer of Dr. King was not executed. The Bible says to love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.

I am really happy that Rick Perry now shows little chance of becoming President. He is another one who claims to be a Christian and yet said he has no problem executing an innocent man. People who believe in and would carry out the death penalty have no business being in power in America. They are no better than the Saudis.
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kapalabhati
Lokah Samasta Sukhino Bhavantu
08:12 PM on 12/15/2011
In PA, it is a life sentence without possibility of parole.
12:09 AM on 12/11/2011
Anyone that does any reasonable amount of research on this case will find that his trial was unfair and rigged. He should not be in jail.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mulebone
You're heavy, and I'm not your Brother
06:24 PM on 12/10/2011
I just want to say for the record, if they reinstate the death penalty on this guy, please contact me if someone is needed to give him the lethal injection or pull the switch.
08:06 AM on 12/10/2011
It's not enough. He must be freed and given 30 million dollars and a seat in Congress.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vesaversa1
Stupid is forever, ignorance can be fixed.
06:41 PM on 12/09/2011
Justice

The dead cannot cry out for justice; it is a duty of the living to do so for them.
Lois McMaster Bujold
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
22Keys
12:23 PM on 12/09/2011
Dropping the death penalty ok. However, anyone that thinks a murderer should EVER go free is insane.
12:20 PM on 12/09/2011
Just served for Mumia, at last! And the death penalty won't deprive him of the opportunity of benefiting from new evidence, new witnesses or perhaps, a new day and way of assessing the justice of his imprisonment.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
floorme1955
where SNARCASM- meets REALITY
11:13 AM on 12/10/2011
New evidence is not out living the witnesses and planting "new black panthers or black muslims in their place. Their was no justice served here, your view is tainted by your racism. Bet you think OJ was innocent and Tawana Brawley was assulted by the police and used feces to write on her body. Maybe if it was your father that was murdered by this RACIST, you'd celebrate a little less.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
11:41 PM on 12/08/2011
While I think this guy should have been put down a long time ago, it's a good idea to drop the death penalty as that will keep his knucklehead supporters quiet.
12:16 PM on 12/09/2011
Put down? PUT DOWN? You must be the alpha male of your litter.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
01:34 PM on 12/09/2011
No, I've just never committed murder.
10:56 PM on 12/08/2011
So who is the next copkiller liberals are going to defend after their hero Wesley Cook aka Mumia?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aHazMatHoney
Free, Black, and Way Over 21...
08:03 PM on 12/08/2011
Hallelujah! The death penalty is just as wrong as murder. I have supported Mumia and longed for his liberation for 30 years -- over half my life. Just as hating Mumia and wishing for his death has become a way of life and an acculturated process for some of us, it has been the opposite for me, but a way of life and an acculturated process, as well. Officer Faulkner's death remains a great tragedy to this day, but it also remains an unsolved killing. Tell me that you have not noticed that when someone is murdered, it often becomes more important to the people whose lives are touched by that murder to make sure that some-body suffers, even if it is not the right-body? Mumia is not the first, nor will he be the last, person to spend 3 or 4 decades in prison for a crime he did not commit.

I realize that there are a whole lotta people out there, and particularly on this page, who believe that calling people vile names and slinging insults serves as an acceptable substitute for intelligent, civil, debate. So go ahead. Projectile vomit your hate all over this site just because someone has the nerve, and the gall, to believe that Mumia might just not be guilty. It's happened before. So, say what you like, and same to you. I'll check back in my notifications in about six months. lol.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lshaft
This We'll Defend
07:55 PM on 12/08/2011
Abu-Jamal got away with murder. Period.
12:15 AM on 12/09/2011
...And LOT of White racists have gotten away with killing MILLIONS of Blacks.
Ummm...wonder what happened to most of those killers?
Period.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
22Keys
12:19 PM on 12/09/2011
Non-sequitur
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
floorme1955
where SNARCASM- meets REALITY
11:26 AM on 12/10/2011
So your intelligent response to this is :: naner~ naner~ nanner? OH and your math is way off!, unless you're listening to Rev. Wright and his propaganda::::

Also when is wrong okay with you. only when it is a black RACIST murderer?? that thought process seems racist to most folks that I call friends:
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kapalabhati
Lokah Samasta Sukhino Bhavantu
08:13 PM on 12/15/2011
How? He remains in prison.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thebearclaw007
Is your conscience functioning properly?
06:28 PM on 12/08/2011
For those among you who feel the world is rational, here's another example of how it is not. I feel really sorry for the family of the policeman who died. However, if the criminal justice system is racist and criminal itself, how can one ever ex[ect justice? Very sad story.
02:41 PM on 12/08/2011
I can't wait to see the day when white police men are being charged for the brutality, oppression and murder they seem to openly inflict on the black community with impunity.
Or for at least 90% of the population to be educated in anthropology and genetics; so they know genetically, we are so similar that race simply does not exist and that the biggest difference between ourselves are the dichotomies we create through self-identification and prejudices born of cultural ideology. We are all brothers and sisters, it's our silly beliefs and ideas that keep us blind to that truth!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thebearclaw007
Is your conscience functioning properly?
06:32 PM on 12/08/2011
Here's my brother's answer to everything wrong in the world: " It's sin." I'm beginning to think he's right.
06:57 PM on 12/08/2011
Yawwwwwwnnnnn!!!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
floorme1955
where SNARCASM- meets REALITY
10:55 AM on 12/08/2011
Whats really sad here is : Racists will find their own truths here:
White Racist will cry out reverse privilege with a liberal justice system gone mad:: and
Black racist will pretend that he's completely innocent and framed for a murder he did not commit.

Lost in all this manutia is the victim and his family. Take a moment to personalize the reality. Own it, make it yours and tell me you would not want a RACIST murderer punished for killing your loved one: try to be honest: set aside your own prejustice views and think about how this would effect you.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thebearclaw007
Is your conscience functioning properly?
06:41 PM on 12/08/2011
Maybe the only way for whites to keep their fake "superiority" going is to keep everyone else in down, which btw proves they're not superior at all. Superior people don't have to break the legs so to speak of their opponents first in order to come out on top. When social circumstances are equal for all those involved and a certain group comes out on top, those people will be able to profess superiority. Until then, we won't really know who the superior people are and who really cares? However, we have a pretty good idea already of who the cruelest people are in the US.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
floorme1955
where SNARCASM- meets REALITY
12:02 PM on 12/09/2011
You know your point would be better accepted if this was the 1940's, but it's 2011 and although racism still exists and many black folks are equally racists, maybe you could try to find a way to crawl out from under Jesse Jackson's and Rev.Al Sharpton's rock. Want a better social situation, you can EARN IT! No one keeps you down other than folks talking the old- WOO IZZZ ME- B.S. No one group of people are superior to another, but there are difference within all people and color has nothing to do with it. ATTITUDE does: maybe if you change yours, so will your fortunes! Oh and as to this story: this MURDERER should be put to Death years ago, but: it was the color of his skin that actually saved his worthless life::::::