Monday, September 29, 2008

FRAMING MUMIA: author J. Patrick O'Connor's Bay Area Book Tour

The SF Bay Area Mobilization to Free Mumia is organizing an exciting book tour with author J. Patrick O'Connor, from October 3-8. Please see the schedule below and learn more about this explosive book

Included in this post announcing the Bay Area tour, is the full text of O'Connor's speech, given at Baruch College, June 23, 2008, during his East Coast book tour.
framinglr.jpg
framinglr.jpg

Please Click here to see Journalists for Mumia's special page about O'Connor, including our exclusive interview at Philly City Hall:

http://www.abu-jamal-news.com/article.php?name=vidframe

Here is the schedule (from freemumia.org):

Sponsor: The Mobilization to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal
freemumia.org, jmackler [at] lmi.net, 510-268-9429, P.O. Box 10328, Oakland, CA 94610

The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal - Northern California Tour

October 3 - 8 - The Mobilization to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal is organizing a Northern California tour by J. Patrick O'Connor, Crime Magazine on-line editor, author of the recently published book, "The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal." Meetings and media work is planned for San Francisco, the East Bay, Palo Alto, Santa Rosa, and many other locations. This amazing book presents new evidence detailing the frame-up of Mumia and proving, once again, that he is innocent!

(J. Patrick O'Connor is the editor & publisher of Crime Magazine. He was a reporter and Bureau Manager for United Press International, editor of Cincinnati Magazine, associate editor of TV Guide & editor/publisher of the Kansas City New Times.)

San Francisco: Friday, Oct. 3
5:30 - 7:15 pm, Golden Gate Law School, 536 Mission St.
(between 1st and 2nd Street), San Francisco, Room 3214, $10.

Oakland: Saturday, October 4,
2-5 pm. Special reception/luncheon at the home of Jeff Mackler with Patrick O'Connor and friends, Lynne Stewart, Barbara Lubin and KPFA's Walter Turner, Kris Welsh & Nora Barrows Friedman. Call: 510-268-9429 to attend. $15.00

Patrick O'Conner's new book, "The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal" is based on a meticulous review of 12,000 pages of court transcripts, legal briefs, police records and an exhaustive examination of the constitutional violations perpetrated by America's criminal 'justice' system. His evidence makes a powerful case that Mumia Abu-Jamal should be granted a new trial, and having been cruelly kept on death row for 26 years, he should be immediately freed.
-- Howard Zinn, author, People's History of the United States

Patrick O'Connor Bay Area Tour Schedule

* Fri., Oct. 3, 5:30 pm - Golden Gate Law School, SF (See above)

* Fri., Oct. 3, 7:30 pm - Niebyl-Proctor Library, 6501 Telegraph Ave, Oak. (bet. Alcatraz & 66th St.)
Sponsor: Labor Action Comm. to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal

* Sat., Oct. 4, 2-5 pm - Special reception/luncheon at the home of Jeff Mackler and Carol Kummer, (See above)

* Sun., Oct. 5, 4-6 pm -College of Marin/Kentfield: Patrick O'Connor with Lynne Stewart: Call 510-268-9429 for room & details.

* Mon., Oct. 6, 1pm - Stanford University Radio; Noon, Stanford Law School (tentative)

* Tues., Oct. 7, 12 Noon - Golden Gate Law School, 536 Mission, SF (bet. 1st & 2nd Sts., Rm. 3216

* Tues., Oct. 7, 7 pm SHARP - Community Media Center, 900 San Antonio Rd (near Charleston), Palo Alto. This will be a live TV program followed by Q&A & reception sponsored by the Peninsula & Justice Center

* Wed., Oct. 8, 7:30 pm - Peace and Justice Center of Sonoma County, 467 Sebastopol Ave, Santa Rosa

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

J. Patrick O’Connor’s presentation at Baruch College, NYC
June 23, 2008

Good evening and thank you for coming.

Tonight I’m going to cover five areas of the Mumia Abu-Jamal case, beginning with my reasons for writing The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal. I’ll next discuss how the arrest set the framing in motion. Then look at how the physical evidence and early eyewitness statements pointed to a shooter other than Mumia. In Part 4 I’ll show how the prosecutor used perjured, coerced, and bribed testimony to get the death verdict. I’ll finish with an analysis of Mumia’s various legal appeals and where he stands now. At the conclusion, I’ll be happy to try to answers your questions about the case.

1. Why I wrote this book:

When Mumia was sentenced to death on July 3, 1982, for the murder of Philadelphia Police Officer Daniel Faulkner, I was an associate editor for TV Guide at its headquarters in nearby Radnor, Pennsylvania.

I had often heard Mumia giving reports on the local public radio station during the 20 months he was employed there. I was impressed with his ability to make listeners feel what he was describing – and with the compassion in his distinctive voice. He was, in a very real sense, the “voice of the voiceless.” I had great admiration for him.

In 1996 I watched the BBC documentary: Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Case for Reasonable Doubt on HBO and I began to develop some doubts about the fairness of his trial and its verdict.

When Amnesty International published an 84-page pamphlet in 2000 stating that it had determined that numerous aspects of Mumia’s case “clearly failed to meet minimum standards safeguarding the fairness of legal proceedings,” I began to research the case. By this time I was editor of the Internet site Crime Magazine (http://www.crimemagazine.com), and my intention was to write an article about the case for it.

Running throughout much of Mumia’s support is a subtext that his trial was unfair but that he probably killed Officer Faulkner in self-defense. As I read and re-read the available material on the case – transcripts from both his trial and Post-Conviction Relief Act hearings, newspaper accounts, and several books written about the case – I could see that his trial was a monumental miscarriage of justice, representing an extreme case of prosecutorial abuse and judicial bias.

What I could not tell until I was several years into my research was whether Mumia had actually killed Officer Faulkner. The officer had been in the process of violently arresting Mumia’s younger brother – Billy Cook – shortly before 4 a.m. in a “red-light” section of Center City Philadelphia when Mumia – moonlighting as a taxi driver – happened to be nearby and ran from a parking lot to assist his brother. When I was able to determine that the passenger in Billy Cook’s car had killed Officer Faulkner, I then set out to show what no other book about this case had ever attempted to reveal: Why and how Mumia was framed for Officer Faulkner’s killing.

What makes getting to the truth of this case so difficult for so many people who continue to believe that Mumia is guilty of murdering Officer Faulkner is that the prosecution built its case on perjured, bribed, and coerced testimony with a calculated disregard for what the actual evidence established.

2. How the arrest set the framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal in motion:

The framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal was set in place at the very outset when Inspector Alfonzo Giordano arrived within minutes to take control of the crime scene. Giordano formerly reported directly to George Fencl, the chief inspector of the Philadelphia Police Department’s Civil Defense Bureau – a special intelligence unit that had monitored Mumia since he joined the Philly chapter of the Black Panther Party at age 15. The civil defense bureau was also at the heart of the police department’s harassment of MOVE, the small, radical back-to-nature group that became the focal point of police brutality in the 1970s and 1980s. The civil defense bureau’s interest in Mumia intensified as his radio career took wing. At the local public radio station, Mumia became an outspoken critic of the Mayor Rizzo-dominated police department and one of the city’s few reporters to dare empathize with MOVE in its ongoing and epic-like battle with Rizzo and the police department.

Normal police procedure would have been for a homicide detective to assume control of the crime scene, but there would be nothing normal about this arrest. Giordano seized control, confronting Mumia in the paddy wagon by striking him in the forehead with a hard object – most likely his walkie-talkie – and cursing him with repeated racial epithets. It would be Giordano who claimed that Mumia told him that he dropped his gun in the street after he shot Faulkner. It would be Giordano who arranged at the scene for 21-year-old prostitute Cynthia White and a 23-year-old, white, felon by the name of Robert Chobert to identify Mumia as the shooter. Giordano and White would be the D.A. Office’s only witnesses at the preliminary hearing to hold Mumia over for trial where Giordano repeated this so-called “confession.” Although the police released this confession to the news media the day of Faulkner’s shooting, no jury would ever hear Giordano testify to it. In one of the most sinister aspects of Mumia’s case, the police department waited until the first working day after Mumia’s sentencing to “relieve” Giordano of his duties on what would prove to be well founded “suspicions of corruption.”

Giordano was as corrupt a police officer as one can imagine, even by Philadelphia standards. For years he had been extorting kickbacks – personally averaging $3,000 per month – from Center City prostitutes, pimps, and bar owners, which explains his early arrival at the crime scene. Four years after Mumia’s trial, Giordano pled guilty to tax evasion in connection with those payouts. His penalty: four years probation. In the wide-ranging FBI probe that nailed Giordano, numerous other high-ranking police officers also were convicted, including Deputy Police Commissioner James Martin, and John DeBenedetto, head of the Central Division, to which Faulkner was assigned. Martin, the acknowledged head of the Philadelphia Police Department’s elaborate extortion apparatus, was in charge of all major investigations, including Faulkner’s death.

Giordano didn’t even bother to have White go through the pretense of identifying Mumia in the paddy wagon as he did several other eyewitnesses. Instead, he coerced or enticed her at the scene to concoct an eyewitness account of Faulkner’s shooting and packed her off in a patrol car to give her statement to police detectives at the Roundhouse. White would be the only witness the D.A. had to claim to see Mumia holding a gun over a prone Faulkner.

3. How the physical evidence and early eyewitness statements pointed to a shooter other than Mumia:

From the outset, the investigation into the shooting death of Officer Faulkner was conducted with one goal in mind: to hang the crime on Mumia Abu-Jamal. There was no search for the truth, no attempt at providing the slain officer with the justice he deserved. The physical evidence at the crime scene and the initial witness statements – other than White’s – pointed to a shooter other than Mumia.

• Four eyewitnesses told police that they saw one or more black men running from the scene after hearing gunshots.

• The prosecution’s entire account of how Mumia himself came to be shot – that Officer Faulkner, after Mumia cowardly shot him in the back, was able somehow to whirl around, and while falling down backwards get off the shot that struck Mumia – was a flagrant misrepresentation of the actual evidence. The prosecution’s scenario was completely discredited at trial when the surgeon who operated on Mumia testified that the bullet struck him in the chest and traveled straight downward, lodging in his liver. What the evidence actually showed was that Faulkner – while standing on the sidewalk – shot Mumia as he approached from the street.

• Even Robert Chobert, the felon on probation Giordano had I.D. Mumia in the paddy wagon, said in his first statement that the shooter was in his mid-30s, was heavy-set, weighing 200 to 225 pounds, was 6 feet tall, and wore a gray colored dress shirt that had a green picture on the back. (Mumia was 27. He was 6 feet tall, but weighed a lean 170 pounds then. That night he wore a waist-length, red-quilted ski jacket with a vertical blue stripe crossing the front. There was no picture on it, front or back.

• Cab driver Robert Harkins is the only eyewitness who saw what actually happened to Faulkner. He was driving by the police car and Cook’s VW when he saw an officer grab a man. The man then spun the officer around and the officer went to the ground on his hands and knees, his back now facing the assailant. The assailant then shot the officer in the back, causing the officer to roll over on his back, and then the assailant – according to Harkins – fired two more shots point blank at the officer, one hitting him between the eyes, killing him instantly. When Harkins saw the officer go flat to the ground, he began fearing for his own life and sped away. Within a block he spotted a police paddy wagon and alerted the officers in it that a police officer had been shot.

Harkins’s account of the officer being thrown down on his hands and knees was borne out by the slit in Faulkner’s trousers at the knee and the denuding of his knee.

Harkins – like Chobert – described the assailant as being a little taller and heavier than the officer. Faulkner was 6 feet and weighed 200 pounds. Harkins said the assailant’s clothing was “not too dark and it wasn’t light.” His description fit Billy Cook’s burly street vendor associate, Kenneth Freeman, who was about 6 foot, but weighed over 200 pounds. Freeman that night wore a green army jacket – not too dark and it wasn’t light.

Mumia’s jury did not get to hear from Harkins because the prosecution did not want his testimony to put to rout the perjured testimony of Cynthia White and Robert Chobert.

• In Faulkner’s shirt pocket was a driver’s application bearing the name Arnold Howard. (When the prosecution turned over evidence to the defense, it concealed that the driver’s application had been found in Faulkner’s clothing, claiming it had been recovered from inside Cook’s VW.) Police rousted Howard from his house pre-dawn that morning and brought him in for questioning. He informed them that he had loaned his driver’s application to his friend, Kenneth Freeman. Police then brought Freeman in for questioning. Here, delivered to them, was Faulkner’s assailant. But the police did not want Freeman for this crime even after star prosecution witness Cynthia White twice picked him out of lineups that morning. Freeman was released without having to even bother to contact an attorney.

Five days later, in what the Philadelphia Inquirer reported as a probable police arson, Freeman’s vending stand was burnt to the ground at 3 a.m., effectively bankrupting him. Less than four years later, on the night the police firebombed the MOVE home on Osage Avenue – killing 11 MOVE members, including five children and burning down 60 other row houses in the process – Freeman’s dead body was found nude, gagged and bound – his hands cuffed behind his back – in an empty lot on Roosevelt Boulevard. Coincidence? The coroner listed the 31-year-old’s death as a heart attack and no investigation of his obvious murder was undertaken.

• Perhaps the most absurd claim – absurd as in unbelievable – that the crime-scene police made was that they didn’t conduct even the most elementary tests of Mumia’s gun to determine if it had been recently fired, by either feeling it for heat or smelling it. Neither, they claimed, did they run the most basic trace-metal test on Mumia’s hands to determine if he had fired his gun. What is probable is that they did conduct all three of these tests and each was negative.

• The 26-crime scene photos taken by freelance photographer Pedro Polakoff at the scene of Officer Faulkner’s killing represent another major indication of the Philadelphia Police Department and Philadelphia D.A.’s Office total disregard for what the actual crime-scene evidence revealed. Polakoff arrived at the crime scene 12 minutes after hearing of the shooting on his police scanner. When Polakoff offered the photos to the police and the D.A.’s Office in early 1982, neither wanted them. And for good reason. The photos, taken in total, tell a story neither the police nor the prosecution wanted anyone to know about.

For one thing, the photos depict a stunning nonchalance on the part of the police at the crime scene, particularly the crime scene of a felled fellow officer. Normal police protocol for securing a crime scene – instead of heightened – was abandoned. Polakoff would tell German author Michael Schiffmann 25 years later that it was the “most messed up crime scene I’ve ever seen,” because it was never secured and he, and many others, had free access to it.

The photos also show a disturbing pattern of evidence manipulation and mishandling of crucial forensic evidence within minutes of the police arriving at the scene.

In an interview after his photos were released in 2007, Polakoff said that when he first arrived at the scene the working theory of the police was that the shooter had fled. He said police were interviewing people to get information about the shooter’s description.

4. How the prosecutor used perjured and coerced testimony to get the death verdict:

It wasn’t enough for Prosecutor Joe McGill to try Abu-Jamal on the facts and evidence of the case. Time and again, from his pre-trial dealings through his summations at both the guilt and sentencing phases of the trial, he would go over the top in his effort to send Abu-Jamal to the electric chair.

• McGill knew there was another person in Billy Cook’s VW. He knew that another man – Arnold Howard – had loaned his driver’s application to Cook’s street-vendor partner, Kenneth Freeman, and that application was in Faulkner’s shirt pocket when the officer was killed. He most likely knew that Cynthia White had twice picked Freeman out of lineups hours after Faulkner’s death.

• At Billy Cook’s assault trial – held three months prior to Mumia’s trial – Cynthia White had testified – under questioning from McGill – about both the driver and a passenger in Cook’s VW getting out of the car as Faulkner approached. One of McGill’s first orders of business when White took the stand at Mumia’s trial was to get on record the exact opposite testimony. McGill began by asking her if anyone else was there besides the defendant, the police officer, and Billy Cook. Her answer was, “No.” Getting White to limit the people at the crime scene to only those three was an essential deception McGill needed to establish to counter any other eyewitness testimony regarding one or more black men fleeing the scene.

• McGill, apparently, had no ethical misgivings about using Cynthia White’s obviously perjured testimony. He knew that not one eyewitness had seen her at the scene. He also knew that in her original statement to police – given within an hour of Faulkner’s shooting – that she had Mumia running from the parking lot and from as far as 10 yards away firing four or five shots at Faulkner. After police arrested her again for prostitution three days after Faulkner’s death, she expanded her statement only to say that she saw Billy Cook strike Faulkner. Arrested again five days later, she finally got the message. She was now willing to alter her first two statements to comport with the actual evidence that Faulkner was shot at close range. He reward was to ply her trade with impunity for the six months leading up to Mumia’s trial. She admitted at Billy Cook’s assault trial that she had not been arrested since providing her third statement to police on December 17. Another perk the D.A.’s Office threw her way was to allow her live-in pimp to sign his own bail on a felony theft charge the month before Mumia came to trial.

• The same lack of ethical concern can be said of McGill’s use of Robert Chobert as a witness. Chobert had made the absurd claim in his statement that his taxi was parked directly behind Faulkner’s patrol car and that he saw it all from just feet away. Polakoff’s photos, by the way, belie this claim as did all other eyewitness testimony except for that of Cynthia White. At the time, Chobert was on felony probation and violating that parole by driving a taxi with a revoked driver’s license – revoked for two DUIs. McGill knew that it was nonsense for Chobert to claim that he would park directly behind any police car, but he needed him to bolster White’s less than credible standing as the key prosecution witness. So he used Chobert, simple as that. It didn’t seem to faze McGill that in Chobert’s original statement to police he had said the shooter had run 30 feet or so before collapsing. Mumia, of course, was found passed out just feet from Faulkner. In a subsequent statement to police, Chobert reduced the feet that Mumia ran to 10, still 10 feet more than was true.

• How desperate was the D.A.’s Office and the police to frame Mumia? One of the four witnesses who told police they saw one or more black men fleeing the scene immediately after the shooting was prostitute Veronica Jones. She would recant her original statement at trial after detectives visited her in her jail cell shortly before she was to testify at Mumia’s trial. At the time the 21-year-old Jones faced major felony charges for armed robbery, assault, and possession of an instrument of crime. She was looking at up to 15 years in prison. Her reward for cooperating turned out to be a sentence of five years’ probation on the felony charges against her. At Mumia’s Post-Conviction Relief Act hearing continuation in 1996, Jones bravely testified – under a threat of perjury charge from Judge Sabo – that Philadelphia detectives had coerced her into disavowing her claim about seeing two black men flee the crime scene. Sabo, of course, found her testimony not credible.

• The most credible witness the jury would hear from was a young accounting student – Dessie Hightower, whom the defense called to testify. Just as White had at Cook’s assault trial – Hightower would testify that Faulkner had approached the passenger side of the VW. A few minutes later, after hearing gunshots, Hightower observed someone running from the scene. The police, and presumably the prosecution, were so concerned with the exculpatory contents of his original statement that detectives re-interviewed him in the weeks to come for five hours on one occasion and then a week later came to his workplace and picked him for more questioning, some of it conducted with Hightower wired to a polygraph machine. Hightower would be the only witness the police polygraphed even though White and Chobert had so obviously altered their original statements. In addition, no polygraphs were administered to Officer Garry Bell and hospital security guard Priscilla Durham who concocted the damning “hospital confession” from Mumia.

• There was ample reason to polygraph both of them. For one thing, neither reported the so-called confession to the prosecution until over two months later when McGill himself interviewed them. More pointedly, the two officers who accompanied Mumia from the time he was placed in the paddy wagon until he went into surgery – and who never left his side during that interim – were Officers Gary Wakshul and Stephen Trombetta. In separate, signed statements given to detectives shortly after Mumia went into surgery, both Wakshul and Trombetta reported that Mumia had made no comments. Wakshul’s statement read, “During this time, the Negro male made no comments.”

When Mumia’s court-appointed attorney, Anthony Jackson, made an 11th hour attempt at Mumia’s trial to call Wakshul as a rebuttal witness to debunk Mumia’s alleged hospital confession, prosecutor McGill said he did not know where he was, although McGill knew that Wakshul was at home awaiting the possibility of being called to court to testify. The jury never got to hear from Wakshul or Trombetta – only from Bell and Durham. At trial, Bell testified he had no recall of even seeing Durham at the hospital.



5. Mumia’s failed appeals – “the Mumia exception” and his legal status now:

Mumia’s legal odyssey has been beset by the same sort of machinations as his arrest and trial. In 1989, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court turned down his first appeal even though one of his claims was almost the exact same claim that had persuaded the same court to grant Lawrence Baker a new trial in 1986. In that case, Commonwealth v. Baker, the court overturned Baker’s death sentence for first-degree murder on the grounds that the prosecutor improperly referenced the lengthy appeal process afforded those sentenced to death. That prosecutor – Joseph McGill – was the same prosecutor who used similar – almost identical – language in his summation during both the guilt and sentencing phases of Mumia’s trial. The judge who failed to strike the language in the Baker case was the same judge who presided at Mumia’s trial, Common Pleas Court Judge Albert F. Sabo.

The State Supreme Court ruled in Baker that the use of such language “minimize[ed] the jury’s sense of responsibility for a verdict of death.” When Mumia’s appeal included the very same issue, the court reversed its own precedent in the matter, denying the claim in a shocking unanimous decision.

A year later, in Commonwealth v. Beasley, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court reinstated the death sentence of Leslie Beasley, but exerted its supervisory power to adopt a “per se rule precluding all remarks about the appellate process in all future trials.” This rule not only reinstated the Baker precedent but it ordered all prosecutors in the state to refrain once and for all from referencing the appellate process in summations to the jury. The court could have made this new rule retroactive to Mumia’s case, but did not.

As Amnesty International declared in its pamphlet published in 2000 about Mumia’s case, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s judicial scheming leave “the disturbing impression that the court invented a new standard of procedure to apply to one case only: that of Mumia Abu-Jamal,” Temple University journalism professor Linn Washington aptly dubs this and subsequent court decisions denying Mumia a new trial “the Mumia exception.”

Mumia’s Post-Conviction Relief Act hearing in 1995 was doomed from the beginning when Judge Sabo – Mumia’s original trial judge – would not recuse himself from the case and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would not remove him for bias.

Mumia’s federal habeas corpus appeal – decided by Federal District Judge William Yohn in 2001 – should have resulted in at least an evidentiary hearing on Mumia’s Batson claim that the prosecutor unconstitutionally purged blacks from Mumia’s jury by using peremptory strikes to exclude 10 or 11 otherwise qualified black jurors from the jury pool. Judge Yohn’s error was egregious and could have been easily avoided if he had held one evidentiary hearing on that defense claim. But during the two years that Judge Yohn considered Mumia’s habeas appeal, he held no hearings.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit should have corrected that district court mistake by remanding Mumia’s case back to Judge Yohn to hold the evidentiary hearing on the Batson claim, but in another example of the “Mumia exception,” the court instead continued the long and tortured denial of Mumia’s right to a fair trail. In a 2 to 1 decision released on March 27 that reeks of politics and racism, the court ruled that Abu-Jamal had failed to meet his burden in providing a prima facie case. He failed, the majority wrote, because his attorneys at his Post-Conviction Relief Act hearing in 1995 neglected to elicit the prosecutor’s reasons for peremptorily removing 10 otherwise qualified blacks during jury selection.

In the decision written by Chief Judge Anthony Sirica, the court stated that] “Abu-Jamal had the opportunity to develop this evidence at the PCRA evidentiary hearing, but failed to do so. There may be instances where a prima facie case can be made without evidence of the strike rate and exclusion rate. But, in this case [i.e., “the Mumia exception” is in play], we cannot find the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s ruling [denying Mumia’s Batson claim] unreasonable based on this incomplete record.”

In a nutshell, the majority denied Mumia’s Batson claim on a technicality of its own invention, not on its merits. It also broke with the sacrosanct stare decisis doctrine – the principle that the precedent decisions are to be followed by the courts – by ignoring its own previous opposite ruling in the Holloway v. Horn case of 2004 and the Brinson v. Vaughn case of 2005. It is a general maxim that when a point has been settled by decision, it forms a precedent which is not afterwards to be departed from. In a Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling in 1989 in a case entitled United States v. Washington, the decision stated that an appeal court’s panel is “bound by decisions of prior panels unless an en banc decision, Supreme Court decision, or subsequent legislation undermines those decisions.” None of those variables were in play when the Third Circuit Court majority ruled against Mumia’s Batson claim.

Judge Thomas Ambro’s dissent was sharp: “…I do not agree with them [the majority] that Mumia Abu-Jamal fails to meet the low bar for making a prima facie case under Batson. In holding otherwise, they raise the standard necessary to make out a prima facie case beyond what Batson calls for.”

In other words, the majority, in this case alone, has upped the ante required for making a Batson claim beyond what the U.S. Supreme Court stipulated. When ruling in Batson in 1986, the U.S. Supreme Court did not require that the racial composition of the entire jury pool be known before a Batson claim may be raised. The high court ruled that a defendant must show only “an inference” of prosecutorial discrimination in purging potential jurors. Prosecutor McGill’s using 10 or 11 of the 15 peremptory strikes he deployed is just such an inference – and an extremely strong one. McGill’s strike rate of over 66 percent against potential black jurors is in itself prima facie evidence of race discrimination. Prima facie is a Latin term meaning “at first view,” meaning the evidence being presented is presumed to be true unless disproved.

In commenting on Holloway v. Horn, a Batson-type case with striking similarities to Mumia’s claim, Judge Ambro – the lone Democrat-appointed judge on the three judge panel – demonstrated just how disingenuous the panel’s ruling against Mumia’s Batson claim was. “In Holloway, Judge Ambro wrote in his dissent, “we emphasized that ‘requiring the presentation of [a record detailing the race of the venire] simply to move past the first state – the prima facie stage – in the Batson analysis places an undue burden upon the defendant.’ There we found the strike rate – 11 of 12 peremptory strikes against black persons – satisfied the prima facie burden.” In Holloway, the Third Circuit ruled that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision denying Holloway’s Batson claim was “contrary to” and an “unreasonable application” of the Batson standard.

In fact, in rendering both its Holloway and Brinson decision, the Third Circuit specifically rejected the requirement that a petitioner develop a complete record of the jury pool. In making its ruling in Mumia’s appeal, it reversed itself to make the pretext of an incomplete jury record his fatal misstep. Basing its ruling against Abu-Jamal’s Batson claim on this invented pretext demonstrated how desperate the majority was to block Abu-Jamal’s Batson claim. What the majority was implying was that Abu-Jamal’s jury pool may well have consisted of 60 or 70 percent black people and that therefore the prosecutor’s using 66 percent of his strikes to oust potential black jurors was statistically normal and did not create a prima facie case of discrimination. This hypothesis is, of course, absurd on its face. Blacks have been underrepresented on Philadelphia juries for years – and remain so today. What was likely was that the jury pool at Abu-Jamal’s trial was at least 70 percent white.

The Third Circuit – if it had followed its own precedent – would have found the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s ruling denying Abu-Jamal’s Batson claim “contrary to” and an “unreasonable application” of the Batson standard and remanded the case back to Federal District Court Judge Yohn to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine the prosecutor’s reasons for excluding the 10 potential black jurors he struck. If that hearing satisfied Judge Yohn that all of the prosecutor’s reasons for striking potential black jurors were race neutral, Mumia’s Batson claim would fail. If, conversely, that hearing revealed racial discrimination on the part of the prosecutor during jury selection – even if only concerning one potential juror – Judge Yohn would be compelled to order a new trial for Abu-Jamal.

Mumia is left with only two remedies to correct the flawed Third Circuit ruling. His first option is to request the Third Circuit to review its decision en banc where the entire panel of active judges sitting on the Third Circuit would conduct oral arguments anew. On April 9, the Third Circuit granted Abu-Jamal’s petition for Extension of Time to File for Rehearing En Banc, which allowed Mumia’s lead attorney, Robert Bryan of San Francisco, until May 27 to file.

According to Bryan, the basis of the petition he filed is that the Third Circuit’s “decision conflicts with a decision of the U.S. Supreme Court or of the court” – in this case the Third Circuit – “to which petition is addressed and consideration of the full court is therefore necessary to secure uniformity of the court’s decisions,” and “the proceeding involves one or more questions of exceptional importance.”

There is some likelihood that the Third Circuit might agree to meet en banc because the three-judge panel’s decision to deny Abu-Jamal’s Batson claim went against that court’s own well-established precedents in granting similar Batson claims in the past. However, the barrier to en banc deliberations is a high one: the majority of the active judges must vote to sit. In the case of the Third Circuit, there are 12 active judges eligible to vote, but three have already recused themselves from this particular politically charged case, meaning five of the remaining nine remaining judges would be needed to vote to go forward en banc. Considering that the decision denying Mumia’s Batson claim was written by the court’s chief judge and that the majority of active judges are Republican appointees – four of them by George W. Bush – Mumia has most probably had his one day before the Third Circuit. I can only hope I’m wrong about that.

Barring an en banc hearing by the Third Circuit, Mumia’s final option is to appeal the Third Circuit’s ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court, which has on three previous occasions denied to take up his case. This time, though, there is a remote possibility that the high court might intervene in the case because the Third Circuit’s ruling created new law by placing new restrictions on a defendant’s ability to file a Batson claim. The Third Circuit, in effect, tampered with and undermined a long-established Supreme Court ruling. One clean, simple option for the Supreme Court would be to remand the case to federal district court for the Batson hearing the Third Circuit should have ordered.

Such a hearing would, in all probability except for “the Mumia exception,” lead to a new trial for Mumia. I pray that day will come.

Thank you.




Flyer
by Abu-Jamal-News.com Saturday Sep 27th, 2008 11:51 PM

Marie Mason sentencing set

From:    freemarie@riseup.net
Date: Sat, September 27, 2008

Marie Mason's sentencing has been set for February 5, 2009 at the Federal
Building 315 W. Allegan St.Lansing, MI. Courtroom #128.

One of the things Marie told us after her initial arrest back in March was
how cold and depressing all the faces were at her arrangement as almost no
family/supporters were able to attend. Lets make sure that that doesn't
happen again and that Marie is surrounded by supporters, friends and
Family throughout this difficult time.

We are encouraging people to attend these dates and support Marie. Be sure
to arrive early, dress well for court and please behave during the
proceedings.

Its all about the Struggle,
Got Your Back Collective
www.freemarie.org

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Political Prisoner Birthday List for October

Listed below are the birthdays for the month of October.

JAMIL ABDULLAH AL-AMIN
#99974-555
USP Florence ADMAX
P.O. Box 8500
Florence, CO 81226
October 4, 1943

DAVID GILBERT
83A6158 / Clinton Corr. Facility
P.O. Box 2001
Dannemora, NY 12929
October 6, 1944

MICHAEL DAVIS AFRICA
#AM4973
Box 244
Graterford, PA 19426
October 6, 1955

HERMAN WALLACE
#76759
Camp D, Eagle 1
Louisiana State Penitentiary
Angola, LA 70712
October 13, 1941

ROBERT SETH HAYES
#74-A-2280
Wende Corr. Facility
P.O. Box 1187
Alden, NY 14004-1187
October 15, 1948

ANTONIO GUERRERO
#58741-004
U.S.P. Florence
P.O. Box 7500
Florence CO 81226
October 18, 1958

JALIL MUNTAQIM
{Anthony Bottom} 2311826
850 Bryant St
San Francisco, CA 94103
October 18, 1951

EDWARD GOODMAN AFRICA
AM4974 / SCI Mahoney
301 Morea Road
Frackville, PA 17932
October 21, 1949

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Brooklyn Man TASERed to Death by NYPD

"What do we want?-JUSTICE!"
"When do we want it?-NOW!"

For Immediate Release:
Contact: Lisa Ortega 646.260.6575
Mary Dougherty 845.598.4186

Who: Rights for Imprisoned People with Psychiatric Disabilities

Why: We are outraged over the death of another person with mental illness who was tasered by the NYPD

The blood lies in the hands of the NYPD!

They must be held accountable!

The NYPD needs a change in policy and procedure
NOW IS THE TIME FOR CRISIS INTERVENTION TEAMS!

What: Joins members of RIPPD, Make the Road New York, People's Justice, Justice Committee, 100 Blacks in Law Enforcement, Urban Justice Center/Mental Health Project for a Press Conference/Rally

When: Wednesday, October 1, 2008
1:00 PM

Where: 489 Tompkins Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11216
C train to Kingston Throop

Read the following article to get more details of the incident:
NYP: http://www.nypost.com/seven/09252008/news/regionalnews/nypd_investigate_stun_gun_death_130718.htm
NYT: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/26/nyregion/26taser.html?hp
This is how the media puts it.
Stigmatization, like Criminalization towards those overwhelmed with Mental Illness must Stop
POST STAFF REPORT
Last updated: 5:58 pm
September 24, 2008
Posted: 5:03 pm
September 24, 2008
A deranged Brooklyn man ranting in his birthday suit from a fire escape stairway was shot by cops with a taser gun fell to his death, this shocking video shows.
The crazy rager fell about 10 feet to the street below 491 Tompkins Ave. in Bedford-Stuyvesant around 2 p.m. and was rushed to Woodhull Hospital with a serious head injury, cops said. He later died at the hospital.
The nudist first appears on the video standing on a fire escape stairway between the second and third floors, screaming inaudibly to a crowd below.
With police shouting for him to get down, the man climbed down to a ledge above a metal roll-down storefront cover.
He then picked up what appears to be a six-foot metal rod and waved it in the air.
"Walk down now! Move down!" the police can be heard shouting to him.
He refused the order and continued his incoherent tirade, the video shows.
Finally, one of the cops can be seen shooting him with the taser, sending the mad man head first to the street 10 feet below. It was unclear what set off his seemingly psychotic episode.

Peoples' Justice for Community Control and Police Accountability
Statement on the NYPD Killing of Iman Morales
Sept. 26, 2008

Peoples' Justice for Community Control and Police Accountability condemns the killing of Iman Morales by the NYPD last Wednesday afternoon in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. Like the shooting deaths of Sean Bell and Jayson Tirado by NYPD officers, Mr. Morales death sends yet another message that the lives of people of color in New York City are expendable. Furthermore, it is another example of the NYPD's disregard and disrespect of people with disabilities.

Incidents such as the killings of Eleanor Bumpers, Gideon Busch, Khiel Coppin, and now Iman Morales are evidence of the NYPD's blatant dehumanization of people with mental disabilities. Peoples' Justice supports the call of Rights for Imprisoned People with Psychiatric Disabilities' (RIPPD) for the NYPD to make use of crisis intervention teams. Such teams, which exist in other parts of the country and have been used with great success, are well trained in non-lethal de-escalation techniques and are prepared to deal with similar situations without the use of TASERs or any other weapons. These teams also always have mental health clinicians on-site, who are prepared to offer treatment, not abuse, to emotionally disturbed individuals.

Peoples' Justice thanks the New York residents that videotaped and publicized Mr. Morales' killing. The ability to document and publicize police misconduct increases accountability and prevents the police from misrepresenting or covering up their actions as they have done many times in the past. We call on all New Yorkers to arm themselves with cameras, observe all law enforcement activity and document any incidents of misconduct. All documentation of questionable law enforcement behavior should be made available to the public.

Sean Bell's killing – in which the cops were acquitted of all charges – and that of Jayson Tirado – a killing that never even went to trial – show that the District Attorney's Office is not capable of overcoming its marriage with the police department in pursuit of justice. Therefore, we can only expect the same in this case and once again reiterate the call for the assignment of an independent prosecutor to investigate the killing of Mr. Morales and all cases of police violence, past and future.
Amnesty International's website states, "Since June 2001, more than 290 individuals in the United States have died after being struck by police TASERs. Amnesty International is concerned that TASERs are being used as tools of routine force, rather than as weapons of last resort." (http://www.amnestyusa.org/us-human-rights/taser-abuse/page.do?id=1021202&n1=3&n2=850&n3=220). This quote speaks not only to the deadly potential of TASERs, but to the fact that the police, no matter their weapon of choice, routinely act with unnecessary violence. The killing of Mr. Morales was not an isolated incident of poor judgment on the part of individual officers. The killings of all those mentioned in this statement, on top of many others, reveal the pattern – and policy – of the NYPD to kill in communities of color as an initial response, regardless of whether the circumstances call for the use of deadly force.
Peoples' Justice is a coalition of NYC-based grassroots organizations that have joined forces to win community control and police accountability.

Filiberto Ojeda Film Festival November

The Filiberto Ojeda Rios Film Festival 2008 is an initiative of the ProLibertad Freedom Campaign to showcase films that speak to our experience as a colonized people fighting for independence and self-determination!

We have named the film festival after assassinated Machetero leader Filiberto Ojeda Rios because his death raised consciousness throughout the Puerto Rican Diaspora; his murder illustrated the colonial oppression Puerto Rico faces and has radicalized a generation of young activists to continue the fight for independence.

We hope these films will do the same. Join us on our three consecutive Fridays!

Don’t support the Hollywood machine that feeds you nonsense, sex, violence and cheap humor! Learn about yourself, your people, and your struggle!

$5 donation/Best offer at each film!

Friday November 7th, 2008 @ 7pm @ Hunter College West Building 2nd floor room 217 (E68th St. and Lexington Avenue)

¡Palante Siempre Palante!

From Chicago streets to the barrios of New York City and other urban centers, the Young Lords emerged to demand decent living conditions and raised a militant voice for the empowerment of Puerto Ricans and other Latino/as in the United States and for the independence of Puerto Rico. Through on-camera interviews with former members, archival footage, photographs and music, the documentary surveys Puerto Rican history, the Young Lords' political vision and actions, and the organization's legacy. Take the 6 train to E68th St. and Lexington Avenue

Friday November 14th, 2008 @ 7pm @ John Jay College of

Criminal Justice 889 10th Ave. Room 3305N (between W58th-W59th St. on 10th Ave.)

The Double Life of Ernesto Gomez Gomez

What happens to the parents, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters of those willing to sacrifice everything for their beliefs? This film uniquely blends forms to tell the singular story of a son of Puerto Rican revolutionaries — his mother in prison, his father in exile — sent as a baby to Mexico to be raised in safety and anonymity. As a teenager Ernesto/Guillermo learns of his past and collaborates with filmmakers Catherine Ryan and Gary Weimberg to magically chronicle his turbulent journey of self-discovery, offering a striking account of the costs of fiercely held convictions and the binding force of a son's love. (56 minutes) Take the A,B,C,D, 1, and 2 to 59th St. and Columbus Circle

Friday November 21st, 2008 @ 7:30pm @ The Brecht Forum 451 West Street (that's the West Side Highway) between Bank & Bethune Streets

La Operacion/The Operation

This documentary brings to the foreground the problem of widespread sterilization among Puerto Rican women through the use of personal testimony, newsreels, and government propaganda excerpts. The procedure is so common that more than one-third of all Puerto Rican women of childbearing age have been sterilized. Begun in the 1930's as a means of curbing the surplus population, it continues to be reinforced politically and socially in the Puerto Rican communities. Directions: A, C, E or L to 14th St. & 8th Ave, walk down 8th Ave. to Bethune, turn right, walk west to the river, turn left. 1, 2, 3 or 9 to 14th St.& 7th Ave, get off at south end of station, walk west on 12th Street to 8th Ave, left to Bethune, turn right, walk west to the river, turn left. PATH Train to Christopher Street, north on Greenwich St to Bank Street, left to the river.

What is the ProLibertad Freedom Campaign?

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign has been working for the release of the Puerto Rican Political Prisoners for over 10 years.

With the release of 11 of the Political Prisoners in September 1999, we have re-dedicated our efforts to securing the freedom of the remaining Puerto Rican political prisoners.

Through educational events, lobbying and public pressure work and activities it is our goal to secure the freedom of these patriots whose only “crime” has been the love of their home land, Puerto Rico.

We support the release of All U.S. held Political Prisoners, oppose the U.S. colonial control of Puerto Rico, U.S. imperialism throughout the world, and the U.S. military presence in Vieques.

CONTACT US AT ProLibertad@Hotmail.com or call the ProLibertad Hotline at 718-601-4751. Check out our website for campaign updates: www.ProLibertadweb.com

Midwest ELF investigation got a jump-start with discovery in garbage

REDFORD TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) A business owner checking a trash container for scrap cardboard was alarmed by something else: gas masks, maps, an M-80 explosive, arson photos and anti-government writings.

"It was kinda scary," Andy Wishaw recalled. "Some of my employees said it's nothing. I thought, 'What's it going to hurt to call the police?'"

The discovery turned out to be a big break for the Agents on the trail of eco-terrorism used the contents to help solve more than a dozen acts of arson and tree spikings in Michigan and Indiana committed in the name of a radical group, the Earth Liberation Front, known as ELF, from 1999 through 2003.

Details on the trash and other evidence against two key figures are in search warrants in federal court in western Michigan. The warrants and affidavits are sealed, but they've landed on the Internet, offering a look at how the FBI closed in on Frank Ambrose and Marie Mason.

"There's no question that the discovery in the Dumpster was the catalyst that caused this thing to move forward," said Greg Stejskal, a retired FBI agent who was involved in earlier phases of the probe.

Ambrose, whose financial records and e-mail were in the trash, has admitted to 13 acts, including a New Year's Eve 1999 explosion and fire that caused more than $1 million in damage at Michigan State University. He faces up to 20 years in prison when sentenced next month.

The Detroit man also fingered Mason, his ex-wife. He recorded their phone conversations after agreeing to cooperate with the FBI, her attorney says. She pleaded guilty Sept. 11 to the Michigan State arson and admitted working with Ambrose in other incidents.

Ambrose's cooperation is causing a buzz among activists and on the Internet, where the home page of ecoprisoners.org declares "Frank Ambrose: Informant." There's a sympathetic Web site for Mason called freemarie.org.

"There is a lot of anger and resentment," said Craig Rosebraugh, a law student in Arizona and former spokesman for ELF. "Frank was an above-ground activist involved in the national environmental community for a number of years."

Lauren Regan, lawyer and director of the Civil Liberties Defense Center in Eugene, Ore., said there's a fear that Ambrose may have been wearing a wire at activist gatherings.

"Once a snitch, always a snitch," she said.

Defense lawyer Michael Brady declined to comment on Ambrose's work for the government. But in a recent court filing, he said his client's "substantial and rather extraordinary cooperation" with investigators will emerge at sentencing.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Hagen Frank declined to discuss Ambrose's role. He does not contest the authenticity of the search warrants posted on ecoprisoners.org but declined to comment on the contents.

Ambrose's "cooperation to the government will be addressed at sentencing. The judge will decide how much weight to give it," Frank said.

Ambrose, 33, a former Big Ten swimmer at Purdue University, is no stranger to police. In Indiana, he was accused of spiking trees in 2000 to damage logging blades, but the charge was dropped.

In 2003, after he moved to Detroit, four homes under construction in Washtenaw and Macomb counties were destroyed by fire to protest urban sprawl. The FBI had Ambrose under surveillance, Stejskal said, but no charges were filed.

That same year, someone tried to set a fire at a pump station owned by Ice Mountain, a water bottler, in Michigan's Mecosta County. A grand jury demanded fingerprints and DNA from Mason and Ambrose, but again no charges followed.

The trail seemed to turn cold until March 2007 when Wishaw went hunting for scraps in a commercial trash container here in suburban Detroit and found stuff that seemed straight out of an international plot.

"With an airport map and the gas mask with 'No U.S.' written on it — it seemed like something," Wishaw told The Associated Press. "It was not so much the things; it was the writings. ... It didn't look right."

There was an M-80 explosive, a large block of candle wax and a 10-foot-long canvas strap — all "common components of incendiary devices," FBI agent James Shearer wrote in a sealed court affidavit.

Ambrose had a job in the area and tossed his possessions in the garbage, even a rock collection.

"He had been completely inactive for a long time," Brady said of Ambrose's acts for ELF. "Every once in a while you clean out your garage, I guess."

The cache was used to justify a raid of their Detroit home, eight miles away.

In March, federal prosecutors charged Ambrose and Mason in the New Year's Eve 1999 arson at Michigan State's Agriculture Hall, a fire committed in the name of ELF to protest genetically modified crops. The fire was so intense that it burned Mason's hair.

"Domestic terrorism, plain and simple," declared U.S. Attorney Charles Gross.

Ambrose pleaded guilty to conspiracy and also admitted 12 other acts, including six arsons of boats and new home sites in Michigan and Indiana. Value of property destroyed: more than $2.5 million.

Mason, 46, recently pleaded guilty to the campus arson and also admitted to the same list of acts with one addition, the attempted arson at Ice Mountain, something she had long publicly denied.

When Ambrose pleaded guilty in March, U.S. Magistrate Judge Hugh Brenneman Jr. asked about decisions made by ELF activists as to "what's good and what's bad and what's beneficial and what's not beneficial."

"Essentially judge and jury," Ambrose replied, "yes."

Friday, September 26, 2008

Angola 3: Albert Woodfox Conviction is Overturned!!


From: nycjericho@gmail.com

Good evening everyone,

I am thrilled to report that earlier today (Thursday, Sept. 25, 2008) Judge Brady issued the long anticipated final judgment in Albert's case,officially overturning his conviction after 36 years in solitary confinement!

Attorney General Buddy Caldwell immediately told AP reporters that the State intends to appeal and retry if necessary saying: "We respectfully but
vehemently disagree with the judge's ruling ...If this ruling is upheld, we
will with no question retry Albert Woodfox. We will take it as high as we
need to go."

But no matter how hard the State fights back, this is a huge victory--Albert
is no longer convicted of the murder of Brent Miller, and there is at least
a possibility he could be released on bail in the near future. A big
congrats to the attorneys and everyone who has refused to give up on the
idea that Herman and Albert will one day be free.

Albert's attorneys and the Chair of the Louisiana House Judiciary Committee,
Representative Cedric Richmond, will hold a joint press conference call to
discuss the ruling tomorrow (Friday) at 11amC/12amE. The press release and
call-in numbers are below and everyone is welcome to tune in if they'd
like. If you have contacts in the media who may want to cover the story,
please forward the release to them as well. The AP story has already been
picked up by hundreds of outlets around the world.

HOOORAY! YAHOO!! YIPEEE!!!
peace,

--
Tory Pegram
Campaign Coordinator
International Coalition to Free the Angola 3
odsllc@gmail.com
504.338.2631
www.angola3.org

COALITION TO FREE THE ANGOLA THREE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Emma Mackinnon
Thursday, September 25, 2008
202.302.6920/emma@fenton.com


*** Press Call FRIDAY at 11 AM Central ­ Dial 1-800-895-1085, Conf. ID
'ANGOLA' ***

Conviction Overturned After 36 Years in Solitary For "Angola 3" Member
Albert Woodfox

Federal Judge Orders the State: Must Either Retry or Dismiss Charges
Against "Angola 3" Member

Lawyers: Charges Should be Dismissed Immediately; Otherwise, Woodfox
Should be Released on Bail

In response to a federal judge's decision overturning the conviction of
Albert Woodfox, one of the two "Angola 3" members who remain in prison,
lawyers for the men called on the State Attorney General's office to drop
any further charges and release the men immediately.

If the state intends to re-try Woodfox, they said, he should be released on
bail until the time of trial. They argued the man, now 61 and in poor
health, has spent long enough imprisoned on a wrongful conviction and that
continuing to hold him would be unthinkable. They plan a press conference
call for tomorrow, Friday, at 11 AM CDT; to join, reporters can dial
1-800-895-1085 and provide conference ID "Angola."

Woodfox and fellow inmate Herman Wallace have been imprisoned since 1972 for
the murder of prison guard Brent Miller. They spent 36 years
of that time in solitary confinement. The federal judge's ruling
acknowledged that Woodfox has been wrongfully imprisoned. His conviction
rested on the testimony of a fellow prisoner, a convicted serial rapist who
was promised and received the warden's help obtaining a pardon in exchange
for testifying against Herman and Albert. The deal was not disclosed at
trial; the witness was pardoned and freed later. An additional witness, who
said he had seen Albert in the area of the crime, was a schizophrenic who
was on heavy doses of psychotropic medications at the time of the murder,
which also was not disclosed. No physical evidence ties Woodfox or Wallace
to the crime.

"Both the magistrate judge and the district court judge have now found
that Woodfox's conviction was invalid and had to be reversed. Woodfox
has demonstrated the deep flaws in the state's investigation and
prosecution of the case against him, and has presented evidence of his
innocence. If the State of Louisiana appeals, it will bear the burden
of showing the court of appeals that both of the two judges were
incorrect. As the facts and the law are so clearly on the side of Mr.
Woodfox, we are confident that the State cannot carry that burden. No
further legal delay should deprive Albert of even one more day of his
life," said Chris Aberle, one of Woodfox's lawyers.

"The state has already stolen nearly four decades of Albert Woodfox's
life. The injustice in this case is unfathomable. How can Louisiana
continue to imprison a 61 year old man after a federal judge has ruled
that he shouldn't have been convicted in the first place? Albert must
be released," said Nick Trenticosta, co-counsel in the case.

The third member of the Angola 3, Robert King, was released in 2001
after a judge overturned his conviction. King had spent 29 years in
solitary confinement for a separate crime.

For a copy of the ruling or to speak with lawyers in the case, call
Emma Mackinnon at 202-302-6920 or email emma@fenton.com. For Friday's 11
AM CDT call, dial 1-800-895-1085 and provide conference ID
"Angola"; please RSVP for the call by emailing emma@fenton.com.


Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110


415 863-9977

www.Freedomarchives.org <http://www.freedomarchives.org/>

--
Free All Political Prisoners!
nycjericho@gmail.comwww.jerichony.org

A letter from the RNC8

Dear Friends, Family, and Comrades:

We are the RNC 8: individuals targeted because of our political beliefs and
work organizing for protests at the 2008 Republican National Convention, in
what appears to be the first use of Minnesota’s version of the US Patriot
Act. The 8 of us are currently charged with Conspiracy to Commit Riot in
Furtherance of Terrorism, a 2nd degree felony that carries the possibility of
several years in prison. We are writing to let you know about our situation, to
ask for support, and to offer words of hope.

A little background: the RNC Welcoming Committee was a group formed in late
2006 upon hearing that the 2008 Republican National Convention would be
descending on Minneapolis-St. Paul where we live, work, and build community.
The Welcoming Committee’s purpose was to serve as an
anarchist/anti-authoritarian organizing body, creating an informational and
logistical framework for radical resistance to the RNC. We spent more than a
year and a half doing outreach, facilitating meetings throughout the country,
and networking folks of all political persuasions who shared a common interest
in voicing dissent in the streets of St. Paul while the GOP’s machine chugged
away inside the convention.

In mid-August the Welcoming Committee opened a “Convergence Center,” a
space for protesters to gather, eat, share resources, and build networks of
solidarity. On Friday, August 29th, 2008, as folks were finishing dinner and
sitting down to a movie the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Department stormed in,
guns drawn, ordering everyone to the ground. This evening raid resulted in
seized property (mostly literature), and after being cuffed, searched, and
IDed, the 60+ individual inside were released.

The next morning, on Saturday, August 30th, the Sheriff’s department executed
search warrants on three houses, seizing personal and common household items
and arresting the first 5 of us- Monica Bicking, Garrett Fitzgerald, Erik
Oseland, Nathanael Secor, and Eryn Trimmer. Later that day Luce Guillen-Givins
was arrested leaving a public meeting at a park. Rob Czernik and Max Specktor
were arrested on Monday, September 1, bringing the number to its present 8. All
were held on probable cause and released on $10,000 bail on Thursday, September
4, the last day of the RNC.

These arrests were preemptive, targeting known organizers in an attempt to
derail anti-RNC protests before the convention had even begun. Conspiracy
charges expand upon the traditional notion of crime. Instead of condemning
action, the very concept of conspiracy criminalizes thought and camaraderie,
the development of relationships, the willingness to hope that our world might
change and the realization that we can be agents of that change.

Conspiracy charges serve a very particular purpose- to criminalize dissent.
They create a convenient method for incapacitating activists, with the
potential for diverting limited resources towards protracted legal battles and
terrorizing entire communities into silence and inaction. Though not the first
conspiracy case against organizers- not even the first in recent memory- our
case may be precedent-setting. Minnesota’s terrorism statutes have never been
enacted in this way before, and if they win their case against us, they will
only be strengthened as they continue their crusade on ever more widespread
fronts. We view our case as an opportunity to demonstrate community solidarity
in the face of repression, to establish a precedent of successful resistance to
the government’s attempts to destroy our movements.

Right now we are in the very early stages of a legal battle that will require
large sums of money and enormous personal resources. We have already been
overwhelmed by the outpouring of support locally and throughout the country,
and are grateful for everything that people have done for us. We now have a
Twin Cities-based support committee and are developing a national support
network that we feel confident will help us through the coming months. For more
information on the case and how to support us, or to donate, go to
http://RNC8.org

We have been humbled by such an immense initial show of solidarity and are
inspired to turn our attention back to the very issues that motivated us to
organize against the RNC in the first place. What’s happening to us is part
of a much broader and very serious problem. The fact is that we live in a
police state- some people first realized this in the streets of St. Paul during
the convention, but many others live with that reality their whole lives.
People of color, poor and working class people, immigrants, are targeted and
criminalized on a daily basis, and we understand what that context suggests
about the repression the 8 of us face now. Because we are political organizers
who have built solid relationships through our work, because we have various
forms of privilege- some of us through our skin, some through our class, some
through our education- and because we have the resources to invoke a national
network of support, we are lucky, even as we are being targeted.

And so, while we ask for support in whatever form you are able to offer it, and
while we need that support to stay free, we also ask that you think of our case
as a late indicator of the oppressive climate in which we live. The best
solidarity is to keep the struggle going, and we hope that supporting us can be
a small part of broader movements for social change.

For better times and with love,

the RNC 8:

Monica Bicking, Robert Czernik, Garrett Fitzgerald, Luce Guillen-Givins,
Nathanael Secor, Max Spector, Eryn Timmer, Erik Oseland,

Support the RNC8! Dissent is not a crime!

www.rnc8.org

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Cuba and Puerto Rico Events this week

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign
http://www.prolibertadweb.com
ProLibertad@hotmail.com
ProLibertad hotline: 718-601-4751
___________________________________________

Join ProLibertad on our annual Freedom Cook out to HighLands Pool in Ringwood, New Jersey!!

Enjoy the sun, fun and relaxation of

HighLands Pool!! Bring your swimming trunks for the cool and refreshing Chemical-free mountain stream-fed pool!!

We will have DELICOUS BORICUA FOOD, FUN,

MUSIC,DOMINOES, GAMES, SPORTS and RELAXATION!!

Saturday Aug. 2nd, 2008 at 9am!! Get on the Bus!!

Meet at the corner of w179th St. and Broadway at 9am to catch one of our Freedom Vans to HighLand Pools!!

Transportation from NYC ($10), Entrance to HighLand Pools ($5) and Food ($5); all together $20 (Adults) $15 for (Children)

Contact ProLibertad to reserve a seat on our Freedom Bus by calling the ProLibertad hotline: 718-601-4751

____________________________________________

The Puerto Rican Freedom Project

2nd fundraiser Hosted by Hec-one

Suggested donation: $10

Fri. July 25th, 2008

A benefit for the Freedom Album, a CD compilation to raise awareness and funds for the Puerto Rican Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War and their families

Lcation: Camaradas El Barrio

2241 1st avenue

between 115th-116th St.

212-348-2703

www.camaradaselbarrio.com

Doors open at 7pm, show will begin by 8:30pm-9pm

There will be an art sale to benefit the efforts of the Puerto Rican Freedom Committee as well as a blow out performances by: The Welfare Poets, Bombayo, NOT4PROPHET(OF THE X-VANDALS AND RICANSCTRUCTION) M-TEAM AND Division X

www.prfreedomproject.org or www.myspace.com/freeourpoliticalprisoners

____________________________________________

Friday Sat. July 26, 2008

The Cuban Revolution Today:

Change in Continuity

Continuity in change

Celebrate the 55th Anniversary of the Attack of the

Moncada Garrison; the Start of the Cuban Revolution!

Saturday, July 26, 2008 / 6pm Reception, 7pm Program

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Labor Center Auditorium

310 West 43rd Street (Between. 8th-9th Aves. Manhattan

Take the A,C,E,1,2,3, 7,N,Q,R trains to 42nd St Times Square

Suggested Donation: $10 (no one will be turned away for lack of funds)

This year’s July 26th Celebration will tell the truth about what is happening in Cuba today; why the Cuban revolution is stronger than ever and why it continues to inspire popular movements throughout the world.

P R O G R A M

New Film: “Against the Silence in Our Own Voices: Families of the Cuban 5 Speak Out”

Keynote Speaker: Representative of the Cuban Mission to the United Nations

Question & Answer Period: Raise your questions and concerns

about what is happening in Cuba today

Legal Update: The Case of the Cuban 5 & 10th Anniversary

of their unjust imprisonment

Update: Continuing victories in U.S. challenges to Cuba travel prohibitions

Remarks: Casa de las Américas—Historic Solidarity Organization with Cuba

Remarks: Cuba & Puerto Rico: Historic Solidarity

Poetry & Music: Cultural experssions of solidarity with the Cuban People

‘For more information contact The July 26th Coalition at 917-887-8710 or email us at

july26coalition@mindspring.com

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

A Message from Gerardo Hernandez

Cuban Five 2008
Sept. 22, 2008


National Committee To Free the Cuban Five Bulletin


A Message from Gerardo Hernández
on the tenth anniversary
of the unjust imprisonment
of the Cuban Five
Gerardo 2007 Dear compañeras y compañeros:

We arrive at the 10th anniversary of the arrest of the Cuban Five at a crucial moment of our legal process (That is what they call it, although perhaps "illegal process" would be more appropriate.) The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, based in Atlanta, has just ended our appeal.

That is to say, if it were up to them, things would stand as is, and some day my bones would be sent to Cuba, after death frees me from two life sentences.

The court in question has given unmistakable signals of the type of "justice" that the Five can aspire to in this country. When there was a decision 3-to-0 in our favor, with 93 pages of solid arguments in which the three-judge panel characterized our trial as "The Perfect Storm," the full panel, against all predictions, not only agreed to review the decision, but reversed it without much explanation. The "perfect storm" quickly became simply a drizzle.

Yet, this time, when the decision was 2-1 against the Five, with obvious legal errors, with a judge arguing in 16 pages that the prosecution presented absolutely no proof that sustains the charge of conspiracy to commit murder, and with a judge who-although voting against us-recognized that it is a "very close case," and with several defense arguments were not even seriously analyzed, the 11th Circuit categorically refused to review it.

As we say in Cuba: "Not even water is as clear." We have said time and again that this is a political case, and those who do not see it as such, choose not to see it.

Someone recently mentioned that now the Supreme Court has the last word. I would say, the second-to-last word. The final word in the case of the Cuban Five rests with you, our sisters and brothers of Cuba, the United States and the whole world, who throughout all these years have been our principal source of encouragement. Our hopes are not placed in any court. Ten years are more than enough to have cured us of any such naïve notion.

You are our hope, who through sacrifice and swimming against the current, have succeeded in making people on all continents aware of the injustice committed against the Five.
You are the ones who are not taking time out or resting in your homes but instead are honoring us with your presence in different activities, commemorating the 10th anniversary of our imprisonment. You continue struggling to unmask the double standard of a government that invades other countries to supposedly fight terrorism, at the same time that it harbors and protects infamous terrorists, and imprisons those who are trying to stop those criminal acts.

We have confidence in you to expose the hypocrisy of the corporate media and of certain international organizations, which portray mercenaries-who betray our people for a handful of dollars or a visa-as suffering political prisoners. Yet they are disgracefully silent in the case of two women who have been deprived for a decade of the basic right to visit their husbands in prison.

We know that right is on our side, but to win true justice we need a jury of millions of people throughout the world, and we need you, defenders of just causes, to make our truth known.

The injustice committed against the Five has kept us away from our homeland for ten years, but it has not kept us from accompanying our people through joyful times and also the suffering. A few days ago Hurricane Gustav caused great damage in Cuba, mainly on the Isle of Youth and in Pinar del Río, two territories from where we have received a multitude of support and love all these years.

We are certain that all the people of Pinar del Río and Isle of Youth, together with local and national leadership, with the solidarity of all dignified Cubans and many friends of the world, will become stronger in these difficult moments and-as is characteristic of revolutionaries-will convert the setbacks into victory. Although it is not possible for us to be there physically, today more than ever the Cuban Five are with you in our hearts, with our brothers and sisters in the Isle of Youth and Pinar del Río, who have done so much to support the struggle for our liberation.

Compañeras y compañeros: Ten years after that September 12, 1998, we thank you once again for walking this long and rough road together with us. We know, that to continue this march, we can keep counting on you, and you can also always count on our firm determination to resist, with our heads held high, for as long as it takes.

¡Hasta la Victoria Siempre!


Gerardo Hernández Nordelo
Victorville Federal Prison, California
September, 2008

Contact us: info@freethefive.org
Or call: 415-821-6545

Free the Cuban Five Now!
Allow the families' visits!
Grant entry visas to
Adriana Pérez and Olga Salanueva!

Robert Seth Hayes' Parole Hearing postponed - Letters still needed ASAP

From:    "Political Prisoner News" <ppnews@freedomarchives.org>
Date: Sun, September 21, 2008

Date: Sat, 20 Sep 2008 13:57:45 -0400
Subject: [ABCF] Robert Seth Hayes' Parole
Hearing postponed - A Message from Seth - Letters still needed ASAP

Dear friends, please pass this on as far as you can. Please note that
we're currently experiencing problems with Seth's website
www.sethhayes.org but we should have those fixed shortly. Please send in
letters in support of Seth's parole as soon as possible as the hearing
could happen anytime between September and December of 2008. For more
information please email torontoabcf@gmail.com

In solidarity,

the Toronto Chapter of the Anarchist Black Cross Federation


From Robert Seth Hayes
#74A2280, Wende Corr. Facility
P.O. Box 1187, Alden, NY
14004-1187, USA


September 8, 2008

Dear friends and supporters,

This brief letter wishes to update you about my strategy to gain
immediate release from confinement and return to working in the
community. Many of you know that I was expecting a parole board hearing
in September 2008. As it was, I was belatedly informed that the hearing
would commence on September 3, 2008. On the second of September I
reached out to my attorney Susan Tipograph to discuss the hearing
schedule and then learned of the passing of Comrade Bashir Hameed a.k.a.
James York. A strong and positive Brother in our struggle to free the
land, spirit and inhabitants, Bashir joined our ancestors on August 30,
2008. I ask you to join me in sending up prayers of rejoicing to a
soldier whose contributions have sustained many of us.

As I struggled with the news of Bashir, I pondered the input of Susan on
seeking a second installment from the parole board as we again seek
information promoting a stronger defense at a future parole board
hearing. I listened, contemplated and decided such a proposal was
necessary. I went to the parole board hearing on the third of September
and sought a postponement for at least 30 days, pending advice from my
attorney. It was granted. I received confirmation on September 5
informing me that postponement was granted for December 2008 or sooner.

What does that mean? It means we must consolidate our efforts to put
forth a stronger position than initiated before. Quality is a must. For
those of you out there with connections in the political arena, you
should connect with political representatives and instruct them to
submit letters of assurance to the parole board on my behalf, offering
housing, jobs, education opportunities and any potential help that would
result in a smoother transition back to the community. Community
activists, church leaders, politicians, etc. should all be contacted and
asked for their support. What we need are issues that parole
commissioners can view and recognize as serious and unwavering support.
I will do my part in making a presentation suitable to our task.

Please visit my webpage www.sethhayes.org for background information.
Remember, “many are called, few are chosen.” If you are one of those who
step up (the chosen), I thank you and honor your support. For those who
in the past absently committed without maintaining their support (the
many), here is your chance to redeem self and reputation.

This missive must remain brief, as there are many awaiting word that I
must reach out.

My love and respect to you.
Forward our righteous struggle to its conclusion!
My love,

Robert Seth’ Hayes


*PLEASE FORWARD*

Support Parole for US Political Prisoner Robert 'Seth' Hayes! - Letters
needed by May 30th 2008

Locked down for more than a lifetime: Soliciting letters of support for
a U.S. political prisoner Robert Seth
Hayes’s Parole – May 2008

A letter from the Robert Seth Hayes Support Committee -
www.sethhayes.org | info (at) sethhayes.org

Robert “Seth” Hayes is a U.S. political prisoner and former member of
the Black Panther Party who has been imprisoned in New York state for
more than three decades. When Seth was convicted in 1974, his sentence
was 25 years to life. The implicit understanding at the time of his
sentencing was that Seth would serve 25 years as a minimum, after which
time he would be eligible for release based on his record and conduct in
prison.

In June of 2008, Seth will be going before the parole board for the
fifth time. At each of Seth’s previous parole hearings, he was denied
release due to the serious nature of the crime he was convicted for and
given another two years in jail. The refusal of parole for the serious
nature of the crime seems contrary to the spirit of the law, for it is
something that a prisoner can never change, and the giving of parole is
based upon the prisoner's behavior while behind bars.

Seth is not the only one being subjected to these unfair rules. This has
become common practice for the New York state parole board, who, by
denying parole based on the seriousness of the conviction, are defacto
re-sentencing many prisoners to life in prison without the possibility
of parole.

Seth’s prison record is exemplary, and if a decision about Seth’s parole
were to be based on his conduct and personal growth, he would have
rejoined his family and his community years ago.

Please write a letter to the parole board to let them know that you
think Seth deserves to be released. Write your own letter, or use the
sample letter that has been included in this document.

If you have a personal relationship with Seth, please consider writing
about this relationship in your letter. If you work with a community
organization or union, have a professional job, or are a rock star,
please consider mentioning this in your letter (or writing on
letterhead, etc.).

If you decide to personalize your letter, you may choose to include
information drawn from the short biography also included in this
package, where some of Seth’s accomplishments are highlighted.

More information about Seth can be found on a web page that has been put
together by his supporters at www.sethhayes.org

All letters should be mailed or faxed to the Senior Parole Officer at
Wende Correctional facility with a copy going to Seth’s lawyer, Susan
Tipograph, as soon as possible, as Seth's parole hearing could take
place any time between September 30th and December 31st of 2008. Please
send all of your letters to:

Senior Parole Officer
Wende Correctional Institute
P.O. Box 1187, (3622 Wende Road) Alden, NY
14004-1187, USA

and send a copy or a fax to:

Susan Tipograph

Attorney At Law
350 Broadway
New York, NY
10013
fax (212) 625-3939


Sample Letter

Re: Robert Seth Hayes

#74A2280

Dear Senior Parole Officer of Wende Correctional Institute,

I am writing on behalf of Robert Hayes who is scheduled to appear before
the parole board for the fifth time in July of 2006.

Robert Hayes' application for parole was denied when he last appeared
before the board two years ago. At the time of that appearance, his
record was excellent. However, since that time his record is
outstanding. Mr. Hayes has continued to work to help others and improve
himself. While at Clinton Correctional Facility, he facilitated in the
HIV Educators program to assist others as well as becoming a member of
the Lifer's and Long Termers Organization whose primary goal is to
educate and instruct newly arriving inmates in adjustment to and
preparation for final release from incarceration. Since his transfer to
Wende Correctional Facility, he has coached basketball and participated
in a local restorative justice project. These are but a few of his many
accomplishments over his years of incarceration. I am confident that
were he to be released, he would be a great asset to the community and
to society at large.

There is no question that the crime for which Mr. Hayes was convicted
was a serious crime. However, he has shown remorse and takes full
responsibility for his acts. I am sure that you will agree that after
serving almost 33 years Mr. Hayes’ release at this time would not so
deprecate the seriousness of the crime so as to undermine respect for
the law. Moreover, if you examine all of the factors that are used to
predict whether person is most likely to recidivate, those factors
indicate that Mr. Hayes will not engage in any criminal activity. His
disciplinary history during his incarceration indicates that he obeys
the rules in prison; he has a supportive network of family and friends
on the outside available to assist him in his reintegration back into
society and he had an extensive work history prior to being incarcerated
in addition to obtaining marketable skills in prison that will help him
to obtain employment. Nothing is gained by his continued incarceration,
and much is lost, as he has much to offer the community upon his release.

By the time that Mr. Hayes appears before the parole board, he will be
58 years old – more than 30 years older and considerably wiser than the
man who was charged with committing the crime. He is a compassionate,
caring individual and deserves a second chance. Please grant Mr. Hayes
parole and give him that second chance.

Sincerely,

_____________________

Biography

Robert Seth Hayes was born in Harlem, New York in October 1948. His
father, John Franklin Hayes, was the child of sharecroppers and came to
New York City from South Carolina; his mother, Francine Washington
Hayes, moved to New York from Pittsburgh. Both of Mr. Hayes’ parents
worked for the U.S. Postal Service, trying to provide a better life for
Seth and his four brothers and sisters. They also instilled in their
children the desire to work for the betterment of their community. Seth
writes, “My mother taught me to visualize family universally, not
individually.” Seth’s father was a World War II veteran and a member of
the United Negro Improvement Association, the Black Nationalist
organization founded by Marcus Garvey.

Growing up in New York City, first in Harlem, later in the Bronx and
Queens, Mr. Hayes saw one Black neighborhood after another suffering
from neglect, despair, anger and defeat. During 1950s and 1960s with the
growing rise of the civil rights and Black power movements Seth recalls
witnessing over the years a birth of hope and determination to overcome
these conditions.

After his schooling in New York City, Mr. Hayes worked as a psychiatric
aide at Creedmoor Hospital. He was drafted into the U.S. Army and sent
to Vietnam. He saw combat, was wounded and awarded the Purple Heart,
National Defense Service Medal, the Vietnam Service Medal and the
Vietnam Campaign Medal.

In the armed forces, Seth underwent a change of consciousness. After
the death of Martin Luther King Junior in 1968, Seth’s troop was ordered
to patrol the city streets with fixed bayonets to put down the
rebellions resulting from Dr. King’s assassination. “It was the saddest
day of my life,” Seth remembers, “and I could never identify again with
the aims of the armed forces or the government.”

Upon returning to the United States from Vietnam, Seth was swept up in
the Black Liberation movement and joined the Black Panther Party. He
worked in the free breakfast for children program and began dedicating
his life to the betterment of Black people. His knowledge of the
effects of racism on the Black community convinced him that the Black
Panthers’ program of community service ad community self-defense was
what was needed. His work, like that of so many others, was disrupted
by COINTELPRO. Fearing further attacks, he went underground, believing
it to be the only way to protect the work of the Black Panther Party and
the Black movement in general.

Robert Seth Hayes had two children prior to his arrest and imprisonment,
and he has remained closely involved their lives and upbringing, despite
the difficulties presented by his long incarceration. His son, Chunga,
lives and works in Atlanta. His daughter, Crystal, herself mother of
14-year-old Myaisha, is a student at the Smith College graduate school
of social work in Western Massachusetts. Seth calls his family “the
loves of my life.” He describes his relationship with Crystal this way,
“She has had the most intense impact on my life, always questioning,
full of joy and insight, grasping lessons and maintaining her own
dreams. She has kept me striving always to expand my knowledge and
illuminate my principles, as I struggle to stay abreast of her
questioning mind.”

Seth has been diagnosed with Type II diabetes and Hepatitis C. He has
been extremely ill and had great difficulty procuring the necessary
healthcare and has needed the help of his lawyers and some state
political leaders in order to get adequate treatment.

While in prison, Seth continues to work for the betterment of the
community in which he lives. He has participated in programs with the
NAACP, the Jaycees and other organizations and has worked as a
librarian, pre-release advisor and AIDS counselor. Whenever possible, he
has taken college courses. He is also a longtime advisor and
collaborator in the annual “Certain Days” Political Prisoner calendar
project. He is dedicated to continuing to work for social justice when
he gets out of prison. At Wende correctional facility where he is
currently incarcerated, Seth is working to put together a "lifers
program" to help rehabilitate prisoners and prepare them to reenter the
community. Seth also coaches basketball and works on assisting a local
restorative justice project taking place in Buffalo.

For more information about Seth, please check out www.sethhayes.org or
e-mail info (at) sethhayes.org.

Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110

415 863-9977

www.Freedomarchives.org Questions and comments may be sent to
claude@freedomarchives.org

Support for Rod Coronado: The Sound of Silence

From:    "Support for Rod Coronado" <info@supportrod.org>
Date: Sun, September 21, 2008

(Last night, only the Bobby Kennedy speech was sent..? Here is what was
intended..."

Let me warn you, this is going to be a long one…..
Many, many, many thoughts have been whirling through my head. They come
because of what happens in my life, like all of us trying to make sense of
our realities. We experience and we synthesize all that is within and
without, deciding what should become and what should dissipate. It is part
of being conscious, the intention to manifest, to transform, to possibly
transcend our gut reactions in favor of what may be better. So we play
with all that is in our head, until we choose it to come out right.
Lately, I find that I am reluctant to write much on this website. There is
no lack of information that I feel is important, there are insights and
experiences that are also valid to share with people who are aware of what
is happening to Rod and so many other folks. There is also a chill that is
settling into my ability to communicate.
This feeling that remains in my heart is heavy. It scares me in a way that
is curtailing what I say, to whom I say things, and it blocks
transparency. Without saying, there is a time and a place for everything,
and there are some things you should certainly keep to yourself. Even now,
I feel myself censoring my vocabulary, afraid to use words like security
culture, because I dare not link my husband to a concept. Because the
concept is linked to a group of people, a group of people referred to by
some as “activists”. Me, I refer to them as people. Like I refer to most.
If any general title were given to this group of people, I would say
organizers. And that would include folks from all over the spectrum that
organize, whether it be organize cooperatives, organize community dinners,
organize a household, organize a garden, or organize a bike ride. Do I
consider myself an organizer? Well, proud to say: yes, I do.
I organize 24 little people every day at a children’ center, and actively
help organize their interpretation of justice, of responsibility, of
equality, and where their sleeping mats are placed each day. It’s very
radical work.

I went to visit Rod last weekend. I met my step-son and his mom in
Oklahoma City last Thursday, and we spent three days visiting with Rod,
and having a very powerful, exciting, and loving weekend. There was not a
negative aspect to the trip, besides the fact that Rod is in prison and
that is a horrible and depressing experience. We must all step over that
stone (or wall) each time we are together, we must let that pain subside
and move into the place where we can laugh and feel the warmth of our
family. And I see us do it with grace, time and time again. I see two
children who are not damaged by this experience because they are
surrounded with such love and intention; children who will remember how to
overcome struggle and fear with the power of love.
I hear a man speak to his wife, and his children, and the mother of his
son, with love and hope. After years of government persecution, and years
of walking within iron walls, he is able to dissolve the persona he must
wear in the prison, where violence is king, and come to us with
vulnerability and gentleness. He remains a warrior. Can I use that word?
I do not use that word to inflame his name. I use it to say he is a
warrior of the light. He believes there is something more powerful than
what they take from us. They take our days, our sacred time, but they
cannot take our knowledge of the truth. What we know in our hearts, which
is that believing in and working toward a better world is not a threat, it
is our responsibility.

When Rod is released from prison, he has requested to be released some
where different than Arizona. He has requested to be allowed to move where
his son lives, so that we may go and try to lead an existence that is
semi-normal. We whole-heartedly want to be together so that Maya is with
her brother, and we are with both of our kids, and that his son gets to
have his daddy. Our plans are just that, honest and true.

In order for his release to another location than Tucson to be allowed,
there is much leg-work to be done. This includes a probation officer
visiting and verifying that there is a reason for allowing a release to
this location, and a concrete address and person that will vouch for him.
This visit has happened, and during it, some startling insinuations were
made regarding Rod’s true intentions, and mine, as well. It appears that
some three-lettered agencies don’t want this to happen. It appears that my
very intentions are in question, as well. It was also suggested that if
Rod is really, “done with activism” then why am I soliciting activists for
money? Am I not aware of where the money is coming from? Well, it
certainly is not coming from my husband whom is a political prisoner, and
it is also not coming from those that have taken him from his family.

It comes from people, like all of you, whoever you are, and yes, I do know
who some of you are, and I love you. It comes from people like Robert
Meeropol, who founded the Rosenberg Fund for Children as an adult, because
at the age of six his parents, Ethel and Julius Rosenberg were murdered
for alleged espionage. In 1990 Meeropol began work on his lifelong dream,
The Rosenberg Fund for Children. The Fund supports children of injured,
harassed, or imprisoned activists, as well as targeted youth-activists.
They provide things like counseling, music lessons, tuition, and summer
camp for young people who have felt the horror of political imprisonment
and persecution in their families. The Rosenberg Fund has helped kids
including Judy Bari’s daughter and Mumia Abu Jamal’s son. It is the only
organization of its kind dedicated to protecting the voices and actions of
families in the political realm.
They funded our entire trip to see Rod this past weekend. I am grateful
and humbled to receive this gift from someone who has endured such tragedy
and loss, but remained in light, and continued to serve where there is
such a need.

Yet, there is a subtle warning in the words spoken by the probation
officer. Am I not allowed to organize if I want to raise a family that
includes my step-son? Must I accept the terms of fear and silence? I
cannot. That is against my spirit and my design. I can only persevere in
truth, with compassion. My life, which is so damn privildged, recognizes
that no one is silent, though many are not heard. My voice must work to
change that. I cannot be silenced because of fear. My words will not
promote violence, or suffering, but may challenge the paradigm which
empire enforces.

This weekend I went to an event for another person who is a political
prisoner. Watching the presentation on Eric McDavid sent chills throughout
my entirety. It was haunting. It was heartbreaking to hear another person
who shares the deep loss that I feel. It was scary to see what lies
beneath the persecution of him, which is his philosophy. To see the video
tape from FBI cameras in the car he rode in, to watch video from the cabin
where he was with “friends”. Terrifying how silly conversations about
movies were manufactured into “revolutionary” talks. He wasn’t given bail
in part because he didn’t have a cell phone! It reminded me of the
constant surveillence that surrounds our lives. How real that is in my
life.

Robert Meeropol wrote a statement following the release of the transcript
of 43 of 46 witnesses who appeared in front of the Grand Jury
investigating his parents. The release of the documents coincided with an
interview in the New York Times with Mort Sobell, his parents
co-defendant. In last weeks interview, he admitted that he, along with
Julius Rosenberg passed along non-atomic military intelligence to the
Soviets during WWII, in an effort to defeat the Nazi’s. From all that was
released, it is clear that Ethel Rosenberg was not involved in this
passing of information, and that although there was passing of military
information, Julius did not “steal” or transmit the “secret of the Atomic
Bomb”, for which he was executed. Robert says that the biggest lesson be
taken by his parents case is the the U.S. government abused it’s power in
truly dangerous ways that are still very relevant today. He says they:
*created and fueled anti-communist hysteria
*capitalized on that political climate by targeting his parents, then
making them the focus point of the public’s Cold War-era fear and anger
*Facilitated Judicial Misconduct
*Hounded witnesses for their political beliefs and associations rather
than about alleged illegal activity
*Used the ultimate weapon- the threat of death- to try to extort cooperation
*Used Ethel as leverage to try to get Julius to cooperate
*Created the myth that there was a “secret” of the Atomic Bomb
*Executed Julius when he refused to cooperate
*Executed Ethel when she refused to cooperate, despite knowing that she
was innocent.

All of these thoughts are in my head, my heart. I want to protect my
family. I want to live in the North Woods, and spend my step-sons young
years together. I am diligent about my commitment to walking peaceful
footsteps. Sometimes it is violent to remain silent.

Tonight, probably because of all the election hype, I rented Bobby. It is
a movie about the day Robert Kennedy was shot, a commentary on the state
of the U.S. in 1968. The Kennedy’s are highly questionable in my mind, but
Bobby’s rhetoric is pretty right on (although I find myself wanting to
change all of the references to “man”, to “people”). So I close tonight
with some poignant words from someone who may have really stood for
something. I wish Obama spoke like that.

The Menace of Violence

“What has violence ever accomplished? What has it ever created? No
martyr’s cause has ever been stilled by an assassin’s bullet.

Yet we seemingly tolerate a rising level of violence that ignores our
common humanity and our claims to civilization alike. We calmly accept
newspaper reports of civilian slaughter in far-off lands. We glorify
killing on movie and television screens and call it entertainment. We make
it easy for men of all shades of sanity to acquire whatever weapons and
ammunition they desire.

Too often we honor swagger and bluster and wielders of force; too often we
excuse those who are willing to build their own lives on the shattered
dreams of others. Some Americans who preach non-violence abroad fail to
practice it here at home. Some who accuse others of inciting riots have by
their own conduct invited them.

Some look for scapegoats, others look for conspiracies, but this much is
clear: violence breeds violence, repression brings retaliation, and only a
cleansing of our whole society can remove this sickness from our soul.

For there is another kind of violence, slower but just as deadly
destructive as the shot or the bomb in the night. This is the violence of
institutions; indifference and inaction and slow decay. This is the
violence that afflicts the poor, that poisons relations between men
because their skin has different colors. This is the slow destruction of a
child by hunger, and schools without books and homes without heat in the
winter.

This is the breaking of a man’s spirit by denying him the chance to stand
as a father and as a man among other men. And this too afflicts us all.

I have not come here to propose a set of specific remedies nor is there a
single set. For a broad and adequate outline we know what must be done.
When you teach a man to hate and fear his brother, when you teach that he
is a lesser man because of his color or his beliefs or the policies he
pursues, when you teach that those who differ from you threaten your
freedom or your job or your family, then you also learn to confront others
not as fellow citizens but as enemies, to be met not with cooperation but
with conquest; to be subjugated and mastered.

We learn, at the last, to look at our brothers as aliens, men with whom we
share a city, but not a community; men bound to us in common dwelling, but
not in common effort. We learn to share only a common fear, only a common
desire to retreat from each other, only a common impulse to meet
disagreement with force. For all this, there are no final answers.

Yet we know what we must do. It is to achieve true justice among our
fellow citizens. The question is not what programs we should seek to
enact. The question is whether we can find in our own midst and in our own
hearts that leadership of humane purpose that will recognize the terrible
truths of our existence.

We must admit the vanity of our false distinctions among men and learn to
find our own advancement in the search for the advancement of others. We
must admit in ourselves that our own children’s future cannot be built on
the misfortunes of others. We must recognize that this short life can
neither be ennobled or enriched by hatred or revenge.

Our lives on this planet are too short and the work to be done too great
to let this spirit flourish any longer in our land.”


--

The following physical address is associated with this mailing list:

PO Box 732
Tucson, Arizona 85702

Leonard Peltier - America's Unfinished Business


From:    contact@whoisleonardpeltier.info
Date: Fri, September 19, 2008

September 18, 2008 - The Leonard Peltier Defense Offense
Committee (LPDOC) is campaigning to raise awareness and
educate the public about Leonard Peltier for the purpose
of mobilizing people to take actions to set him free.

September 12th marked the 64th birthday of Leonard Peltier,
an American Indian male convicted to two life sentences
based on fabricated testimony and circumstantial evidence.
Many of us see this as the typical injustice perpetuated
against American Indians in the legal system that exists
through today. Mr. Peltier, a citizen of the Anishinabe
and Lakota Nations, is a father, a grandfather, an artist,
a writer, and an Indigenous rights activist. He has spent more than thirty-three years in
prison for a crime he did not commit. Amnesty International considers him
a "political prisoner" who should be "immediately and unconditionally
released."

Leonard Peltier was born in Grand Forks, North Dakota. He came from a
large family of 13 brothers and sisters. He grew up in poverty, and
survived many traumatic experiences resulting from U.S. government
policies aimed to assimilate Native Peoples. At the age of eight he was
taken from his family and sent to a residential boarding school for Native
people run by the US Government.

In the late 1960's and early 1970's Leonard Peltier began traveling to
different Native communities. He spent a lot of time in Washington and
Wisconsin and was working as a welder, carpenter, and community counselor
for Native people. In the course of his work he became involved with the
American Indian Movement (AIM) and eventually joined the Denver Colorado
chapter. In Denver, he worked as a community counselor confronting
unemployment, alcohol problems and poor housing. He became strongly
involved in the spiritual and traditional programs of AIM.

Leonard Peltier's participation in the American Indian Movement led to his
involvement in the 1972 Trail of broken Treaties which took him to
Washington D.C., in the occupation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
building. Eventually his AIM involvement would bring him to assist the
Oglala Lakota People of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota
in the mid 1970's. On Pine Ridge he participated in the planning of
community activities, religious ceremonies, programs for self-sufficiency,
and improved living conditions. He also helped to organize security for
the traditional people who were being targeted for violence by the
pro-assimilation tribal chairman and his vigilantes. It was here that the
tragic shoot-out of June 26, 1975 occurred, leading to his wrongful
conviction.
The court record in this case clearly shows that government prosecutors
have long held that they do not know who killed Mr. Coler and Mr. Williams
nor what role Leonard Peltier "may have" played in the tragic shoot-out.
Despite many such admissions, Mr. Leonard Peltier remains imprisoned at
the United States Penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. Other persons
guilty of worse crimes have been released time and time again on parole or
pardoned, yet Mr. Peltier remains imprisoned.

To the international community, the case of Leonard Peltier is a stain on
America's Human Rights record. Nelson Mandela, Rigoberta Menchu, the U.N.
High Commissioner on Human Rights, the Dalai Lama, the European
Parliament, the Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights, and Rev. Jesse
Jackson are only a few who have called for his freedom. To many Indigenous
Peoples, Leonard Peltier is a symbol of the long history of abuse and
repression they have endured. The National Congress of American Indians
and the Assembly of First Nations, representing the majority of First
Nations in the U.S. and Canada, have repeatedly called for Leonard
Peltier's freedom.

Despite the harsh conditions of imprisonment, Leonard Peltier has
continued to lead an active life.

From behind bars, he has helped to establish scholarships for Native
students and special programs for Indigenous youth. He has served on the
advisory board of the Rosenberg Fund for Children, and has sponsored
children in Central America. He has donated to battered women's shelters,
organized the annual Christmas drive for the people of Pine Ridge
Reservation, and promoted prisoner art programs.
Leonard Peltier is widely recognized for his good deeds and in turn has
won several awards including the North Star Frederick Douglas Award;
Federation of Labour (Ontario, Canada) Humanist of the Year Award; Human
Rights Commission of Spain International Human Rights Prize; and 2004
Silver Arrow Award for Lifetime Achievement. In 2004, 2006 and again in
2007, Mr. Peltier also was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize five times.
He has also established himself as a talented artist, using oils to paint
portraits of his people, portraying their cultures and histories. He has
written poetry and prose from prison, and completed a moving biography
titled Prison Writings: My Life Is My Sun Dance (St. Martin's Press, NY,
1999).

Leonard Peltier credits his ability to endure his circumstances to his
spiritual practices and the love and support from his family and
supporters.

Leonard Peltier is Americas unfinished business and a symbol of the
injustice perpetrated against all American Indians. It is time to stop
the 34 years of injustice and is 34 years too long to have imprisoned an
innocent man. Freedom for Leonard Peltier is way overdue!

Leonard Peltier's first full parole hearing was held in 1993, at which
time his case was continued for a 15-year reconsideration. He'll be
eligible for another full parole hearing in December 2008. An application
for parole will be filed at Mr. Peltier's discretion. The earliest that
hearing is likely to occur is in January 2009 (according to the Parole
Commission's schedule for in-person parole reviews to be held at
USP-Lewisburg, where Peltier is currently imprisoned).

Anyone and everyone can help Leonard Peltier get justice and freedom.

First sign the online petition that can be found at
http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/parole2008/, they can also download
sample letters of support from
http://www.whoisleonardpeltier.info/parole.htm. Each tribal member can
urge their Tribal Nation to pass a formal Resolution also found at
http://www.whoisleonardpeltier.info for submission to the US Parole Board.

To support Mr. Peltier by contributing directly to his commissary account,
can send funds through the mail to the following address: Federal Bureau
of Prisons
Leonard Peltier #89637-132, Post Office Box 474701, Des Moines, Iowa
50947-0001.

The deposit must be in the form of a money order made out to: Leonard
Peltier 89637-132. The Bureau of Prisons will return funds that do not
have valid inmate information to the sender provided the envelope has an
adequate return address. Personal checks and cash can not be accepted for
deposit. The sender's name and return address must appear on the upper
left hand corner of the envelope to ensure that the funds can be returned
to the sender in the event that they can not be posted to the inmate's
account. The deposit envelope must not contain any items intended for
delivery to the inmate. The Bureau of Prisons shall dispose of all items
included with the funds.
In the event funds have been mailed but have not been received in the
inmate's account and adequate time has passed for mail service to Des
Moines, Iowa, the sender must initiate a tracer with the entity who sold
them the money order to resolve any issues.
Western Union Quick Collect Program

People can also send funds to Leonard through Western Union's Quick
Collect Program. All funds sent via Western Union's Quick Collect will be
posted to Leonard's account within two to four hours, when those funds are
sent between 7:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. EST (seven days per week, including
holidays). Funds received after 9:00 pm EST will be posted by 7:00 am EST
the following morning. Funds sent through the Quick Collect Program may be
sent via one of the following ways:

1) At an agent location with cash: You must complete a Quick Collect Form.
To find the nearest agent, they may call 1-800-325-6000 or go to
www.westernunion.com.
2) By phone using a credit/debit card: Simply call 1-800-634-3422 and
press option 2.
3) Via the Internet using a credit/debit card: Go to www.westernunion.com
and select "Quick Collect".

For each Western Union Quick Collect transaction, the following
information must be provided:
Valid Inmate Eight Digit Register Number (89637-132)
Committed Inmate Name (Leonard Peltier)
Code City: FBOP
State code: DC

It is very uplifting to Mr. Peltier to receive letters and cards. Write
to him at:
Leonard Peltier - # 89637-132, USP Lewisburg, US Penitentiary, P.O. Box 1000
Lewisburg, PA 17837-1000.

At the very least if everyone that reads this would write the US Parole
Board at United States Parole Commission, 5550 Friendship Boulevard, Suite
420, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-7286 to offer your whole hearted support for
the release of Leonard Peltier. And please write, write, write, to
Congressmen, the President, Human Rights Organizations, and Tribal Leaders
in support of freedom for Leonard Peltier now!

The Leonard Peltier Offense Defense Committee can be found on the web at:
www.whoisleonardpeltier.info. Contact person for the LP DOC is Betty Ann
Peltier-Solano at (701) 235-2206.

New SF8 Blog & Newsletter - CR10 Events

From:    "SF-8 case" <cdhrsupport@freedomarchives.org>
Date: Wed, September 17, 2008

http://freethesf8.blogspot.com/

Check out the new SF8 Blog - Read the New SF8 Newsletter

Find out about SF8 Events at the Oakland Critical Resistance 10
Conference - September 26-28


_______________________________________________
Please support these brothers by sending a donation. Make checks payable
to CDHR/Agape and mail to the address below or donate on line:

www.freethesf8.org/donate.html

Committee for the Defense of Human Rights (CDHR)
PO Box 90221
Pasadena, CA 91109
(415) 226-1120
FreetheSF8@riseup.net

www.freethesf8.org

Critical Resistance 10: Strategies & Struggle to Abolish the Prison Industrial Complex

Critical Resistance 10

­­



Check out the CR10 blog at

criticalresistance10.blogspot.com





NEW!

While you will be able to register for CR10 on-site during the conference all weekend long, we have closed pre-registration. You will be able to register for the conference by going to the registration station at the main entrance to Laney College (900 Fallon St. in front of the Adminstration Building). If you have pre-registered, you will be able to check in and get your conference packet at the same site. See you next week!


In September 1998, thousands gathered in Berkeley, California, for conference that founded Critical Resistance’s movement to abolish the prison industrial complex (PIC).­ Each participant, with their own experiences of oppression and resistance, watched as diverse struggles were unified: by humanity, hope, and the shared vision of a different world. We witnessed a vision of a world with truly safe, healthy, and whole communities; a world with unconditional access to self-determination and dignity for all; and, critically, a world without imprisonment, policing, and other forms of punishment and control.

To celebrate 10 years of Critical Resistance, thousands will converge once more, September 26-28, 2008, in Oakland, California, for CR10, a 10th Anniversary Celebration and Strategy Session.

Over the past decade, the movement to eliminate the PIC has faced tremendous challenges. We have witnessed rising levels of imprisonment in the US and around the world. We have endured passage of the USAPATRIOT Act of 2001, the Military Commissions Act of 2006, increasing surveillance and policing in our lives. Meanwhile, US-led wars continue to ravage communities around the globe. We have witnessed the increased repression and criminalization of migrants and immigrants, people of color, young people, and queer communities. We have seen California prepare to embark on the biggest prison building project in history as the Gulf Coast region continues to struggle and to prevail in spite of ongoing neglect and militarization.

During this period Critical Resistance has also developed into a leading force fighting against the use of imprisonment, policing, and surveillance as responses to social, economic, and political problems. During the past 10 years we have:

  • Brought the idea of the prison industrial complex (PIC) into mainstream conversations;
  • Substantially increased collaboration of PIC abolitionists with organizers in environmental justice, anti-violence, and queer movements;
  • Promoted prisoners, former prisoners, and their loved ones as the real experts on the system;
  • Provided a platform and jumping off point for new organizations and organizing efforts; and
  • Contributed to dozens of local and regional victories across the country.
We have seen only the beginning of what we can accomplish together. CR10 promises to propel this momentum forward, with united, strategic force. Through workshops, skill shares, performances, action, reflection and celebration, CR10 aims to reunite our voices, reinvigorate our collective refusal to be silenced and strengthen our collective will to build a world without walls.
Title:
START DATE: Friday September 26 TIME: 1:30 PM - 6:30 PM Location Details: Laney College
900 Fallon St.
Oakland, CA 94607
Event Type: Conference 1:30pm - 3:00pm

Taking It Down, Brick by Brick: Local Anti-Jail Campaigns
Community in Unity (NYC); Decarcerate Monroe County (Bloomington, Indiana); Critical Resistance-Los Angeles; Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana (New Orleans); Suffolk County Anti-Jail Campaign (NY)

Organizing Community-Based Responses To Violence In Communities of Color (people of color only)
Alisa Bierria, INCITE!; Isabel Gonzalez, INCITE!; Xandra Ibarra, INCITE!

Stopping the School to Prison Pipeline Training (runs for 2 sessions)
Families and Friends of Louisiana's Incarcerated Children

When the Prisoners Ran Walpole: Lessons Learned by Massachusetts
Ralph Hamm, former president, National Prisoners Reform Association; Edward Rodman, Canon Missioner Episcopal Divinity School; Robert Dellelo, former president, National Prisoners Reform Association, former prisoner, Walpole prison; Jamie Bissonette, Director of the AFSC New England Criminal Justice Program

Immigration Detention 101
Raja Jorjani, UC Davis Law School; Luissana Santibanez, Grassroots Leadership; Andrea Black, Detention Watch Network; Dana Kaplan, Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana

Getting Real about Alternatives to the Police
Rose City Copwatch, Portland OR: candace, maria, geoff and Colette

What is the prison industrial complex?
TBA

Prisons and jail is bad for your mental health
Dr. Terry Kupers, M.D. who wrote "Prison Madness"; Paul Boden of the Western Regional Action Project (WRAP); Michael Diehl, community organizer with Building Opportunities for Self Sufficiency (BOSS)

Imagine What We Can Do Together
Kim Diehl, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, Critical Resistance; Sarah Jarmon, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, Critical Resistance

Youth Justice Roundtable at CR10
George Galvis, Barrios Unidos/All of Us or None; Marlene Sanchez, Center for Young Women's Development; Lateefah Simon, District Attorney Kamala Harris' Office; Alex Sanchex, Homies Unidos; Jay Imani, Ella Baker Center

Trans Awareness and the Prison Abolition Movement (runs for 2 sessions)
Dean Spade, Stefanie Rivera, Gael Guevara and Gabriel Arkles, Sylvia Rivera Law Project

Cross-Border Resistance to State Terrorism
Yeni Solis (CISPES); Minister of Information JR (POCC, Block Report Radio); Heyward (CISPES); Black Alliance for Just Immigration; Kiilu Nyasha, Revolutionary Journalist and host of Freedom is a Constant Struggle

The Critical Resistance Campaign and Projects Planning Workshop: The Fundamentals of Campaign Planning for Everyone
Robert "Kool Black" Horton, Campaign and Projects Director of Critical Resistance and a native and chapter member of Critical Resistance New Orleans, Rose Braz, Campaigns Director of Critical Resistance, one of the founding members of CR

The Struggle Inside: Legacies of Prison Activism from the 1970's
Tony Platt, Social Justice; Naneen Karraker, AFSC, has worked on prison abolition since the early 1970s; and others

Critical Negotiations
Dana Linda, UCSC alum Feminist Studies and Literature '07; Brianna Barnes, UCSC alum Literature (Creative Writing Program) and Art '08; translator Marcelo Garzo (UC Berkeley Student); Cindy Garcia

Silence into Speech: Prisoners Speak Out
Stephen Hartnett (University of Colorado-Denver) has taught poetry to inmates for over 20 years and regularly publishes their work; Bryan McCann (The Univeristy of Texas at Austin) is an anti-death penalty organizer in Texas; Karen Lovaas (San Francisco State University) teaches and mentors at San Quentin Prison.

Gender Justice 101 for Abolitionists
Maria Nakae, Alliance Building Coordinator, Asian Communities for Reproductive Justice; Miss Major , Organizing Director, Transgender, Gender Variant, & Intersex Justice Project; Vanessa Huang, Campaign Director, Justice Now; Gael Guevara, Organizing Support Team Coordinator, Sylvia Rivera Law Project

Purposeful Design: The Destruction of California's Indigenous People
TBA

How to write Letters to the Editor and Op Eds in a way that increases their chances of being published
Nancy Oliveira

We Are at War! Grounding Abolition in Revolutionary Liberation(s)
Viviane Saleh-Hanna; Ashanti Alston; Giselle Dias; Suzanne Joseph

Media Justice, Criminal Justice
Nick Szuberla, Thousand Kites, Center for Media Justice, and Lisa Rudman, National Radio Project

Grassroots Fundraising
Ari Wohlfeiler and Ivonne Florez, Critical Resistance

Gender, Militarism, and the Prison Industrial Complex
Nada Elia, Anisha Desai


3:30pm - 5:00pm

Theater as Activism--Lucasville: the Untold Story of a Prison Uprising
Gary L. Anderson: Co-playwright and Artistic Director of American Legends Theatre Works; Four actors from the September 25-27 Oakland theatre production of Lucasville - The Untold Story of a Prison Uprising

Community Based Approaches to Sex Work
Robyn Few and Starchild, Sex Workers Outreach Project (SWOP); Carol Stuart, co-founder St. James Infirmary; Stacey Swimme, Desiree Alliance; Maxine Doogan, Erotic Service Providers Union (ESPU); Carol Leigh, BAYSWAN/COYOTE; Rachel West, USPROS; Gloria Lockett, CAL-PEP; Stephanie Adraktas; Dr. Rita Nakashima

Stopping the School to Prison Pipeline Training (continued from last session)
Families and Friends of Louisiana's Incarcerated Children

What is Abolition?
TBA

Being Safe OUTside the System, LGBTSTGNC People Of Color Challenging Hate and Police Violence
Audre Lorde Project

Criminalization of Mental Illness and the Prison Industrial Complex
Mary Dougherty (Co-Coordinator/Community Organizer, RIPPD); Leah Gitter (member, RIPPD); Gregory James (member, RIPPD); Lisa Ortega (Co-Coordinator/Community Organizer, RIPPD); Kyle Nesbitt (member, RIPPD); Nafis Rashed (member, RIPPD); Alexandra Smith (Soros Fellow and member, RIPPD)

Building a New Civil Rights Movement
Dorsey Nunn, All of Us or None; Rev. Kenneth Glasgow, The Ordinary Peoples' Society, Alabama; Norris Henderson, Safe Streets, Strong Communities, New Orleans LA; Steven Huerta, All of Us or None Texas

The Open Wounds of our Mother Earth
TBA

Basic strategies for getting support and information to pregnant women in prison
Faith Groesbeck

Trans Awareness and the Prison Abolition Movement (continued from previous session)
Dean Spade, Stefanie Rivera, Gael Guevara and Gabriel Arkles, Sylvia Rivera Law Project

Prospects for Mumia's Freedom
Pam and Ramona Africa; Laura Herrera; Tom Lacey; Merle Woo

Ending Sexual Violence in Detention: An Abolitionist Analysis
Jason Lydon

Long Term Isolation in California
Laura Magnani, AFSC Kim Carter, CFP

Abolition and the Self
Christy Hall, Co-founder and Development Coordinator, Birth Attendants Collective; Julie Imonti, former staff person, Birth Attendants Collective

Envisioning the end of LWOP: A Roundtable Discussion
Hosted by Fight For Lifers Inc./ Fight For Lifers West of PA
Etta Cetera, Kristi Brian (co-moderators); Donna Pfender (mother of lifer & FFL West President); Anita Colon (sister of lifer, PA); Mae Hadley (mother of lifer, PA); Hakim Ali & William Goldsby (FFL, Inc. organizers and former prisoners); Harriet Washington (Mother of lifer, PA) ; Deion Morrison (Youth organizer, PA); Lea Green (mother of a lifer MD); Maura Taub (Prisoner-rights activist, NM); Yvonne Edwards (loved one of lifer, AZ); HR 4300 activist/lobbyist

Beyond These Prison Walls: How Families and Children of Incarcerated Loved Ones are Fighting Back
Maisha Quint & Robin Rederford of LSPC; Anna Wong & Jennifer Lucatero of Project W.H.A.T.!

Alternatives to Incarceration on the Ground in California
Facilitator: Marina Sideris, Critical Resistance; Presenters: Ali Riker, San Francisco Homeless Pretrial Release Program; Kathleen Connolly, UCSF Citywide Case Management Forensics Project; Nora Rahimian, Santa Cruz Barrios Unidos

Let Freedom Ring: Political Prisoners in the United States
PANELISTS: Ashanti Alston, Jericho Amnesty Movement; Bo Brown, Prison Activist Resource Center; Masai Ehehosi, International Committee to Support Imam Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin; Jose Lopez, National Boricua Human Rights Network; MODERATORS Meg Starr, Resistance in Brooklyn; Dan Berger, Resistance in Brooklyn, author, Outlaws in America

The Southern Criminalization Strategy
Southern Center for Human Rights

Steps Toward Change
Tina Reynolds, WORTH, Moderator; Jeanine Cummings, Lift Every Voice; Elizabeth Leslie, WORTH; Maxine King, WORTH; Davian Reynolds, NY Initiative for Children of Incarcerated Parents

Law Enforcement Violence Against Women and Trans People of Color
Andrea Ritchie, Nada Elia, INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence


Monday, September 22, 2008

Legal Updates from the RNC protests in St. Paul, Minnesota, U.S.

Sept 13, 2008 Bombs and Shields


  • Bradley Crowder, and a photo allegedly showing him with a helmet and arm pads lifting a street sign to throw onto a roadway.

    Two men from Austin, Texas David Guy McKay, 22 and Bradley Neil Crowder, 23 are being held on charges that they constructed and possessed eight molotov cocktails. Police discovered the devices with the help of two confidential informants, one of whom traveled from Texas for the protests. FBI agents named the group the "Austin Area Affinity Group."

    The group brought with them a rented U-Haul trailer packed with batons and homemade riot shields that had been fashioned out of traffic barrels and plexiglass. Authorities claim the shields were designed as offensive weapons because of protruding screws that held the shield together faced outward and could theoretically be pushed into police.

    One informant who was traveling with the group took one of the 35 shields to the police who acted quickly and seized the trailer's contents on August 31st, before the convention began. The police did not bother to obtain a search warrant before acting on their informant's tip so it is unlikely that anyone can be charged in connection with the materials confiscated from the trailer.


    David McKay

    The two face charges outlined in an affidavit signed by Special Agent Christopher V. Langert. Langert, 40, has been with the F.B.I. for the last 10 years and has investigated environmentally focused anarchist organizing in the past. Agent Langert also authored the affidavit that supports RNC related charges against another anarchist, Matthew DePalma. According to the affidavit McKay confessed that he did construct the molotov cocktails and he went on to implicate Crowder as his accomplice.

    Since their arrests authorities have named both Crowder and McKay as "prime suspects" in the June blaze that destroyed the 152-year-old Texas Governor's Mansion. The building was burned beyond repair by a lone individual with a molotov cocktail. The act was caught on serveilance footage but no one has been arrested for the crime and no motive has yet been made public. No one was injured in by the fire.

  • Authorities arrested 23-year-old Michigan resident Matthew DePalma for possessing five molotov cocktails. According to an FBI affidavit DePalma met an FBI informant at the annual Crimethinc. Convergence that was held in Waldo, Wisconsin in July. According to the affidavit the informant asked DePalma to contact him when he got to Minnesota for the convention.

    Between the 15th and 28th of August DePalma assembled five fire bombs with the assistance of the FBI informant who drove DePalma to stores and gas stations where they purchased supplies. Two of the bombs were tested and three were left with the informant with the understanding that people other than DePalma would put them to use while protesting the Republican convention.

    The affidavit specified that the informant in this case has been working with the FBI for at least five years. An informant who infiltrated the Minneapolis based RNC Welcoming Committee and is confirmed to have attended the Waldo, WI Crimethinc. gathering has already been exposed although not much detailed information about him has been publicized.

  • A Saint Paul Police Department Bulletin that appealed to assistance from the public led to two tips that resulted in the arrest of 23-year-old Jason Sparks. Sparks, a resident of the neighboring city of Fridley is accused of smashing a $17,000 plate-glass window at the First National Bank Building with his hands. He faces a felony count of criminal damage to property and is also alleged to have kicked a police car.

    Although the individual sought by police had their face obscured by a bandanna they did not cover their hair or a piercing over their right eye. Sparks is no longer in custody and awaits arraignment. At least one other individual was arrested and charged similarly for allegedly breaking windows during anti-RNC demonstrations.


  • David Murphy

    Saint Paul, Minnesota - 23-Year-old David Terence Mahoney faces charges of assault and "terroristic threats" for allegedly dropping a 50-pound sandbag off an overpass along Interstate 94 during the first day of the protests. The bag landed harmlessly out of the way of traffic.

    Although the individual who hurled the weight off the overpass was masked, authorities say that they were able to identify Mahoney by a distinctive tattoo on his back. According to police he was arrested at the home of a member of the RNC Welcoming Committee, eight of whom still face felony conspiracy charges.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Updated 9/16-Free the Cuban 5 Calendar

ENDORSE THE FREE THE CUBAN 5 MONTH!

Endorsers:

  • The Popular Education Project to free the Cuban 5
  • EL Frente Socialista-Comite de NYC
  • International Committee for the Freedom of the Cuban 5
  • Al-Awda Right to Return
  • The Malcolm X Grassroots Movement
  • Brigada Vilma Guillois Espin
  • The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign
  • New York Anarchist Black Cross Federation
  • The Philadelphia Cuba Solidarity Coalition
  • Nicaragua Solidarity Committee Chicago
  • The Cuba Solidarity Committee in Houston
  • Puerto Rican Alliance Of Los Angeles
  • Radical Women
  • Freedom Socialist Party
  • The Venceremos Brigade
  • December 12th Movement
  • The Orange County KPFK Support Group
  • International Action Center
  • Troops Out Now Coalition
  • Worker’s World Party
  • DestroyIndustrY
  • Fuerza de la Revolucion
  • NYC Jericho Movement
  • Cuba Solidarity New York
  • Peace and Freedom Party
  • All African People’s Revolutionary Party
  • African Awareness Association
  • DC metro Committee to Free the Cuban Five
  • Cuban en focus WBAI radio 99.5fm
  • Alliance for Global Justice
  • Nicaragua Network
  • Venezuela Solidarity Network
  • Rev. Luis Barrios, St. Mary’s Episcopal Church
  • Amigos de CLARIDAD
  • October 27th Committee
  • The Nationalist Party of Puerto Rico-New York
  • The Puerto Rican Independence Party/NYC
  • Critical Resistance Baltimore Chapter
  • Baltimore Nonviolence Center
  • Journalists for Mumia
  • James F. Harrington, Activist
  • The July 26 Coalition of Boston
  • Free the Cuban 5 Committee-Vancouver
  • The Workers International League
  • Orange County Committee to Free The Cuban Five
  • The Los Angeles Coalition in Solidarity with Cuba
  • Asians 4 Jericho/Mumia
  • Chicago Committee to Free the Cuban 5
  • la Coorfinadora Continental Bolivariana Puerto Rico
  • Peace House and Southern Oregon Friends of Cuba
  • Rock Around The Blockade - Manchester (UK)
  • Comitato Italiano Giustizia per I Cinque (Italian Committee: Justice for the Five)
  • Rock Around the Blockade
  • Jericho Boston

To organizations and Individuals who believe in the Freedom of the Cuban 5,

In 2006, Ricardo Alarcon, President of the Cuban National Assembly, declared the period of time between September 12-October 8 to be a time to raise awareness around the Cuban 5. Here in NYC The Popular Education Project to Free the Cuban 5 extends this time to October 12; in order for it to be a full month of events and to include a commemoration of the assassination of Ernest “Che” Guevara. We refer to this period of time as the “Free the Cuban 5 Month!”

September 12th is the tenth anniversary of the arrest of the Cuban 5 and the Project wants to create a calendar full of events throughout the city, nationally and internationally! Motivated by the negative and unjust decision of the 11th Circuit Appeals, the Project feels it is time to double our efforts to educate about the case of the Cuban 5 and to garner more support on their behalf.

The Project would like to organize Cuban 5 events in NYC communities that have not had them before. We want to broaden this movement and build Solidarity for the Cuban 5 in as many communities as possible.

The Project is asking organizations and individuals to organize forums, letter writing nights, film screenings, conversations, or fund-raisers for the Cuban 5. The Project will help by providing speakers, films, literature and promotion!

If you are interested in endorsing the Free the Cuban 5 Month AND ORGANIZING AN EVENT, please email us at freethecuban5@gmail.com

So far this is the Calendar events:

Fri. Sept. 5th- Comite Dominicano Pro-Libertad de los cincos Anti-terroristas Cubanos presos en Los Estados Unidos is organizing a meeting/film screening of El Process/the Trial at 2005 Amsterdam Avenue (between W159th-160th St.) in the basement at 7pm!

Tues. Sept. 9th-Interview with College Radio University of Maryland College Park Campus at 6pm

Friday, Sept 12th- 7:00 pm The Los Angeles Coalition in Solidarity with Cuba presents Entre Ciclones (Hurricanes)(2003) RSVP:RachelJay@earthlink.net or call 310-451-2752 (first 20) Home of: Rachel Sene and Jay Johnson 601 - 9th Street, Santa Monica, CA 90402 1 block East of Lincoln and 1 block North of Montana. South East corner. $5 donation for The Cuban Five defense Continue discussion at: Izzy's Deli -15th and Wilshire, Santa Monica C Free parking in rear + free valet + free street parking www.freethefive.org/

Fri. Sept. 12th -SPECIAL CULTURAL NIGHT FOR THE CUBAN 5! Marking the 10th Anniversary of their Unjust Imprisonment. Bring your family and friends for a night of original and inspiring poetry for the 5 Heroes, as well as a showcase of artwork by the Cuban 5, including their poetry. Doors open @ 7pm at Mount Pleasant Neighbourhood House (800 East Broadway 1 block east of Fraser on Broadway) Admission by donation. Free the Cuban 5 Committee – Vancouver778-889-7664 |cuban5_van@yahoo.com,

http://www.vancubasolidarity.com/freethefivevan.html

Fri. Sept. 12th- 4:00 - 6:00 pm For 10 Years Five Innocent Men Have Been Unjustly Imprisoned in the U.S. But the media has wrapped this case in a curtain of silence. Break that Silence! FREE THE CUBAN FIVE! Downtown Crossing T Stop (Washington & Winter St., Boston). Get Involved: info@july26.org 617-566-2861 or 617-522-9478

Fri. Sept. 12th- The Orange County KPFK Support Group & Orange County Committee to Free The Cuban Five will hold a special street corner vigil, also taken out a FREE THE FIVE ad in the September Change Links newspaper to draw attention to the injustice and imprisonment of these five Cuban antiterrorist who are truly heroes of peace and justice. Change links has a circulation of 11,000 in Los Angeles and Southern California.Our vigil will take place on the Corner of Bristol & Anton, Costa Mesa from 5:00-7:00 PM. September 12, 2008 contact. QUETZALCOATL38@AOL.COM tel. 714-956-5037

Sat. Sept. 13th-All out to Malcolm X Park in Washington DC at 10am! 10th anniversary of the arrest of the Cuban 5! For ticket information in NYC contact: 917-887-8710

Sat. Sept. 13th-CINCO ESTRELLAS Y UN CANTO/ FIVE STARS AND ONE SONG Featuring DANNY RIVERA VICTOR VICTOR, The Dynamic CHUCHITO VALDÉS PUERTO RICAN GOLDEN JAZZ ALL STARS 7:30 PM, Hostos Center for the Arts & Culture, 450 Grand Concourses at 149th Street, Bronx, New York, Admission: $35.00 – VIP $100 (Group, senior and student rates available) Box Office and Information: 718-518-4455

Sat. Sept. 13th- Time: 12 - 3pm City: Manchester, UK Location: Piccadilly Gardens, Manchester Open air rally to protest the 10 years in prison for the Cuban 5. Sponsors: Rock Around the Blockade – Manchester Endorsers: Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! – Manchester Contact: manc@ratb.org.uk | 07940988203

Sat. Sept. 13th- from 5:00 to 9:00 p.m. in Piazza Farnese. The protest has been organized by, Comitato Italiano Giustizia per I Cinque (Italian Committee: Justice for the Five). The demonstration is called, Giustizia Per I Cinque or Justice for the Five. US Citizens 4 Peace & Justice, an American political group here has endorsed and will attend this demonstration.

Sat. Sept. 13th- 11am-2pm at Grey's Monument, Grey Street, Newcastle Upon Tyne,

England we are having a street action. There will be a stall, speeches on the case of the Cuban 5, the war on terror and anti-terror laws in Britain and democratic rights. With music from the Verbal Terrorists (a political hip-hop group) and street theatre. Email - northeast@ratb.org.uk Phone No - 07858346276

Tues. Sept. 16th-LETTER WRITING NIGHT IN BROOKLYN at 7pm with the New York Anarchist Black Cross Federation, In Brooklyn 123 Tompkins Avenue, between Myrtle & Vernon Avenues www.123communityspace.org/directions

Tues. Sept. 16th- 7 pm Urban Justice Center123 William Street, 16th Floor New York, NY, 10038 Trains: 2/3/J/M/Z/4/5 to Fulton; A/C to Broadway-Nassau Families Kept Apart by U.S. Government Come find out why. Learn about the families and the case of the Cuban Five. Speakers: Vinie Burrows, Actor, Representative of the Women’s International Democratic Federation to the United Nations and Cuban Five Supporter Heidi Boghosian, Executive Director of the National Lawyers Guild Teresa Gutierrez, New York Committee to Free the Cuban Five For more information: NY Committee to Free the Cuban Five 212.633.6646 www.nyfreethefive.org Urban Justice Center 646.602.5600 www.urbanjustice.org

Sun. Sept. 21st-People’s Mass with La Iglesia San Romero de Las Americas at 11:30am at La Iglesia San Romero de Las Americas/UCC at 2410 Amsterdam Avenue 4th Floor New York, NY 10040 Telephone #: 212 - 237-8747

Sun. Sept. 21st- Chicago Committee to Free the Cuban 5 Film Showing: Posada Carriles: Terrorism Made in the USA (2007) at 2pm De Paul University, Schmitt Academic Center, Levan 406 Schmitt Academic Center is located at 2320 N. Kenmore, near the Fullerton stop on the Red Line. All movies are free. 773-376-7521 uscubachi@hotmail.com This is a very educational film on Posada and the CIA, not just in Cuba, but in Venezuela, Central America and here at home, especially Miami. If you would like a copy for a showing, contact us.

Fri. Sept. 26-Boricuas for the Cuban 5 event at Cemi Underground at 6:30pm 1799 Lexington Avenue @ 112th St. Special Film on the Cuban 5 will be shown: Against The Silence in our own Voices: The Family of the Cuban 5 Speak out! For more information call 212-860-2820

Sun. Sept. 28th-Poetry/cultural Event at Sista’s Place 456 Nostrand Avenue Brooklyn, NY A or C train to Nostrand (corner of Nostrand & Jefferson Aves., entrance on Jefferson) Sponsored by the December 12th Movement. For more information contact: 718-398-1766

Fri. Oct 3rd-Venceremos Brigade Galeria Cubana: Report back from the 39th Contingent to Cuba Summer 2008 at 6pm! Featuring art, video footage, photos, and memories and more! 235 w23rd St (7th-8th Avenues) Food, drinks for sale! For more information contact: Vbrigade@gmail.com or call 212-560-4360

Wed. Oct. 8th- Free The Cuban 5 benefit w/Rutger Ruckus www.myspace.com/xaviergray & the Bull City Bad Guys www.myspace.com/thebullcitybadguys doors @9pm show 930pm ALLages $4.00 @ the MarVell Event Center Durham, NC 119 West Main Street 919 688 0975 www.theMarVell.com

Fri. October 10th- 10th Anniversary Jericho March in NYC for all Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War in New York City at 12pm! Check the Jericho Website: www.jerichony.org and Contact GET INVOLVED! For more information: 718-853-0893, 206-888-4001, and nycjericho@gmail.com

Sun. Oct. 12th-Free the Cuban 5 event in Baltimore, sponsored by the Critical Resistance Baltimore Chapter; Baltimore Nonviolence Center at 4pm Cork Factory Building Cork Gallery 4th Floor Doorbell #9 302 E Federal. For more information call 443-850-2840

Mon. Oct. 13th- FREE THE CUBAN FIVE! Film and Discussion Film will be followed by discussion and information about what we can do to help the Cuban 5 in their struggle for justice. “5 Men, 1 Story” (12 min) is a documentary which tells the story of these five men, gives an update on their legal situation, and features news reports from Cuba. At 7pm at Peace House FREE Sponsored by Peace House and Southern Oregon Friends of Cuba. Peace House is located at 543 S. Mountain, Ashland, Oregon. For more information contact Liisa Wale at l_wale@yahoo.com or Mary Ann Jones at 482-8915

Sat. Nov. 1st-Cuban 5 event with the Radical Women and the Freedom Socialist Party at Freedom Hall in Harlem at 6:00pm! Freedom Hall 113 w128th St. (Between Malcolm X Blvd./Lenox Ave. and Adam Clayton Powell Blvd. Take subways #2 or 3 to 125th St.; #4,5 or 6 to 125th St. and walk west four blocks; A,B, C or D to 125th St. and walk east three blocks. For more information call 212-222-0633

*IN SEPTEMBER CUBAN EN FOCUS WILL FEATURE AN INTERVIEW WITH THE POPULAR EDUCATION PROJECT TO FREE THE CUBAN 5 ABOUT HE FREE THE CUBAN 5 MONTH

*THE VENEZUELA SOLIDARITY NETWORK AND THE NICARAGUA NETWORK WILL BE FORWARDING THIS EMAIL TO THEIR LISTS TO HELP BUILD OUR CALENDAR!

For more information on FREE THE CUBAN 5 MONTH consult The Popular Education Project to Free the Cuban 5 website: www.freethecuban5.com

Monday, September 15, 2008

Benefit for the San Francisco 8 & the Angola 3 - Sunday, Sept 28

From:    "SF-8 case" <cdhrsupport@freedomarchives.org>
Date: Mon, September 15, 2008

Sunday, September 28, 6:30 pm
First Unitarian Church of Oakland
14th & Casto Streets

Featuring appearances by the SF 8 and Robert King of the Angola 3

Performances by Rico Pabon, Martin Luther & Silk E, Khalil Anthony
and Starchild Dance

$10-20, Students $5

For more information call 415 226-1120

_______________________________________________
Please support these brothers by sending a donation. Make checks payable
to CDHR/Agape and mail to the address below or donate on line:

http://www.freethesf8.org/donate.html

Committee for the Defense of Human Rights (CDHR)
PO Box 90221
Pasadena, CA 91109
(415) 226-1120
FreetheSF8@riseup.net

http://www.freethesf8.org

Woman pleads guilty in 1999 Michigan State arson

By ED WHITE Associated Press Writer Sept 11, 2008

DETROIT — A Detroit woman pleaded guilty Thursday to setting a New Year's Eve 1999 fire at Michigan State University, an act of eco-terrorism, and also admitted roles in 12 other incidents.
Marie Mason, 46, and Frank Ambrose, 33, were accused of pouring gasoline and starting a fire to protest research on genetically modified plants. Ambrose already has pleaded guilty and will be sentenced Sept. 22.
Fumes from the gasoline caused an explosion. The fire caused more than $1 million in damage at MSU's Agriculture Hall. It also destroyed records related to the government's $2 million support for the research.
"There was no intention to harm any living thing," Mason's defense attorney, John Minock, said in an interview. "They didn't intend to cause an explosion. They just wanted to damage some paper."
Mason appeared in federal court in Grand Rapids to plead guilty to conspiracy and arson charges, including an incident that destroyed logging equipment in northern Michigan a day after the MSU fire.
U.S. Attorney Charles Gross has called it "domestic terrorism, plain and simple."
The government says Mason and Ambrose were affiliated with the Earth Liberation Front, a radical band of environmentalists. They were married at the time but divorced earlier this year.
Minock said prosecutors built their case against Mason with help from Ambrose, who tape-recorded their conversations in 2007.
Ambrose's attorney, Michael Brady, declined to comment. Assistant U.S. Attorney Hagen Frank could not be reached.
The explosion at MSU burned Mason's hair and prevented her from finishing the message, "No GMO," on a wall, a reference to genetically modified organisms. She and Ambrose fled the building and drove 190 miles north to Empire.
In her plea agreement, Mason also admits involvement in 12 other acts with property damage pegged at more than $2.5 million.
They include the destruction of four homes under construction in Washtenaw and Macomb counties and an attempted arson at an Ice Mountain bottled water pumping station in Mecosta County, all in 2003.
Mason will not be charged with those incidents, but they could affect her sentence. The U.S. attorney's office agrees not to seek more than 20 years in prison but could appeal if U.S. District Judge Paul Maloney goes below 15 years. No date was set.
A co-defendant, Stephanie Lynne Fultz, has agreed to plead guilty to failing to report the MSU arson to authorities, court documents say. The government says she cut Mason's scorched hair after the fire.
Aren Burthwick has agreed to plead guilty to a similar charge for helping Mason and Ambrose and not reporting the arson, documents say.
http://www.animalconcerns.org/external.html?www=http%3A//www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/nation/5996639.html&itemid=200809112132480.662291

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Sign on Statement in Support of Marie Mason

From: freemarie@riseup.net
Date: Sat, September 13, 2008

In a movement wide show of unity and Solidarity. We are encouraging
groups, collectives and individuals to sign on to the statement in support
of Marie Mason. Please forward sign ons to freemarie@riseup.net.

On September 8, Marie Mason accepted a non-cooperating plea agreement
which requires her to plead guilty to three out of four charges leveled
against her by the US Attorney's Office relating to E.L.F. activity. We
are aware that Marie was facing several consecutive life sentences had she
taken her case to trial and been convicted. She was also facing the threat
of additional indictments in other districts. Within the wording of
Marie’s plea agreement, she stipulates to the involvement of confirmed
snitch and government informant, Frank Ambrose, in the actions she plead
guilty to. Frank Ambrose has already plead guilty and admitted his
involvement in these actions in his own plea agreement. We have all
reviewed a full and un-redacted copy of Marie's agreement. There are no
other names mentioned in the plea agreement, rather the terminology
‘others’ is used. Furthermore, her plea agreement does not require her to
provide information about other individuals, testify against others, or
provide any further information to law enforcement.

Frank Ambrose has been a paid informant for the FBI since April 2007.
Along with numerous debriefs with federal agents concerning multiple
actions and individuals, Ambrose traveled the country “wearing a wire” -
visiting old friends and attempting to make new ones - in an effort to
incriminate these people, thereby assisting the FBI in securing additional
indictments. There are hundreds of hours of recordings of Frank in
conversations with his ‘friends’ and ‘allies,’ prodding and digging for
information to use against those individuals and other activists. Marie
was arrested along with Aaron Burthwick and Stephanie Fultz – these
arrests stemmed directly from the information and cooperation Ambrose
provided to the FBI. Ambrose not only cooperated fully with the FBI but
actively assisted the investigation, going so far as to pursue information
on other unrelated groups and individuals involved in legal, above-ground
activism.

We believe wholeheartedly in the principle of non-cooperation. We also
believe that the idea of expecting someone to face several consecutive
life sentences to protect a confirmed snitch – one who has already plead
guilty to the charges – follows not only flawed reasoning, but is simply
insane.

Marie Mason has faced calculated betrayal and continued to fight when the
deck was so clearly stacked against her. Throughout this, she has acted
completely “above board” and has carried herself admirably. She has shown
incredible courage and integrity throughout this case, always putting the
safety of others above her own. Despite threats and risks to their
personal safety, those involved in Marie’s case worked diligently to get
information about Ambrose to the rest of us. Marie refused to even look at
a cooperating plea agreement and has refused for weeks to sign the current
non-cooperating plea agreement because Ambrose, the very person who turned
her over to the Feds, was named in the agreement. It was not until several
movement activists and movement attorneys gave their support to the
agreement that Marie accepted the plea.

Too much has been lost to informants, and Ambrose truly is among the worst
of them. Marie strikes us all as a courageous and compassionate woman -
full of integrity and concern for how her actions might affect others.
While her plea agreement does not include specific text protecting her
from future subpoenas or interrogations, Marie’s conduct thus far serves
as a good measure of the actions she would take should she find herself in
that kind of situation. Marie's agreement absolutely falls into the
non-cooperating category. We are throwing our full support behind her and
all prisoners who have maintained their integrity in the face of such
incredible oppression. We ask that the rest of you do the same and help us
help Marie get through the next 15 to 20 years of her life – the horrid
sentence being sought by the US District Attorney’s office.

The above statement is endorsed by the following
Ecoprisoners.org
Peace Center Collective of Kalamazoo, MI
East Bay Prisoner Support Collective
Chicago Anarchist Black Cross
Got Your Back Collective
Earth Warriors Are OK! (EWOK!) Eco Prisoner support collective Twin
Cities, MN

Friday, September 12, 2008

Updated 9/12-Free the Cuban 5 Month calendar

ENDORSE THE FREE THE CUBAN 5 MONTH!

Endorsers:

  • The Popular Education Project to free the Cuban 5
  • EL Frente Socialista-Comite de NYC
  • International Committee for the Freedom of the Cuban 5
  • Al-Awda Right to Return
  • The Malcolm X Grassroots Movement
  • Brigada Vilma Guillois Espin
  • The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign
  • New York Anarchist Black Cross Federation
  • The Philadelphia Cuba Solidarity Coalition
  • Nicaragua Solidarity Committee Chicago
  • The Cuba Solidarity Committee in Houston
  • Puerto Rican Alliance Of Los Angeles
  • Radical Women
  • Freedom Socialist Party
  • The Venceremos Brigade
  • December 12th Movement
  • The Orange County KPFK Support Group
  • International Action Center
  • Troops Out Now Coalition
  • Worker’s World Party
  • DestroyIndustrY
  • Fuerza de la Revolucion
  • NYC Jericho Movement
  • Cuba Solidarity New York
  • Peace and Freedom Party
  • All African People’s Revolutionary Party
  • African Awareness Association
  • DC metro Committee to Free the Cuban Five
  • Cuban en focus WBAI radio 99.5fm
  • Alliance for Global Justice
  • Nicaragua Network
  • Venezuela Solidarity Network
  • Rev. Luis Barrios, St. Mary’s Episcopal Church
  • Amigos de CLARIDAD
  • October 27th Committee
  • The Nationalist Party of Puerto Rico-New York
  • The Puerto Rican Independence Party/NYC
  • Critical Resistance Baltimore Chapter
  • Baltimore Nonviolence Center
  • Journalists for Mumia
  • James F. Harrington, Activist
  • The July 26 Coalition of Boston
  • Free the Cuban 5 Committee-Vancouver
  • The Workers International League
  • Orange County Committee to Free The Cuban Five
  • The Los Angeles Coalition in Solidarity with Cuba
  • Asians 4 Jericho/Mumia
  • Chicago Committee to Free the Cuban 5
  • la Coorfinadora Continental Bolivariana Puerto Rico
  • Peace House and Southern Oregon Friends of Cuba
  • Rock Around The Blockade - Manchester (UK)
  • Comitato Italiano Giustizia per I Cinque (Italian Committee: Justice for the Five)
  • Rock Around the Blockade
  • Jericho Boston

To organizations and Individuals who believe in the Freedom of the Cuban 5,

In 2006, Ricardo Alarcon, President of the Cuban National Assembly, declared the period of time between September 12-October 8 to be a time to raise awareness around the Cuban 5. Here in NYC The Popular Education Project to Free the Cuban 5 extends this time to October 12; in order for it to be a full month of events and to include a commemoration of the assassination of Ernest “Che” Guevara. We refer to this period of time as the “Free the Cuban 5 Month!”

September 12th is the tenth anniversary of the arrest of the Cuban 5 and the Project wants to create a calendar full of events throughout the city, nationally and internationally! Motivated by the negative and unjust decision of the 11th Circuit Appeals, the Project feels it is time to double our efforts to educate about the case of the Cuban 5 and to garner more support on their behalf.

The Project would like to organize Cuban 5 events in NYC communities that have not had them before. We want to broaden this movement and build Solidarity for the Cuban 5 in as many communities as possible.

The Project is asking organizations and individuals to organize forums, letter writing nights, film screenings, conversations, or fund-raisers for the Cuban 5. The Project will help by providing speakers, films, literature and promotion!

If you are interested in endorsing the Free the Cuban 5 Month AND ORGANIZING AN EVENT, please email us at freethecuban5@gmail.com

So far this is the Calendar events:

Fri. Sept. 5th- Comite Dominicano Pro-Libertad de los cincos Anti-terroristas Cubanos presos en Los Estados Unidos is organizing a meeting/film screening of El Process/the Trial at 2005 Amsterdam Avenue (between W159th-160th St.) in the basement at 7pm!

Tues. Sept. 9th-Interview with College Radio University of Maryland College Park Campus at 6pm

Friday, Sept 12th- 7:00 pm The Los Angeles Coalition in Solidarity with Cuba presents Entre Ciclones (Hurricanes)(2003) RSVP:RachelJay@earthlink.net or call 310-451-2752 (first 20) Home of: Rachel Sene and Jay Johnson 601 - 9th Street, Santa Monica, CA 90402 1 block East of Lincoln and 1 block North of Montana. South East corner. $5 donation for The Cuban Five defense Continue discussion at: Izzy's Deli -15th and Wilshire, Santa Monica C Free parking in rear + free valet + free street parking www.freethefive.org/

Fri. Sept. 12th -SPECIAL CULTURAL NIGHT FOR THE CUBAN 5! Marking the 10th Anniversary of their Unjust Imprisonment. Bring your family and friends for a night of original and inspiring poetry for the 5 Heroes, as well as a showcase of artwork by the Cuban 5, including their poetry. Doors open @ 7pm at Mount Pleasant Neighbourhood House (800 East Broadway 1 block east of Fraser on Broadway) Admission by donation. Free the Cuban 5 Committee – Vancouver778-889-7664 |cuban5_van@yahoo.com,

http://www.vancubasolidarity.com/freethefivevan.html

Fri. Sept. 12th- 4:00 - 6:00 pm For 10 Years Five Innocent Men Have Been Unjustly Imprisoned in the U.S. But the media has wrapped this case in a curtain of silence. Break that Silence! FREE THE CUBAN FIVE! Downtown Crossing T Stop (Washington & Winter St., Boston). Get Involved: info@july26.org 617-566-2861 or 617-522-9478

Fri. Sept. 12th- The Orange County KPFK Support Group & Orange County Committee to Free The Cuban Five will hold a special street corner vigil, also taken out a FREE THE FIVE ad in the September Change Links newspaper to draw attention to the injustice and imprisonment of these five Cuban antiterrorist who are truly heroes of peace and justice. Change links has a circulation of 11,000 in Los Angeles and Southern California.Our vigil will take place on the Corner of Bristol & Anton, Costa Mesa from 5:00-7:00 PM. September 12, 2008 contact. QUETZALCOATL38@AOL.COM tel. 714-956-5037

Sat. Sept. 13th-All out to Malcolm X Park in Washington DC at 10am! 10th anniversary of the arrest of the Cuban 5! For ticket information in NYC contact: 917-887-8710

Sat. Sept. 13th-CINCO ESTRELLAS Y UN CANTO/ FIVE STARS AND ONE SONG Featuring DANNY RIVERA VICTOR VICTOR, The Dynamic CHUCHITO VALDÉS PUERTO RICAN GOLDEN JAZZ ALL STARS 7:30 PM, Hostos Center for the Arts & Culture, 450 Grand Concourses at 149th Street, Bronx, New York, Admission: $35.00 – VIP $100 (Group, senior and student rates available) Box Office and Information: 718-518-4455

Sat. Sept. 13th- Time: 12 - 3pm City: Manchester, UK Location: Piccadilly Gardens, Manchester Open air rally to protest the 10 years in prison for the Cuban 5. Sponsors: Rock Around the Blockade – Manchester Endorsers: Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! – Manchester Contact: manc@ratb.org.uk | 07940988203

Sat. Sept. 13th- from 5:00 to 9:00 p.m. in Piazza Farnese. The protest has been organized by, Comitato Italiano Giustizia per I Cinque (Italian Committee: Justice for the Five). The demonstration is called, Giustizia Per I Cinque or Justice for the Five. US Citizens 4 Peace & Justice, an American political group here has endorsed and will attend this demonstration.

Sat. Sept. 13th- 11am-2pm at Grey's Monument, Grey Street, Newcastle Upon Tyne,

England we are having a street action. There will be a stall, speeches on the case of the Cuban 5, the war on terror and anti-terror laws in Britain and democratic rights. With music from the Verbal Terrorists (a political hip-hop group) and street theatre. Email - northeast@ratb.org.uk Phone No - 07858346276

Tues. Sept. 16th-LETTER WRITING NIGHT IN BROOKLYN at 7pm with the New York Anarchist Black Cross Federation, In Brooklyn 123 Tompkins Avenue, between Myrtle & Vernon Avenues www.123communityspace.org/directions

Tues. Sept. 16th- 7 pm Urban Justice Center123 William Street, 16th Floor New York, NY, 10038 Trains: 2/3/J/M/Z/4/5 to Fulton; A/C to Broadway-Nassau Families Kept Apart by U.S. Government Come find out why. Learn about the families and the case of the Cuban Five. Speakers: Vinie Burrows, Actor, Representative of the Women’s International Democratic Federation to the United Nations and Cuban Five Supporter Heidi Boghosian, Executive Director of the National Lawyers Guild Teresa Gutierrez, New York Committee to Free the Cuban Five For more information: NY Committee to Free the Cuban Five 212.633.6646 www.nyfreethefive.org Urban Justice Center 646.602.5600 www.urbanjustice.org

Sun. Sept. 21st-People’s Mass with La Iglesia San Romero de Las Americas at 11:30am at La Iglesia San Romero de Las Americas/UCC at 2410 Amsterdam Avenue 4th Floor New York, NY 10040 Telephone #: 212 - 237-8747

Sun. Sept. 21st- Chicago Committee to Free the Cuban 5 Film Showing: Posada Carriles: Terrorism Made in the USA (2007) at 2pm De Paul University, Schmitt Academic Center, Levan 406 Schmitt Academic Center is located at 2320 N. Kenmore, near the Fullerton stop on the Red Line. All movies are free. 773-376-7521 uscubachi@hotmail.com This is a very educational film on Posada and the CIA, not just in Cuba, but in Venezuela, Central America and here at home, especially Miami. If you would like a copy for a showing, contact us.

Fri. Sept. 26-Boricuas for the Cuban 5 event at Cemi Underground at 6:30pm 1799 Lexington Avenue @ 112th St. Special Film on the Cuban 5 will be shown: Against The Silence in our own Voices: The Family of the Cuban 5 Speak out! For more information call 212-860-2820

Sun. Sept. 28th-Poetry/cultural Event at Sista’s Place 456 Nostrand Avenue Brooklyn, NY A or C train to Nostrand (corner of Nostrand & Jefferson Aves., entrance on Jefferson) Sponsored by the December 12th Movement. For more information contact: 718-398-1766

Fri. Oct 3rd-Venceremos Brigade Galeria Cubana: Report back from the 39th Contingent to Cuba Summer 2008 at 6pm! Featuring art, video footage, photos, and memories and more! 235 w23rd St (7th-8th Avenues) Food, drinks for sale! For more information contact: Vbrigade@gmail.com or call 212-560-4360

Wed. Oct. 8th- Free The Cuban 5 benefit w/Rutger Ruckus www.myspace.com/xaviergray & the Bull City Bad Guys www.myspace.com/thebullcitybadguys doors @9pm show 930pm ALLages $4.00 @ the MarVell Event Center Durham, NC 119 West Main Street 919 688 0975 www.theMarVell.com

Fri. October 10th- 10th Anniversary Jericho March in NYC for all Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War in New York City at 12pm! Check the Jericho Website: www.jerichony.org and Contact GET INVOLVED! For more information: 718-853-0893, 206-888-4001, and nycjericho@gmail.com

Sun. Oct. 12th-Free the Cuban 5 event in Baltimore, sponsored by the Critical Resistance Baltimore Chapter; Baltimore Nonviolence Center at 4pm Cork Factory Building Cork Gallery 4th Floor Doorbell #9 302 E Federal. For more information call 443-850-2840

Mon. Oct. 13th- FREE THE CUBAN FIVE! Film and Discussion Film will be followed by discussion and information about what we can do to help the Cuban 5 in their struggle for justice. “5 Men, 1 Story” (12 min) is a documentary which tells the story of these five men, gives an update on their legal situation, and features news reports from Cuba. At 7pm at Peace House FREE Sponsored by Peace House and Southern Oregon Friends of Cuba. Peace House is located at 543 S. Mountain, Ashland, Oregon. For more information contact Liisa Wale at l_wale@yahoo.com or Mary Ann Jones at 482-8915

Sat. Nov. 1st-Cuban 5 event with the Radical Women and the Freedom Socialist Party at Freedom Hall in Harlem at 6:00pm! Freedom Hall 113 w128th St. (Between Malcolm X Blvd./Lenox Ave. and Adam Clayton Powell Blvd. Take subways #2 or 3 to 125th St.; #4,5 or 6 to 125th St. and walk west four blocks; A,B, C or D to 125th St. and walk east three blocks. For more information call 212-222-0633

*IN SEPTEMBER CUBAN EN FOCUS WILL FEATURE AN INTERVIEW WITH THE POPULAR EDUCATION PROJECT TO FREE THE CUBAN 5 ABOUT HE FREE THE CUBAN 5 MONTH

*THE VENEZUELA SOLIDARITY NETWORK AND THE NICARAGUA NETWORK WILL BE FORWARDING THIS EMAIL TO THEIR LISTS TO HELP BUILD OUR CALENDAR!

For more information on FREE THE CUBAN 5 MONTH consult The Popular Education Project to Free the Cuban 5 website: www.freethecuban5.com

Marie Mason Plea Agreement

From:    freemarie@riseup.net
Date: Thu, September 11, 2008

Marie's complete plea agreement has been post on www.freemarie.org. A date
for sentencing has not been set. We will keep everyone updated on any
future court dates. Marie is grateful for the all the words of support.
Please keep Marie and her family in your hearts and minds during these
difficult times.

Its not called the Struggle for nothing,
Got Your Back Collective
www.freemarie.org

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Feds still probing attacks by Earth Liberation Front

BY LISA THOMPSON
lisa.thompson@timesnews.com [more details]

BY ED PALATTELLA
ed.palattella@timesnews.com
Published: September 09. 2008 12:40AM

Firefighters walk past a burning crane at a construction site off Cooper Road on Sunday, March 23. (Janet B. Campbell / Erie Times-News)

Radical environmentalist Kevin Tucker took the stage at Mercyhurst College two years ago to sound his call for a world freed from civilization.

Today, he is scheduled to take a seat before a different kind of Erie audience -- a federal grand jury.

The 28-year-old former Pennsylvania resident said he has been subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury that is investigating a series of arsons and other politically motivated acts of sabotage and vandalism in the Erie area in 2002 and 2003.

The Earth Liberation Front, or E.L.F., and the Animal Liberation Front, or ALF, variously took responsibility for the local actions, which occurred amid a nationwide wave of crimes committed in the name of environmental and animal liberation.

The government wants to know if Tucker, who now lives in Athens, Ga., has information about incidents in northwestern Pennsylvania.

The actions, six in all, caused an estimated $1.5 million damage, the FBI said. They include a costly arson at a U.S. Forest Service research station in Warren County, the release of animals from local fur farms in Erie County and the torching of a $500,000 construction crane at Wintergreen Gorge.


(Chris Sigmund / Erie Times-News)


Tucker said he knows nothing about the incidents under investigation and is not a target of the probe. He said his role in the green anarchy movement is as a writer and speaker.

"It would be extremely stupid to be a public figure and try to have nighttime activities," he said in an interview with the Erie Times-News. "I think they know I don't have any information. I think this is harassment."


Tucker said he plans to appear today as summoned. He declined to comment on how he will respond when questioned.

Grand jury proceedings are secret, though witnesses are allowed to discuss their testimony publicly. Assistant U.S. Attorney Marshall Piccinini, the chief federal prosecutor in Erie, and Andrew Wilson, head of the Erie FBI office, declined to comment on Tucker's subpoena or confirm that a grand jury is in session.

Wilson said only that the crimes that occurred remain "under active investigation."


Top priority
WHAT IS DOMESTIC TERRORISM?
"Domestic terrorism involves acts of violence that are a violation of the criminal laws of the United States or any state, committed by individuals or groups without any foreign direction, and appear to be intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population, or influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion, and occur primarily within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States."

SOURCE: John E. Lewis, Deputy Assistant Director of the FBI's Counterterrorism Division, speaking before the Senate Judiciary Committee in May 2004
Law enforcement classifies illegal actions such as those taken in the name of E.L.F. and ALF as domestic terrorism. Solving the crimes remains a top priority for the FBI, Wilson said.

"We saw as many or more direct actions than any other part of the country at that time," Wilson said of the E.L.F. and ALF actions in the Erie region in 2002 and 2003.

Tucker's appearance before the grand jury comes more than six years after the first E.L.F. action in the Erie region. But the FBI still has time to investigate and prosecute. Allegations of conspiracy or arson have allowed prosecutors in other eco-terrorist cases nationwide to extend the statute of limitations beyond the typical five years.

While the investigation continues, those targeted by activists await their own reckoning.

In the early morning hours of New Year's Day 2003, arsonists torched two pickups and two sport utility vehicles at Bob Ferrando's car dealership in Girard. Ferrando said he had not heard from investigators since shortly after the January 2003 fire. He said the incident left him unsettled at the time.


"You don't know what is going to happen next," he said.

Forrest Mindek and his brothers operate a Harborcreek Township mink farm that was targeted. He did not respond to a request for comment from the Erie Times-News.

In 2002, Mindek told the Fur Commission, a California-based trade group: "Whoever committed this cowardly crime must be punished to the full extent of the law. It's bad enough that they try to destroy our livelihood, but they put the lives of our animals, our family and the firefighters at risk."


Lasting legacy
LOCAL ACTION OF THE E.L.F. AND ALF IN 2002-03
Members of the Earth Liberation Front and the Animal Liberation Front claimed responsibility for a series of actions in northwestern Pennsylvania in 2002 and 2003:

  • March 24, 2002: A $500,000 construction crane was torched in Wintergreen Gorge in a failed attempt to halt construction of the Bayfront Connector. Activists also sprayed graffiti on construction equipment and drove metal spikes into trees to pose danger to anyone who might try to cut them down.

  • May 2002: Sixteen foxes were released from the Lawrence Dana Fox Ranch on Station Road, Greenfield Township. Several died after being struck by cars.

  • Time not specified in E.L.F. release: Two northwestern Pennsylvania farm fields were destroyed; genetically modified crops were being tested in the fields.

  • Aug. 11, 2002: A U.S. Forest Service research station in Irvine, Warren County, was torched. Seventy years' worth of research was destroyed; $700,000 in damage.

  • Nov. 26, 2002: The feed barn at the Mindek Brothers Fur Farm in Harborcreek Township went up in flames. Also 200, and 50 breeding mink were released there in May and September 2002, respectively.

  • Jan. 1, 2003: Two sport utility vehicles and two pickup trucks were destroyed by fire at Bob Ferrando Ford in Girard, causing $90,000 damage. Ferrando said insurance covered the loss.


    SOURCES: FBI; communiqués from E.LF. and ALF.
  • The FBI estimates animal-rights extremists and environmental extremists have committed 2,000 criminal acts in the United States since 1977.

    No one was injured in the local attacks, but the fire at the Warren County research station stood out in the arsonists' expressed willingness to employ violence against people.


    "Where it is necessary," according to a statement that E.L.F. released at the time, "we will no longer hesitate to pick up the gun to implement justice, and provide needed protection for our planet."

    A person speaking for E.L.F. later dismissed the remarks as representing only one E.L.F. cell. The comments still alarmed law enforcement because they appeared to clear the way for a new threshold of violence.

    In response to the outbreak of eco-sabotage, the FBI, the Erie County District Attorney's Office and Corry, Erie and Millcreek Township police departments formed a joint terrorism task force in 2004 to target terrorism, especially the E.L.F. and ALF actions.

    The group's formation followed the creation of similar task forces in all major U.S. cities in the months after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

    Despite investigators' efforts, no one has been arrested in the local cases. The FBI continues to offer a reward for information leading to the arrest of those responsible, Wilson said.


    Nationwide, the FBI has made a number of eco-terrorism arrests in Western states, but many cases remain unsolved. One difficulty is the loose, secret ties that make up E.L.F. and ALF. Their methods have been described as built around an idea, rather than an organization. Their crimes resist traditional investigative tactics.

    "It is not the standard leadership or hierarchy that a criminal enterprise uses," Wilson said.

    There is no membership roster or organized structure for investigators to infiltrate. Instead, like-minded activists come together in highly secretive cells, or affinity groups, plot actions and commit them in the name of E.L.F. or ALF. The actions are then announced through anonymous press releases or "communiqués." After each action in the Erie area, releases were faxed to news organizations explaining the rationales for the crimes.


    Tucker: Movement targeted, not him
    E.L.F. took credit for spraying graffiti on the earthmoving equipment at the Wintergreen Gorge construction site in spring 2002. The FBI in Erie formed a domestic terrorism task force to probe the radical group. (FILE PHOTO RICH FORSGREN/Erie Times-News)

    Tucker, a former Greensburg resident who studied anthropology at the University of Pittsburgh, describes himself as an anarcho-primitivist. He believes human nature is best realized in small hunter-gatherer societies freed of all forms of domination -- namely government and civilization.

    He and green anarchists John Zerzan, of Eugene, Ore., and Derrick Jensen, of California, spoke on the themes of "Revolution, Sustainability and the Eradication of Domination" in a lecture at Mercyhurst College in April 2006.

    Tucker also appeared in Erie at the Erie Art Museum Annex in January 2004 with other high-profile radicals at the Total Liberation Fest, an event described as a "revolution conference on state repression, political prisoners, social justice, and earth and animal liberation."

    Tucker said his subpoena is not the first time the FBI has carried its investigation into the inner workings of those in the environmental movement.

    He said others in the Erie area have been contacted by the FBI in the past.


    An anonymous Internet blog posting in October 2005 reported that activists and organizers from throughout western Pennsylvania had been subpoenaed to appear before the grand jury in connection with the E.L.F. and ALF actions.

    In an interview, Tucker's colleague, Zerzan, 65, a green anarchist author and radio show host, said Tucker has always been careful to tell others that he does not want to know about any E.L.F. or ALF direct actions.

    Zerzan said he believes Tucker has been called to testify because of his strong leadership in the green anarchy movement.

    Tucker agreed.

    "I wasn't surprised by any of this," he said. "In a way, it is kind of an occupational hazard."

    Statement from Dr Martin Balluch

    ELP Information Bulletin (11th September 2008)

    Dear friends

    Austrian Animal Rights defendant, Dr Martin Bullach, has released the following statement (please reproduce this statement and forward this e-mail to all your friends):

    Statement from Martin Balluch after his release:

    It’s now been a week since I was released from prison. 104 days in a prison cell are over! It is seriously shocking to see how far police repression will be taken in order to stop legitimate and successful protest for animals in the name of a majority of the population, just because it runs contrary to the profit interests of a powerful minority.

    Many many thanks to each and every one of you for all you have done for me. I am deeply humbled by the immense amount of solidarity and support we prisoners have received from the international animal’s rights community.

    I was released without the keys to my home, my car or my office being returned to me. I was also not given my computer, access to my bank account or even my wrist watch! If it had not been for friendly folk supporting me, I would have had to sleep rough during the last week, without any money. Our office – and the offices of 6 other animal rights groups – are still empty. Nothing has been handed back so far, no video material or photo cameras, no computers, no data of our membership, no photo- or film archives, and no book keeping. The intention is obvious: since the jailing of us had to be stopped, depriving us of any material is the next move to silence VGT and prevent us from being effectively active.

    Let me briefly remind you how all this came about.

    In 1997, we developed the idea in Austria of confrontative – but fully legal – grass roots campaigns including all means of civil disobedience in order to achieve reformist changes. The campaign targets were pragmatically chosen on the grounds of being practically achievable and supported by a majority of the electorate. The aim was, though, to see real changes, and not just symbolic gestures, i.e. changes that would make a world of a difference for the animals concerned – and for the people exploiting them.

    In 1998, fur farming was banned and 43 fur farms had to close down. By 2002, a law had been introduced to ban all wild animals in circuses. In 2004, the campaign to ban cages for laying hens – including enriched ones – reached its peak. It was then that powerful interest groups felt our pressure for the first time. We confronted the governing Conservative Party, which was the only party opposed to a battery farm ban, during 2 provincial and 1 presidential election. The agricultural spokesperson of the Conservatives in the southernmost province reacted so angrily to our anti-election rally, that he actually attacked me on the podium during my speech and punched me in the face. The Conservatives lost all 3 elections and eventually gave in to the pressure. From that time onwards, it was not only death threats by farmers and their agents that became part of our lives. The secret service was put on our tracks. No demo went by without plain clothes guys with listening devices, watching and photographing us.

    But the ministry of the interior went ever further. Our demos were banned to a large extent, we were fined huge amounts of money for the most minor law infringements and the ministry warned all schools about our “radicalism”. In addition, in 2005 the secret service arranged for a raid on our office to secure our accounts to try to charge us with some kind of tax fraud. We now have documents of meetings between secret service agents and our political enemy whereby they discuss suggested strategies against our demos and actions and arrange for coordinated media work to libel us. A spokesperson of the secret service called animal rights the biggest threat to national security and the minister of the interior named VGT publicly as a violent organisation.

    When, on 2 occasions, some criminal damage was done to a car and the shop of a furrier, the secret service aided the furrier in publicising this damage widely in order to set up animal rights groups like VGT for being the target of police attacks in the future. Also, contrary to the spirit of the constitution, secret service advised our political enemy to register demos at places where we wanted to do demos, in order to give police a reason to ban our demos as, on paper, the space is already “booked”. These pseudo demos never actually took place.

    When all this didn’t do the trick, another step of escalation was decided upon. At the end of 2006, the owners of Kleider Bauer and representatives of the Conservatives as well as high ranking police officers met and spoke about how to destroy VGT. The minutes of those meetings are now in our hands and make for gruesome reading. It says that there is no evidence of any criminal wrongdoing and that banning our demos cannot be upheld, so a special police unit consisting of more than 32 agents from the secret service, the murder division and from the anti-terror police locally and nationally was formed with the sole purpose of framing us.

    This special unit started the largest operation of spying on political activists ever conducted since World War 2. For almost 2 years, 2 private houses, a pub as a meeting place as well as the VGT office were bugged. The telephone and the email conversation of more than 30 people were listened in on. Two cars, among them mine, had tracking devices put on them. 17 people were followed and watched 24 hours a day. 3 private homes had video cameras filming their entrances. And undercover agents were put into VGT to infiltrate us. Further, more than a dozen potential targets of animal rights activists were under permanent surveillance.

    To justify this operation, secret service drew up a list of 240 acts of criminal damage and arson (including ripping up illegal circus posters) from the last 13 years, which might have had something to do with animal rights, and claimed there was one big international criminal organisation responsible for all of them. In order to inflate the damage, a number of cases of accidental fire were presented as animal rights related arson, and one butyric acid attack on a Kleider Bauer shop was enlarged to a damage of 500,000 euro, which later led to civil law suits because the insurance company made it clear that this figure was about 50 times too large. Most likely, that was another dirty trick out of the hat of the secret service, to inflate the damage out of proportion in order to be able to justify a violent police attack later on.

    Since by May 2008, this huge surveillance operation had not come up with any hint of any criminal activity, the ministry of the interior escalated the police terror even further. On 21st May 2008, 23 police squads of between 30 and 50 officers each attacked as many homes and offices of animal rights activists in the early morning hours. The doors were smashed open and masked officers surrounded people in their beds pointing guns at their heads and went on to turn the places upside down. Since the law against criminal organisations, which was used in this case to justify the operation, states that at least 10 members are necessary to make the law applicable, exactly 10 people were put on remand while almost 40 were arrested and questioned for up to 10 hours.

    Since police and public prosecution had absolutely no evidence against any of us, they spoke to media as well as the judges responsible for extending the incarceration and pretended that they had a huge amount of evidence, but it had to be kept secret since the operation and investigations were ongoing.

    The judges complied and continually extended the remand detention without any charges being brought due to there being suspicion of a criminal organisation. This suspicion was described as follows:

    · The use of non-public internet platforms to discuss issues

    · Encryption of emails and computers

    · The use of non-registered fully legal mobile phones

    · The _expression of supposedly radical opinions on internet discussions in the last 11 years

    · Campaign work involving emails which demand changes and threaten the use of demos

    · International contacts, especially international meetings and gatherings with foreign animal rights activists

    This utterly ludicrous list of “evidence” of suspicion of a criminal organisation was seriously put forward by the judges to extend the remand detention. No criminal act was in any way connected to the 10 held in prison, but the judges argued that this was not necessary. The criminal acts were committed with the same spirit – to further animal rights – and that was sufficient. The mere existence of criminal acts committed somewhere at some time by persons unknown completely unconnected to the accused was used to turn legal groups into supposedly criminal ones. That criminal acts were never the issue is proven by internal protocols that surfaced, which showed that the special police unit concerned with the case had met 4 weeks into our prison stay to debate nothing but the issue how to further damage VGT. A number of ideas were put forward and an additional meeting on the same topic was agreed upon for 4 days later. Obviously, the question on how to destroy VGT – and not how to solve any crime – was highest priority in police meetings.

    But police and state prosecution lost the media battle for public sympathy. An unprecedented wave of international protests in front of Austrian embassies in countless countries shamed the Austrian government. Throughout the whole 104 days of incarceration, daily demos were held outside the prisons and additional vigils and protests took place, including large protest marches drawing in 800 participants. The Green Party and the Social Democrats criticized the police actions with increasing impatience. A huge amount of protest letters were sent to the ministry of justice as well as to other politicians, heads of state and newspapers. Eventually, the Green Party decided to nominate myself as a candidate for the next Parliamentary elections.

    At this stage, there was no sign of any legal moves succeeding in liberating the imprisoned. The case of whether the remand imprisonment was legal is still pending at the Supreme Court. A decision is expected within the next 2-4 weeks. In the meantime, political pressure was mounting, which suddenly led to our release on 2nd September, after 104 days.

    The release was not justified by stating that there is no evidence, albeit that this is so obviously the case. The release was instead justified by saying that the time already spent in prison was out of proportion with the prison sentences expected if a guilty verdict were reached.

    A weird move to save face! Instead of saying the truth that there is no evidence, the reference to an expected sentence was used, although the charge of criminal organisation carries a maximum sentence of 5 years – and arson 10 years.

    The case is not over yet, though. The damage has been done, the threat of the law §278a criminal organisation is still looming above anyone being politically active. We are still accused, even if not charged. However, the longer this status is being drawn out, the longer police have the opportunity to claim that we are serious suspects, which they widely do in the press. A political trial would have the media watching, and then this ludicrous “evidence” would not stand a chance. In order to safeguard animal rights activism and, more generally, political activism in Austria, 3 things must be achieved. Firstly, those responsible for this police terror must be brought to account for what they did. Secondly, the damage inflicted must be fully compensated for. And thirdly, the law §278a must be revoked.

    Exactly 40 years ago, the tanks of the then Soviet Union broke into the Czechoslovakian Republic to destroy with violence what has been called the “Prague Spring”, the new socialist system with a humane attitude. Dissidents were locked up and the tiny seedlings of a new society were violently uprooted. This attack on fundamental basic rights has been justly criticized all over the globe. Western democracies boast of being so different and defending liberal principles. But our case proves them wrong. New laws including bans on fur and battery farming, as well as the removal of fur and battery eggs from ever more department stores and supermarkets, were the animal rights seedlings marking the dawn of a new attitude. Dissident animal rights thinking was infiltrating ever more areas of society. And the tanks of a “democratic” system smashed it all up, and locked up the most active critical thinkers.

    Yes, we have the right to free speech and to protest and to associate freely. But those freedoms end when they are used to effectively change society. You can express your opinion – as long as not enough people listen and act correspondingly. You can protest – as long as profits are not touched by it. And you can freely associate – as long as you only debate and do not influence society significantly by action. Austria has a relatively low level of animal rights related criminal activity, but a very high level of animal rights related successes. And Austria saw the largest and most violent police operation ever conducted against animal rights anywhere and anytime in the world. Is it not obvious that there is a direct connection?

    Internal papers clearly reveal that the senior officers in the secret service consider any effect of political campaigning outside Parliament a threat to national security. Only Parliament is justified to direct society through electoral majorities. Political pressure from groups outside Parliament are not justified in principle, and therefore amount to terrorism.

    If social activism seriously affects the profits of powerful cliques, the secret service is set in motion to smash this movement. However, in reality, outer parliamentarian pressure groups are the most important corrective of the abuse of power by influential cliques, they are the lifeblood of democracy and the safeguard to national security. Indeed, it is the secret service that poses the biggest threat to our constitution.

    But so far, police violence has had the opposite effect on our movement than what they aimed for. We now have more activists than ever before. Animal rights is being taken seriously as a new social movement. It is being talked about everywhere. And the public sympathises ever more with us. Since having been released from prison, I have been approached countless times on the streets by strangers who congratulated me and wished me luck, and many even put money into my hands. People, who I mostly do not know, bought me a new computer, a watch, a mobile phone and a bike and even offered me a new flat to live in for a while. The bike shop gave me a 100-Euro-bikelock for free in solidarity.

    The movement stood up in solidarity behind us prisoners. Now, as a movement we are more united and willing to cooperate than ever before. And the events prove beyond any doubt that our approach to achieving animal rights in the long run is effective. If the reforms we achieved had been welcomed by animal industries, surely they would not have sent the boys round to punch us up.

    This year, our campaigns might have suffered a drawback. But when the case is won, we will push on with more energy than ever before. I am determined to see this through and am looking forward to new advances towards animal rights in the years ahead.

    +++++++

    Earth Liberation Prisoners Support Network

    BM Box 2407

    London

    WC1N 3XX

    England

    www.spiritoffreedom.org.uk

    Documents from FBI and DOJ on the infiltration of Austin Affinity Group

    TC.indymedia.org 09/09/2008

    2 documents, one a press release from the Department of Justice, and the other an affidavit of FBI special agent Christopher Langert, detailing the use of confidential informants to entrap Crowder and Mckay.

    an excerpt:

    2. In February 2007, a confidential human source (“CHS 1”) who has been working with the FBI since November 2007, and who has a proven track record of reliability, began providing the FBI in San Antonio, Texas, with information regarding the activities of a group of individuals involved in planning to disrupt the Republican National Convention (“RNC”).
    3. The group of Texas individuals on whom the source was reporting has been named by law enforcement officials as the Austin Area Affinity Group (“the Affinity Group”).

    Download the Documents here:
    http://houston.indymedia.org/news/2008/09/64791.php

    Corporate Media Article:
    http://www.statesman.com/news/content/news/stories/local/09/09/0909affin...

    -----
    The affidavit is copied below:
    -----

    STATE OF MINNESOTA ) AFFIDAVIT OF SPECIAL AGENT
    ) ss. CHRISTOPHER LANGERT
    COUNTY OF HENNEPIN )
    1. I am a special agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
    I have been so employed for 10 years. This affidavit is based on
    personal knowledge as well as information related to me by other
    investigating officers.
    2. In February 2007, a confidential human source (“CHS 1”) who has
    been working with the FBI since November 2007, and who has a proven
    track record of reliability, began providing the FBI in San
    Antonio, Texas, with information regarding the activities of a
    group of individuals involved in planning to disrupt the Republican
    National Convention (“RNC”).
    3. The group of Texas individuals on whom the source was reporting
    has been named by law enforcement officials as the Austin Area
    Affinity Group (“the Affinity Group”). Bradley Neal Crowder has
    been identified through CHS reporting as a leader of the Austin
    Affinity Group. David McKay has been identified as a member of the
    Austin Affinity Group.
    4. In May 2008, CHS 1 reported that Crowder attended a meeting in
    Minneapolis where numerous individuals from across the United
    States met to discuss preparations for protesting and disrupting
    the RNC.
    5. CHS 1 reported that, on August 28, 2008, eight members of the
    Affinity Group left Austin, Texas in a rented white passenger van.
    2
    The group had a trailer attached to the van. The FBI learned
    through investigation of the rental company that the van was rented
    by a known member of the Affinity Group and that the reservation to
    rent the van was made by Crowder. CHS 1 reported that the trailer
    was rented by group members David McKay and Bradley Crowder. CHS
    1 also reported that the group was holding 35 shields inside the
    trailer.
    6. CHS 1 reported that these shields were assembled by taking
    stolen traffic barrels, cutting them in half, painting them black,
    cutting out a rectangular area that was fitted with plexiglass to
    allow the user of the shield to see through the shield, and then
    securing the plexiglass to the shield with four screws. The screws
    were placed in the shield so that the screw tips protruded from the
    shield to allow the shield to be used as a weapon. CHS 1 reported
    that the group discussed using these shields to attack police
    officers. The FBI has observed one of these shields, which matches
    CHS 1’s description of the devices. St. Paul Police seized 34
    shields, that fit CHS 1’s description from the group’s trailer on
    August 31, 2008.
    7. CHS 1 reported that, following the seizure of these shields by
    police, Crowder, McKay and others went to Walmart to purchase
    “gear” and bolt cutters. CHS 1 learned from another member of the
    Austin Affinity Group that McKay and others went to purchase a gas
    container and tampons. Law enforcement officers have learned by
    3
    reviewing surveillance video tapes at Walmart that on August 31,
    2008, Crowder, McKay and other members of the Austin Affinity Group
    went to Walmart, located at 1450 University Avenue, St. Paul, and
    purchased, among other things, the following items: a two-gallon
    gas can, tampons, motor-oil, a package of rubber bands, ear plugs,
    a pair of bolt cutters, a bike helmet and elbow pads. The group
    entered the store at approximately 8:50 p.m. and members of the
    group exited between 9:01 p.m. and 9:16 p.m on.
    8. Your affiant knows that tampons, oil, rubber bands and gas
    containers are commonly used in the construction of Molotov
    cocktails. Specifically, your affiant is aware that tampons are
    commonly used as wicks for Molotov cocktails, that gas containers
    are used to store fuel for use in gas containers, that rubber bands
    are one method used to affix a wick (such as a tampon) to the side
    of a Molotov cocktail and that oil is commonly mixed with gas in
    the construction of Molotov cocktails to increase the flammability
    of the fuel and to allow the fuel to stick to whatever it hits.
    9. On the morning of September 1, 2008, CHS 1 reported to law
    enforcement that another member of the Affinity Group told CHS 1
    that items purchased from Walmart were being stored at an apartment
    in St. Paul. Law enforcement officers have learned that the lessee
    of the apartment is affiliated with the Affinity Group.
    10. Later on September 1, 2008, an FBI surveillance operations
    group member who was familiar with McKay’s and Crowder’s
    4
    appearances, observed both Crowder and McKay entering and exiting
    the St. Paul residence described previously.
    11. Late on September 1, 2008, CHS 1 reported to law enforcement
    that McKay informed CHS 1 that there were eight assembled Molotov
    cocktails in the basement of the residence. McKay called the
    devices “shrimp cocktails,” and informed CHS 1 that the fuel
    contained in the devices was made up of one-third gas, one-third
    motor oil, and one-third tomato juice. McKay also told CHS 1 that
    the devices were hidden in the basement of the residence where
    McKay was staying.
    12. On September 1, 2008, a second Confidential Human Source (“CHS
    2") who has been working with your affiant for the past five
    months, and has been found to be extremely reliable, met with McKay
    at a Dayton Street apartment in St. Paul, Minnesota. The apartment
    at which CHS 2 met McKay is rented by a woman affiliated with the
    Affinity Group. Officers have learned of the link between the
    lessee and the Affinity group through human source reporting and a
    statement made by the woman to members of St. Paul Police on
    September 3, 2008.
    13. This meeting between CHS 2 and McKay was captured by
    consensual audio and video surveillance. During their meeting,
    McKay told CHS 2 that his name was “David,” that he had a falling
    out with other members of his group, and that he and a couple other
    individuals were going to conduct “Red Actions” on September 2.
    5
    McKay also told CHS 2 that McKay had been arrested and released on
    September 1 and that his friend had been arrested and was scheduled
    to be released at 8:00 a.m. on September 2, 2008. McKay also
    invited CHS 2 to accompany him to conduct “Red Actions.”
    14. The FBI has learned through independent investigation that
    McKay was arrested and cited for disorderly conduct then released
    by St. Paul Police on September 1, 2008. The FBI has also learned
    through independent investigation that Crowder was arrested for
    disorderly conduct on September 1, 2008, and remains in custody.
    15. On September 2, 2008, CHS 1 and McKay met. During the course
    of their conversation McKay used coded language to disguise the
    nature of the subjects of their conversation. During their
    conversation, which was transmitted to law enforcement officers via
    electronic surveillance equipment, McKay told CHS 1 that he [McKay]
    and Crowder manufactured several molotov cocktails together. McKay
    said that the Molotov cocktails consisted of half gasoline and half
    motor oil, with tampons as wicks. McKay told CHS 1 that the wicks
    were soaked in lighter fluid. McKay told CHS 1 that the Molotov
    Cocktails would be lit and thrown at vehicles parked in a parking
    lot, the location of which McKay then described. Law enforcement
    officers have corroborated the existence of this parking lot, which
    is located close to the Dayton Street apartment where the Molotov
    cocktails were found. Law enforcement officers have observed that
    the parking lot is used by marked and unmarked law enforcement
    vehicles and is visibly patrolled by individuals wearing U.S.
    Secret Service vests, as well as uniformed members of the military.
    6
    When describing the Molotov Cocktails, McKay told CHS 1 that using
    tampons is “the safe way to do it.”
    16. During their conversation, CHS 1 asked McKay, “what if there’s
    a cop sleeping in the car?” McKay responded, “he’ll wake up.” CHS
    1 then asked McKay, “what if he doesn’t?,” to which McKay did not
    respond. CHS 1 also asked McKay if McKay could leave the scene
    with a cop burning or dying, to which McKay answered “yes.” McKay
    also told CHS 1 that “it’s worth it if an officer gets burned or
    maimed.”
    17. On September 3, 2008, St. Paul Police executed a search
    warrant for the “third floor living space and common areas” at a
    residence on Dayton Street, in St. Paul, Minnesota. The address
    searched pursuant to the warrant was the same location where CHS 1
    and CHS 2 met with McKay. The warrant was based on the
    observations of St. Paul Police Officer Dave Langfellow. The
    search warrant specifically requested permission to search for
    “[w]eapons or devices that may be used as weapons.” During the
    execution of the search warrant, officers found McKay and 2 other
    individuals, gas masks with filters, a bolt cutter, black ski mask,
    a slingshot, knee pads, and helmets, in the third floor living
    space of the address. Additionally, officers found a black
    backpack containing a bottle which contained a mixture of gasoline
    and oil. Next to the bottle in the backpack was a lighter stick.
    Prior to being removed from the residence, McKay informed officers
    that the backpack belonged to him.
    18. Under the kitchen sink of the residence, officers found a two7
    gallon gas container that appears to be identical to the one
    purchased by McKay and other members of the Affinity Group at
    Walmart on August 31, 2008. See Par. 7 supra.
    19. In the basement area of the residence, which is a common area
    of the residence available to members living in any of the three
    apartment units in the building, officers located eight fully
    assembled Molotov cocktails.
    20. The Molotov cocktails were found wrapped in a towel, a knit
    hat, and a washcloth. Six of the eight Molotov cocktails were
    found in a black Nike duffel bag. Each device consisted of a glass
    wine or liquor bottle filled with a mixture of gas and oil. The
    bottles were each capped. Each bottle also had a tampon secured to
    its neck with rubber bands. Your affiant knows that this is a
    frequently used method of constructing Molotov cocktails that is
    more “user-friendly” in that it lessens the chance that the person
    throwing the Molotov cocktail will be inadvertently burned by the
    fuel inside the bottle.
    21. On September 4, 2008, your affiant conducted a Mirandized
    interview of McKay at the Ramsey County Jail. After acknowledging
    his rights and waiving them, McKay told your affiant that he
    [McKay] and Crowder assembled the Molotov cocktails together at the
    St. Paul residence referenced in paragraphs 17-20 supra. McKay
    told your affiant words to the effect that their intent was to use
    the devices to offensively get back and someone or something.
    22. Federal law makes it a felony for a person to “receive or
    possess a firearm which is not registered to him in the National
    8
    Firearms Registration and Transfer Record.” 26 U.S.C. § 5861(d).
    The term “firearm” includes a destructive device. 26 U.S.C.
    § 5845(a). The term “destructive device” in turn means any
    explosive, incendiary, or poison gas . . . bomb . . . .” 26 U.S.C.
    § 5845(f). The term “destructive device” also includes “any
    combination of parts either designed or intended for use in
    converting any device into a destructive device . . . and from
    which a destructive device may be readily assembled.” Id. I am
    aware that assembled Molotov cocktails qualify as destructive
    devices under this statute. I am also aware that unassembled
    Molotov cocktails have been held to constitute destructive devices
    under the latter definition relating to any combination of parts
    from which a destructive device may be readily assembled.
    23. The United States Attorney’s Office for the District of
    Minnesota caused a check to be made of the National Firearms
    Registration and Transfer Record, which is maintained by the Bureau
    of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. As of September 4, 2008, that
    check revealed that during the relevant time period there have not
    been any firearms as defined above registered to Bradley Crowder or
    David McKay.
    Further your affiant sayeth not.
    ________________________________
    Christopher V. Langert
    Special Agent
    Federal Bureau of Investigation

    Rod Coronado's Family Vacation in OK!

    From:    "Support for Rod Coronado" <info@supportrod.org>
    Date: Thu, September 11, 2008

    Three more days until we are on our way to visit someone who needs our
    visit!!!!! Yes, we leave soon and will join Rod’s son, and his mother on a
    much anticipated visit with Rod!

    This is the first time that his son has been to visit his daddy while he
    has been in prison. It will be a monumental experience for him, and
    probably answer a lot of questions that he may have about what prison is
    like, who Rod is around, what the food is like, and all of those ifs,
    ands, or buts. I think the only reference for prison he has is based on
    Harry Potter and the Azkaban Prison. Yikes, that would put nightmares in
    any child’s mind!

    As you can imagine, Rod is thrilled! All of us together for three days! It
    will surely fly by, but it is these special, sacred times that we all look
    forward to, and then hold dear in our hearts once they have gone!

    We are all staying together, and Maya is really excited to not only see
    her dad, but to also see her brother! She, too, is excited for him to see
    his daddy! Maya has made it clear that her brother will be the first to
    sit on their daddy’s lap, because, she says,” He hasn’t seen him in prison
    before!”. That is the biggest gift she could give, taking into account
    that both of these little hearts long for their daddy everyday.

    I would like to send out a deep thanks to all of those who sent in a
    little bit here, and a little bit from there to help cover Rod’s payment.
    He did indeed have enough money to cover it, and from the bottom of my
    heart, thanks again! I would like you to know, it was the topic of
    conversation every time we spoke, but I assured him it would be ok, and
    his heart is lightened now knowing there is not any reason why he will not
    qualify for half-way house time!

    Statement of Support for Marie Mason

    From:    freemarie@riseup.net
    Date: Wed, September 10, 2008

    Below is a statement of support we received from attorney Lauren Reagan of
    the Civil Liberties Defense Center. Lauren has been instrumental in
    helping Marie navigate this treacherous path. As bad as things are right
    now without Laurens experience and insight they easily could have been a
    lot worse.

    Though we have never met Lauren and have only come in contact in times of
    crisis we know from experience that like Marie, Lauren has a strong
    understanding of the term Solidarity. We are grateful for her efforts in
    support of our friend Marie Mason and all Non cooperating Green Scare
    prisoners.

    In Solidarity,
    Got Your Back Collective
    www.freemarie.org

    Dear friends,
    I, and the Civil Liberties Defense Center have been assisting
    non-cooperating defendants dragged into the Green Scare prosecutions of
    environmental and animal rights activists since late 2005 (grand juries as
    far back as 02!). Marie Mason is one of those activists currently facing
    life in prison as the result of a snitch who was also her husband until
    they recently divorced. I have worked with her and her attorney since
    shortly after her indictment. Her attorney utilized our plea agreements
    from the Oregon non-cooperating defendants' cases in negotiating Marie's
    case. Her attorney has provided me with, and I have reviewed all of the
    court documents in her case including her plea agreement.

    I state with unequivocal confidence and knowledge that Marie has been
    absolutely stalwart in her commitment to not cooperate with the
    government, and to do no act that would damage the larger environmental
    movement in any way. She is an amazingly strong woman and I wish I had met
    her before her legal troubles began. Her plea agreement and negotiations
    do not require her to provide any information at all, other than to admit
    her own crimes in open court. The feds wanted their boy Ambrose to also be
    listed in the crimes that Marie is pleading to and to which Ambrose not
    only admitted, but gave up info on anything and everything he could think
    of. She has never confirmed or denied his role in any crime, but based
    upon the feds insistence that he be named in her plea counts, she will
    agree in court that if the feds say he did it, and Ambrose himself has
    sung like a canary, then so be it. Ambrose made his own bed long ago (see
    below). Like the other noncooperating defendants, the government could
    subpoena her to a grand jury or trial in the future. It would be her
    choice at that point whether to cooperate or not. Based upon the fact that
    she was willing to go to trial and face the rest of her life in prison if
    she was not offered a pure non-cooperation deal, I think we can speculate
    as to her decision if she was merely facing a contempt charge. Hopefully
    that will not happen.

    Marie has not received any favors or special treatment by the US Attorneys
    prosecuting her in Michigan; in fact, it is despicable that Marie may do
    more time then any other Green Scare defendant to date as a result of her
    choice to not snitch. Marie joins Jonathan Paul, Daniel McGowan, Sadie,
    Exile, Briana Waters, Tre Arrow, Rod Coronado, Eric McDavid and several
    others I am probably forgetting to mention --these folks are
    wholeheartedly deserving of our support as activists that have maintained
    their integrity in the face of political persecution by the federal
    government. They will do extra days or years in prison as a result of
    their refusal to give information to the feds used to prosecute others.
    Please take a moment to familiarize yourself with Marie's situation. If
    you are able to contribute financially, I'm sure they would deeply
    appreciate it, and if not, please show solidarity for Marie as she goes
    through the process of being yanked away from her children and family for
    a long time.

    Peace,
    Lauren C. Regan, Attorney at Law
    The Civil Liberties Defense Center

    Marie Mason's Plea details

    ELP Information Bulletin (10th September 2008)

    Dear friends

    As many ELP supporters will be aware, the American eco-activist, Marie Mason, has accepted a non-cooperating plea bargain and is admitting to three of the charges against her. She is expected to receive a sentence of between 15-20 years imprisonment.

    Below is a mailout from her support campaign.

    From: freemarie@riseup.net

    The following was written by a friend and supporter of Marie's with the
    Fifth Estate Collective. Marie is scheduled for a change of plea hearing
    tomorrow. We will post Marie's unredacted plea as soon as it is accepted
    by the court.

    Struggle,
    Got Your Back Collective
    www.freemarie.org

    On Monday, September 8, 2008 Midwest “Green Scare” arrestee Marie Mason
    accepted a plea bargain offered by federal authorities.

    The “Green Scare” is the name given to the recent arrests of animal rights
    and ecological activists who have been charged with acts of economic
    sabotage, in which federal authorities have sought outrageous sentences
    (often Life in prison) and have publicly and legally labeled the activists
    as “terrorists”, despite the fact that no one has been hurt in any of the
    actions.

    Mason was arrested in March 2008 and charged with four felony offenses,
    which were related to two 1999 actions of eco-sabotage in which no one was
    hurt. Mason’s arrest was based on information provided by Frank Ambrose,
    Mason’s former husband, who unbeknownst to her had been cooperating with
    authorities for a number of years, and who entered his own plea bargain in
    March of 2008.

    Mason has been an activist in the environmental and labor movement for 25
    years, and has resisted cooperating with authorities in a number grand
    juries. Since her arrest, Mason and her lawyer have been pushing for a
    non-cooperating agreement of the kind that other “Green Scare” arrestees
    have been able to get from west coast prosecutors.

    However, federal prosecutors in Michigan have refused to offer her a
    similar deal. The only plea-bargain offered was for 15-20 years but which
    required her to implicate other activists by name. Additionally it was
    stipulated that if Mason did not accept this offer by Friday, September 5,
    prosecutors were going to ask for Life at the trial, and also indict her
    on new charges relating to two other eco-sabotage actions. Mason refused
    this offer since it required her providing information against other
    activists and prepared to go to trial.

    On September 5, two hours before the deadline, federal prosecutors
    relented and offered a new deal, which required Mason only to name Frank
    Ambrose in her plea bargain. No information that Ambrose had not already
    provided was required from her. Additionally, the plea bargain included
    clauses that do not require her to perform any debriefs (as other
    non-cooperating Green Scare arrestees did) and did not require any
    additional testimony.

    Mason consulted with several different attorneys concerning this offer,
    including Lauren Regan of the Civil Liberties Defense Center in Eugene,
    Oregon. Their conclusion was that, despite the fact that Mason would be
    required to name Ambrose in her deal, no activists would be hurt by this
    agreement, including Ambrose himself. The likely reason that Mason is
    required to name Ambrose is because one of the four charges against Mason
    is “conspiracy”, and another person is required to be named for the
    charge.

    After holding out for six months and preparing to go to trial rather than
    compromise other activists, this is not the deal that Mason would like to
    accept, but it is the only option that federal authorities have offered.
    Because of the cooperation of her former husband Ambrose, there is no
    expectation that Mason would win a jury trial. Part of this decision is
    also the long sentences handed to the very few Green Scare arrestees who
    have gone to trail, such as Eric McDavid, as is the intense financial and
    emotional strain that this process is taking on Mason’s immediate family.

    Mason thanks her supporters for all their efforts. She understands that
    some of them will be unhappy with her decision to accept a plea bargain
    which names only Frank Ambrose, even though no additional information is
    provided about him which he has not already divulged by him, and that her
    own predicament is because of his choice to cooperate with authorities.
    However, after holding out for six months in hope of a full
    non-cooperating plea, and preparing to go to trial despite the impact it
    will have on her family and her future, she has decided to accept this
    offer.

    In the spirit of full transparency, the plea bargain will be made public
    shortly.


    +++++++

    Earth Liberation Prisoners Support Network
    BM Box 2407
    London
    WC1N 3XX
    England
    www.spiritoffreedom.org.uk

    Greenpeace 'Kingsnorth Six' Not Guilty

    info from ELP Sept. 10, 2008

    Today the six British Greenpeace activists who were accused of damaging a coal fired energy stations chimeny stack, by climbing up it, have been found not guilty.

    To be honest this result was expected (after all, if its so easy to damage a chimney how do they ever carry out any routine repairs to them?). But still its good news.

    For more info check out http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/

    Sept. 26th-Boricuas for the Cuban 5

    In the Spirit of El General Juan Ruis Rivera, Lola Rodriguez De Tio, and El Comandante Filiberto Ojeda Rios:

    Boricuas for the Cuban 5

    Friday Sept. 26, 2008 at 7pm Cemi Undeground

    1799 Lexington Avenue @112th St. El Barrio, New York

    Take the 6 train to E110th St. and Lexington Avenue

    For more information contact 718-601-4751 or 212-860-2820

    “Cuba y Puerto Rico son de un pájaro las dos alas, reciben flores o balas, sobre un

    mismo corazón”-Lola Rodriguez de Tío

    Join The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign, The October 27th Committee, El Partido Naconalista de Puerto Rico, and El Partido Independentista (PIP) for a night of solidarity and action for the Cuban 5!

    The Families of the Cuban 5 have been denied visas to visit their sons and husbands; the Cuban 5 are five U.S. held political prisoners incarcerated for fighting against terrorism and for protecting their homeland Cuba from right wing terrorists based in

    Miami.

    As a part of the Free the Cuban 5 Month and La Jornada Del Grito de Lares, we are showing a film about the Cuban 5’s families and having a talk about how people, especially Boricuas, can support the movement to free the Cuban 5.

    Program:

    Legal Update and Support for the Cuban 5:

    Benjamin Ramos, The ProLibertad Freedom

    Campaign

    Film: Against the Silence in Our Own Voices: Families of the Cuban 5 Speak Out! A film about the Cuban 5’s mothers wives

    Letter Writing to the Cuban 5

    COINTELPRO memo reveals Hoover gave order to withhold evidence in 'Omaha Two' case

    From:    "Political Prisoner News" <ppnews@freedomarchives.org>
    Date: Tue, September 9, 2008
    September 9, 2008 at 11:03:17

    <http://www.opednews.com/articles/COINTELPRO-memo-reveals-J-by-Michael-Richardson-080909-307.html>COINTELPRO
    memo reveals J. Edgar Hoover gave order to withhold evidence in
    'Omaha Two' case

    by <http://www.opednews.com/author/author3874.html>Michael Richardson

    http://www.opednews.com/articles/COINTELPRO-memo-reveals-J-by-Michael-Richardson-080909-307.html


    J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation for
    forty-eight years, was one of the most feared men in Washington, D.C.
    while he was alive because of his extensive files into the private
    lives of the rich and the famous and the powerful. Hoover was also
    feared because of his violent responses to those he considered threats.

    In the late 1960's, Hoover declared a clandestine war on the Black
    Panthers and other "black nationalist" groups as part of Operation
    COINTELPRO. A secret directive dated August 25, 1967 both authorized
    and mandated illegal harassment and targeting of domestic groups and
    U.S. citizens deemed a racial or political threat by Hoover.

    In Omaha, the war on the Panthers was directed at a chapter of the
    party called the Nebraska Committee to Combat Fascism headed by Ed
    Poindexter and Mondo we Langa (then-David Rice). The attack on the
    two activists was personally directed by Hoover and his inner circle
    at the top of the FBI command structure.

    Poindexter and Langa had been targets of COINTELPRO for their
    leadership roles in the Black Panther affiliate and were disliked by
    most local police for their sharp criticism of the shooting death of
    14 year-old Vivian Strong by police in the summer of 1969. Both men
    further inflamed police hostility by their repeated use of the word
    "pig" to describe police officers.

    On August 17, 1970 at 2:07 a.m. a powerful blast killed patrolman
    Larry Minard and injured seven others officers at a vacant house the
    police had been called to investigate. While uniform officers ran a
    dragnet arresting dozens of people in the hours and days following
    the bombing, the man in charge of the investigation, Asst. Chief Glen
    W. Gates, was meeting with the FBI to hatch a plot to convict
    Poindexter and Langa rather than find Minard's actual killers,
    betraying his fallen fellow officer.

    Two days after the bombing, before Larry Minard's body was even
    buried, Hoover gave a command to drop the search for Minard's killers
    and instead make a case against the NCCF leaders, a plan agreed to by
    Gates. Hoover's verbal directive to rig the investigation was
    recorded by Ivan W. Conrad, the head of the FBI Laboratory, on a
    COINTELPRO memo issued the day of the bombing. Conrad called Hoover
    to discuss the recommendation of the Omaha Special-Agent-in-Charge
    that police be only provided an informal, oral report on the lab's
    vocal analysis of the deadly phone call rather than a full
    investigatory report.

    The voice of a killer, whose identity was unknown, presented a
    problem to what was now a police conspiracy. The headline in the
    Omaha World-Herald blared out "Voiceprint in Bombing to FBI
    Lab". According to the newspaper an Omaha Police spokesman said the
    voiceprint would be a "good investigative tool" to identify the man
    who made the call luring police to the deadly ambush.

    Conrad, who apparently understood the implications of not issuing a
    formal lab report, asked Hoover about the Omaha SAC recommendation
    that, "an exception should be made in this case in order to assist
    the Omaha Police in developing investigative leads." The exception
    Conrad asked Hoover about was, "The results of an examination will
    not be furnished directly to the Police but orally conveyed through
    the SAC of Omaha."

    Conrad scrawled on his copy of the COINTELPRO memo, "Dir advised
    telephonically & said OK to do" followed by his initials. Hoover
    gave approval to withhold the FBI Laboratory analysis and the lab
    director was able to keep the results permanently hidden. However,
    Conrad did keep up his end of the plot and gave the results to the
    Omaha SAC who in turn shared them with Gates.

    Ultimately, 15 year-old Duane Peak confessed to planting the bomb
    that took Minard's life. Peak also claimed he made the emergency
    call and that Ed Poindexter and Mondo we Langa helped him build the
    bomb. Peak was offered a deal and became the state's chief witness
    against the two Panther leaders in exchange for a short sentence and
    his freedom. To keep the case from unraveling it was necessary for
    Peak to have been the caller as he claimed. However, there was one
    catch, the voice on the tape did not sound like Duane Peak but rather
    that of an older man.

    On October 13, 1970, the Omaha SAC sent a memo directly to Hoover:
    "Assistant COP GLENN GATES, Omaha PD, advised that he feels that any
    use of this call might be prejudicial to the police murder trial
    against two accomplices of PEAK and, therefore, has advised that he
    wishes no use of this tape until after the murder trials of PEAK and
    the two accomplices have been completed."

    Mondo we Langa says, "This is pretty clear indication of cloak and
    dagger stuff. We want you to do the analysis but we don't want you
    to put the results in writing. Communicate to us this way. So I
    suspect that somewhere between that memo and the prior one, the
    decision was made that the tape would not be part of the trial. A
    vital issue, a critical issue."

    The tape recording was successfully kept from the defense and the
    jury that convicted Poindexter and Langa never got to hear the voice
    that made the fatal call. The original recording was destroyed
    several years after the trial and then in 1980 a reel-to-reel copy of
    the tape was found, quietly made by a dispatcher. In 2006, the
    recording was submitted to modern vocal analysis. Expert Tom Owens
    determined the voice on the tape was not that of Duane Peak, a
    conclusion apparently also reached by Conrad's technicians at the FBI
    Laboratory back in 1970 when the tape was withheld.

    Peak served several years of juvenile detention and then gained his
    freedom. The unknown caller whose voice was captured on tape was
    never identified or brought to justice. Ed Poindexter and Mondo we
    Langa are serving life sentences at the maximum-security Nebraska
    State Penitentiary. Both men deny any involvement in Minard's murder.

    Poindexter has an appeal pending before the Nebraska Supreme
    Court. Oral argument is scheduled for October. No date for a
    decision has been announced.

    Michael Richardson is a freelance writer based in Boston. Richardson
    writes about politics, election law, human nutrition, ethics, and
    music. Richardson is also a political consultant on ballot access.

    Freedom Archives
    522 Valencia Street
    San Francisco, CA 94110

    415 863-9977

    www.Freedomarchives.org Questions and comments may be sent to
    claude@freedomarchives.org

    Book Event in NYC Sep 17: Spotlight on Incarcerated Women: Conditions, Profiteering and Resistance

    Below is information on a book event I will be speaking at next weds at the Blue Stockings bookstore in Brooklyn, New York. My co-panelists will be Vikki Law, Yraida Guanipa and Silja Talvi. If you live in NY and are interested in the subject of women in prison, or know someone who is, we hope to see you there. The event is a joint fundraiser for Prison Legal News and Books Through Bars, but no one will be turned away for lack of funds.

    Spotlight on Incarcerated Women: Conditions, Profiteering and Resistance

    link available here: http://women.prisonersresistance.org/node/21

    The number of women in prison has nearly tripled within the past 2 decades. Join investigative journalist and author of Women Behind Bars Silja Talvi, founding editor of Prison Legal News (and co-editor of Prison Profiteers) Paul Wright, former drug war prisoner Yraida Guanipa, and Books Through Bars co-founder (and author of the forthcoming Resistance Behind Bars) Victoria Law for a discussion on who profits from this increase, conditions inside and resistance both inside and out.

    Paul Wright is the editor and co-founder of Prison Legal News , the longest publishing independent prisoner rights magazine in US history. He co-edited The Celling of America: An Inside Look at the US Prison Industry; Prison Nation: The Warehousing of America’s Poor, and Prison Profiteers: Who Makes Money from Mass Imprisonment. Both during and since his 17-year incarceration, he has successfully litigated a wide variety of censorship and public records issues against prison systems around the country both pro se, as a plaintiff, on behalf of other prisoners and on behalf of Prison Legal News.

    Silja J.A. Talvi is an investigative journalist, essayist, and author of Women Behind Bars: The Crisis of Women in the U.S. Prison System. Her work has appeared in nearly a dozen book anthologies, including Prison Profiteers, and in over 75 publications nationwide. Silja is the recipient of 12 regional awards for excellence in journalism from the Society of Professional Journalists (in the Pacific Northwest); five awards for excellence in criminal justice reporting from the National Council on Crime and Delinquency; and a national award for immigration reporting from the New American Media Foundation.

    Yraida L. Guanipa was sentenced to nearly 11 years as a first-time non-violent offender under the federal sentencing guidelines. While incarcerated, she fought for programs to maintain family bonds and abolish the prison/slave labor system. She was released in 2006. She continues fighting for more just systems and is working to reestablish the bonds with her now-teenage sons.

    Victoria Law (facilitator) has been involved with prisoner issues for the past 15 years and has focused specifically on incarcerated women's issues since 2000. She is the co-founder of Books Through Bars—NYC and the editor of the zine “Tenacious: Art and Writings from Women in Prison.” She is the author of the forthcoming Resistance Behind Bars: The Struggles of Incarcerated Women.

    Bluestockings Bookstore
    172 Allen Street (between Stanton and Rivington Streets), LES
    212-777-6028

    www.bluestockings.com

    $5 to $10 sliding scale. No one turned away for lack of funds

    Childcare is available on request. Please e-mail me at vikkiml [at] yahoo [dot] com to make arrangements.

    F or V train to 2nd avenue. Exit on the 1st Avenue side.

    Participants' travel costs generously sponsored by the Drug Policy Alliance

    Paul Wright, Editor
    Prison Legal News
    P.O. Box 2420
    West Brattleboro, VT 05303
    802-257-1342
    pwright@prisonlegalnews.org
    www.prisonlegalnews.org


    Seattle Office:
    Prison Legal News
    2400 NW 80th St. # 148
    Seattle, WA 98117
    206-246-1022

    Updated 9/9 (new events)-Free the Cuban 5 Month Calendar

    ENDORSE THE FREE THE CUBAN 5 MONTH!

    Endorsers:

    • The Popular Education Project to free the Cuban 5
    • EL Frente Socialista-Comite de NYC
    • International Committee for the Freedom of the Cuban 5
    • Al-Awda Right to Return
    • The Malcolm X Grassroots Movement
    • Brigada Vilma Guillois Espin
    • The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign
    • New York Anarchist Black Cross Federation
    • The Philadelphia Cuba Solidarity Coalition
    • Nicaragua Solidarity Committee Chicago
    • The Cuba Solidarity Committee in Houston
    • Puerto Rican Alliance Of Los Angeles
    • Radical Women
    • Freedom Socialist Party
    • The Venceremos Brigade
    • December 12th Movement
    • The Orange County KPFK Support Group
    • International Action Center
    • Troops Out Now Coalition
    • Worker’s World Party
    • DestroyIndustrY
    • Fuerza de la Revolucion
    • NYC Jericho Movement
    • Cuba Solidarity New York
    • Peace and Freedom Party
    • All African People’s Revolutionary Party
    • African Awareness Association
    • DC metro Committee to Free the Cuban Five
    • Cuban en focus WBAI radio 99.5fm
    • Alliance for Global Justice
    • Nicaragua Network
    • Venezuela Solidarity Network
    • Rev. Luis Barrios, St. Mary’s Episcopal Church
    • Amigos de CLARIDAD
    • October 27th Committee
    • The Nationalist Party of Puerto Rico-New York
    • The Puerto Rican Independence Party/NYC
    • Critical Resistance Baltimore Chapter
    • Baltimore Nonviolence Center
    • Journalists for Mumia
    • James F. Harrington, Activist
    • The July 26 Coalition of Boston
    • Free the Cuban 5 Committee-Vancouver
    • The Workers International League
    • Orange County Committee to Free The Cuban Five
    • The Los Angeles Coalition in Solidarity with Cuba
    • Asians 4 Jericho/Mumia
    • Chicago Committee to Free the Cuban 5
    • la Coorfinadora Continental Bolivariana Puerto Rico
    • Peace House and Southern Oregon Friends of Cuba
    • Rock Around The Blockade - Manchester (UK)
    • Comitato Italiano Giustizia per I Cinque (Italian Committee: Justice for the Five)

    To organizations and Individuals who believe in the Freedom of the Cuban 5,

    In 2006, Ricardo Alarcon, President of the Cuban National Assembly, declared the period of time between September 12-October 8 to be a time to raise awareness around the Cuban 5. Here in NYC The Popular Education Project to Free the Cuban 5 extends this time to October 12; in order for it to be a full month of events and to include a commemoration of the assassination of Ernest “Che” Guevara. We refer to this period of time as the “Free the Cuban 5 Month!”

    September 12th is the tenth anniversary of the arrest of the Cuban 5 and the Project wants to create a calendar full of events throughout the city, nationally and internationally! Motivated by the negative and unjust decision of the 11th Circuit Appeals, the Project feels it is time to double our efforts to educate about the case of the Cuban 5 and to garner more support on their behalf.

    The Project would like to organize Cuban 5 events in NYC communities that have not had them before. We want to broaden this movement and build Solidarity for the Cuban 5 in as many communities as possible.

    The Project is asking organizations and individuals to organize forums, letter writing nights, film screenings, conversations, or fund-raisers for the Cuban 5. The Project will help by providing speakers, films, literature and promotion!

    If you are interested in endorsing the Free the Cuban 5 Month AND ORGANIZING AN EVENT, please email us at freethecuban5@gmail.com

    So far this is the Calendar events:

    Fri. Sept. 5th- Comite Dominicano Pro-Libertad de los cincos Anti-terroristas Cubanos presos en Los Estados Unidos is organizing a meeting/film screening of El Process/the Trial at 2005 Amsterdam Avenue (between W159th-160th St.) in the basement at 7pm!

    Tues. Sept. 9th-Interview with College Radio University of Maryland College Park Campus at 6pm

    Friday, Sept 12th- 7:00 pm The Los Angeles Coalition in Solidarity with Cuba presents Entre Ciclones (Hurricanes)(2003) RSVP:RachelJay@earthlink.net or call 310-451-2752 (first 20) Home of: Rachel Sene and Jay Johnson 601 - 9th Street, Santa Monica, CA 90402 1 block East of Lincoln and 1 block North of Montana. South East corner. $5 donation for The Cuban Five defense Continue discussion at: Izzy's Deli -15th and Wilshire, Santa Monica C Free parking in rear + free valet + free street parking www.freethefive.org/

    Fri. Sept. 12th -SPECIAL CULTURAL NIGHT FOR THE CUBAN 5! Marking the 10th Anniversary of their Unjust Imprisonment. Bring your family and friends for a night of original and inspiring poetry for the 5 Heroes, as well as a showcase of artwork by the Cuban 5, including their poetry. Doors open @ 7pm at Mount Pleasant Neighbourhood House (800 East Broadway 1 block east of Fraser on Broadway) Admission by donation. Free the Cuban 5 Committee – Vancouver778-889-7664 |cuban5_van@yahoo.com,

    http://www.vancubasolidarity.com/freethefivevan.html

    Fri. Sept. 12th- 4:00 - 6:00 pm For 10 Years Five Innocent Men Have Been Unjustly Imprisoned in the U.S. But the media has wrapped this case in a curtain of silence. Break that Silence! FREE THE CUBAN FIVE! Downtown Crossing T Stop (Washington & Winter St., Boston). Get Involved: info@july26.org 617-566-2861 or 617-522-9478

    Fri. Sept. 12th- The Orange County KPFK Support Group & Orange County Committee to Free The Cuban Five will hold a special street corner vigil, also taken out a FREE THE FIVE ad in the September Change Links newspaper to draw attention to the injustice and imprisonment of these five Cuban antiterrorist who are truly heroes of peace and justice. Change links has a circulation of 11,000 in Los Angeles and Southern California.Our vigil will take place on the Corner of Bristol & Anton, Costa Mesa from 5:00-7:00 PM. September 12, 2008 contact. QUETZALCOATL38@AOL.COM tel. 714-956-5037

    Sat. Sept. 13th-All out to Malcolm X Park in Washington DC at 10am! 10th anniversary of the arrest of the Cuban 5! For ticket information in NYC contact: 917-887-8710

    Sat. Sept. 13th-CINCO ESTRELLAS Y UN CANTO/ FIVE STARS AND ONE SONG Featuring DANNY RIVERA VICTOR VICTOR, The Dynamic CHUCHITO VALDÉS PUERTO RICAN GOLDEN JAZZ ALL STARS 7:30 PM, Hostos Center for the Arts & Culture, 450 Grand Concourses at 149th Street, Bronx, New York, Admission: $35.00 – VIP $100 (Group, senior and student rates available) Box Office and Information: 718-518-4455

    Sat. Sept. 13th- Time: 12 - 3pm City: Manchester, UK Location: Piccadilly Gardens, Manchester Open air rally to protest the 10 years in prison for the Cuban 5. Sponsors: Rock Around the Blockade – Manchester Endorsers: Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! – Manchester Contact: manc@ratb.org.uk | 07940988203

    Sat. Sept. 13th- from 5:00 to 9:00 p.m. in Piazza Farnese. The protest has been organized by, Comitato Italiano Giustizia per I Cinque (Italian Committee: Justice for the Five). The demonstration is called, Giustizia Per I Cinque or Justice for the Five. US Citizens 4 Peace & Justice, an American political group here has endorsed and will attend this demonstration.

    Tues. Sept. 16th-LETTER WRITING NIGHT IN BROOKLYN at 7pm with the New York Anarchist Black Cross Federation, In Brooklyn 123 Tompkins Avenue, between Myrtle & Vernon Avenues www.123communityspace.org/directions

    Sun. Sept. 21st-People’s Mass with La Iglesia San Romero de Las Americas at 11:30am at La Iglesia San Romero de Las Americas/UCC at 2410 Amsterdam Avenue 4th Floor New York, NY 10040 Telephone #: 212 - 237-8747

    Sun. Sept. 21st- Chicago Committee to Free the Cuban 5 Film Showing: Posada Carriles: Terrorism Made in the USA (2007) at 2pm De Paul University, Schmitt Academic Center, Levan 406 Schmitt Academic Center is located at 2320 N. Kenmore, near the Fullerton stop on the Red Line. All movies are free. 773-376-7521 uscubachi@hotmail.com This is a very educational film on Posada and the CIA, not just in Cuba, but in Venezuela, Central America and here at home, especially Miami. If you would like a copy for a showing, contact us.

    Fri. Sept. 26-Boricuas for the Cuban 5 event at Cemi Underground at 6:30pm 1799 Lexington Avenue @ 112th St. Special Film on the Cuban 5 will be shown: Against The Silence in our own Voices: The Family of the Cuban 5 Speak out! For more information call 212-860-2820

    Sun. Sept. 28th-Poetry/cultural Event at Sista’s Place 456 Nostrand Avenue Brooklyn, NY A or C train to Nostrand (corner of Nostrand & Jefferson Aves., entrance on Jefferson) Sponsored by the December 12th Movement. For more information contact: 718-398-1766

    Fri. Oct 3rd-Venceremos Brigade Galeria Cubana: Report back from the 39th Contingent to Cuba Summer 2008 at 6pm! Featuring art, video footage, photos, and memories and more! 235 w23rd St (7th-8th Avenues) Food, drinks for sale! For more information contact: Vbrigade@gmail.com or call 212-560-4360

    Wed. Oct. 8th- Free The Cuban 5 benefit w/Rutger Ruckus www.myspace.com/xaviergray & the Bull City Bad Guys www.myspace.com/thebullcitybadguys doors @9pm show 930pm ALLages $4.00 @ the MarVell Event Center Durham, NC 119 West Main Street 919 688 0975 www.theMarVell.com

    Fri. October 10th- 10th Anniversary Jericho March in NYC for all Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War in New York City at 12pm! Check the Jericho Website: www.jerichony.org and Contact GET INVOLVED! For more information: 718-853-0893, 206-888-4001, and nycjericho@gmail.com

    Sun. Oct. 12th-Free the Cuban 5 event in Baltimore, sponsored by the Critical Resistance Baltimore Chapter; Baltimore Nonviolence Center at 4pm Cork Factory Building Cork Gallery 4th Floor Doorbell #9 302 E Federal. For more information call 443-850-2840

    Mon. Oct. 13th- FREE THE CUBAN FIVE! Film and Discussion Film will be followed by discussion and information about what we can do to help the Cuban 5 in their struggle for justice. “5 Men, 1 Story” (12 min) is a documentary which tells the story of these five men, gives an update on their legal situation, and features news reports from Cuba. At 7pm at Peace House FREE Sponsored by Peace House and Southern Oregon Friends of Cuba. Peace House is located at 543 S. Mountain, Ashland, Oregon. For more information contact Liisa Wale at l_wale@yahoo.com or Mary Ann Jones at 482-8915

    Sat. Nov. 1st-Cuban 5 event with the Radical Women and the Freedom Socialist Party at Freedom Hall in Harlem at 6:00pm! Freedom Hall 113 w128th St. (Between Malcolm X Blvd./Lenox Ave. and Adam Clayton Powell Blvd. Take subways #2 or 3 to 125th St.; #4,5 or 6 to 125th St. and walk west four blocks; A,B, C or D to 125th St. and walk east three blocks. For more information call 212-222-0633

    *IN SEPTEMBER CUBAN EN FOCUS WILL FEATURE AN INTERVIEW WITH THE POPULAR EDUCATION PROJECT TO FREE THE CUBAN 5 ABOUT HE FREE THE CUBAN 5 MONTH

    *THE VENEZUELA SOLIDARITY NETWORK AND THE NICARAGUA NETWORK WILL BE FORWARDING THIS EMAIL TO THEIR LISTS TO HELP BUILD OUR CALENDAR!

    For more information on FREE THE CUBAN 5 MONTH consult The Popular Education Project to Free the Cuban 5 website: www.freethecuban5.com

    Green Scare Defendant Marie Mason - Change of Plea and upcoming court date

    Date: Tue, 9 Sep 2008
    From: books4prisoners@riseup.net

    Forwarded from freemarie@riseup.net

    We apologize for the lack of updates lately. Marie's attorney and the US
    Attorney have been in negotiations for the majority of the summer. After
    months of soul searching, reflection, and consideration Marie has entered
    into a tentative agreement with the US Attorney plead guilty to three of
    the four charges she was originally charged with. The US Attorney has
    agreed to drop the remaining count. Her plea agreement calls for a prison
    sentence between 15 and 20 years.

    Since her arrest Marie's primary concern throughout this entire process is
    to ensure that her actions, statements and decisions do not empower the
    state to do harm to any one else. After discussing the situation over with
    Marie and reviewing the plea agreement in detail those of us involved with
    Marie's support crew Got Your Back believe wholeheartedly she has remained
    true to her principles and original intent and will continue our
    solidarity and support efforts for our friend as long as they are needed.

    This has been an extremely difficult time for Marie and her family. Marie
    is thankful for all the support and wishes to be as transparent as
    humanly possible about about her choice and plea agreement. Please
    understand we will be posting more details and a complete unredacted copy
    of her plea agreement as soon as it is accepted and filed by the court but
    we wanted to get word out about this update and upcoming court date out as
    soon as possible.

    We are encouraging people to come out and support Marie at her change of
    plea hearing which is scheduled for Sept. 11, 2008 at 11am before
    Magistrate Carmody at the Federal Building located at 666 Federal Bldg 110
    Michigan St NW Grand Rapids MI 49503. Be sure to arrive early and dress
    appropriately for court. We expect sentencing to take place at a later
    date before Judge Paul L. Maloney in Kalamazoo, MI.

    Its all about the Struggle,
    Got Your Back Collective
    www.freemarie.org

    September Anarchist Birthday Brigade

    Here is this months lists of birthdays for our imprisoned comrades.

    September

    SEKOU KAMBUI (W. TURK)
    113058 / Box 56 SCC (B1-21)
    Elmore, AL 36025-0056
    September 6, 1948

    LEONARD PELTIER
    89637-132 / PO Box 1000
    Lewisburg, PA 178371
    USP Lewisburg
    Sept. 12, 1944

    CARLOS ALBERTO TORRES
    88976-024 / Box 5000
    Pekin, IL 61555
    FCI Pekin
    September 19, 1952

    BRIAN MCCARVILL
    #11037967
    Oregon State Penitentiary
    2605 State Street
    Salem, OR 97310
    September 27

    Monday, September 08, 2008

    Sept. 26-Boricuas for the Cuban 5 in El Barrios

    In the Spirit of El General Juan Ruis Rivera, Lola Rodriguez De Tio, and El Comandante Filiberto Ojeda Rios:

    Boricuas for the Cuban 5

    Friday Sept. 26, 2008 at 7pm Cemi Undeground

    1799 Lexington Avenue @112th St. El Barrio, New York

    Take the 6 train to E110th St. and Lexington Avenue

    For more information contact 718-601-4751 or 212-860-2820

    “Cuba y Puerto Rico son de un pájaro las dos alas, reciben flores o balas, sobre un

    mismo corazón”-Lola Rodriguez de Tío

    Join The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign, The October 27th Committee, El Partido Naconalista de Puerto Rico, and El Partido Independentista (PIP) for a night of solidarity and action for the Cuban 5!

    The Families of the Cuban 5 have been denied visas to visit their sons and husbands; the Cuban 5 are five U.S. held political prisoners incarcerated for fighting against terrorism and for protecting their homeland Cuba from right wing terrorists based in

    Miami.

    As a part of the Free the Cuban 5 Month and La Jornada Del Grito de Lares, we are showing a film about the Cuban 5’s families and having a talk about how people, especially Boricuas, can support the movement to free the Cuban 5.

    Program:

    Legal Update and Support for the Cuban 5:

    Benjamin Ramos, The ProLibertad Freedom

    Campaign

    Film: Against the Silence in Our Own Voices: Families of the Cuban 5 Speak Out! A film about the Cuban 5’s mothers wives

    Letter Writing to the Cuban 5