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Angola 3 Newsletter: May 29, 2012
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International Coalition to Free the Angola 3
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VISITING WITH HERMAN: From left to right are Herman's
sister Vicki Wallace, Herman Wallace, Jackie Sumell, Emily Posner, Angad
Bhalla. Emily reports that "our group visited with Herman for the full
day on Sunday, May 27, 2012. Conversation was lively and filled with
hope around Albert's upcoming evidentiary hearing in Baton Rouge.
Albert and Herman are currently being housed in adjacent tiers, and
have been able to communicate for the first time in three years."
Albert is with Herman at Elayn Hunt Correctional Center, in St. Gabriel
for his hearing. He returns to David Wade Correctional Center in Homer
on Friday.
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Amnesty International Launches New Action as Albert Woodfox's Court Hearing Begins
Today
Albert Woodfox will appear in court in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, seeking
his conviction to be overturned for a third time. As we start this
three-day evidentiary hearing, Amnesty International has released a
statement about the significance of this hearing for Albert and
everyone else's "right to trial, in full equality and free from
discrimination, before a competent, independent and impartial tribunal."
A3 supporters are invited to attend the May 29-31 hearing (read more here).
Determined
to secure justice for the Angola 3, today Amnesty will simultaneously
launch the second stage of their campaign demanding Albert Woodfox and
Herman Wallace's immediate release from solitary confinement. Amnesty's
new online petition is calling for James M. LeBlanc, the Secretary of the Department of Public Safety and Corrections to account for his comments that Herman and Albert were being kept in solitary to protect prison employees, other inmates and visitors. Amnesty asks "where's the evidence?"
*Amnesty International's new petition and statement about Albert's court hearing are reprinted in full below.
*Keep updated by visiting our brand new Free All The Angola 3 facebook page.
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USA: Crucial Hearing Could See Angola 3's Albert Woodfox Freed
40 years in solitary confinement could end
A
three-day evidentiary hearing into a claim of racial discrimination in
the selection of the grand jury foreperson prior to the 1998 retrial
of Albert Woodfox is due to begin in a federal court in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana tomorrow (29 May).
A
ruling in his favour could result in Albert Woodfox's conviction being
overturned for the third time, and could secure his release from
prison after being held in solitary confinement for 40 years.
Albert
Woodfox was convicted in 1973 - along with a second prisoner, Herman
Wallace - of the 1972 murder of a prison guard called Brent Miller.
Both men, who have vigorously denied involvement in the crime, were
placed in solitary confinement in Closed Cell Restriction at Louisiana
State Penitentiary (known as Angola prison). A third man, Robert King,
who was accused of a different crime, was also held in these conditions
and the three were jointly known as the "Angola 3". King was released
in 2001 after serving 29 years in solitary.
Meanwhile,
Woodfox's conviction was overturned in 1992, but he was re-indicted
and convicted again at a 1998 trial. In 2008, a federal District Court
judge ruled that Woodfox had been denied his right to adequate
assistance of counsel at his 1998 retrial and ordered the state to
re-try or release him. The District Court had also found that his
lawyers had made a prima facie case of discrimination in relation to the
selection of the grand jury foreperson, and that this warranted a
federal evidentiary hearing to give the state an opportunity to rebut
the claim. The state appealed against the District Court order for a
retrial and in June 2010 a three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals for
the Fifth Circuit overturned the decision. The case was remanded to
the District Court for an evidentiary hearing on the grand jury
discrimination claim: it is this hearing that is about to begin.
The
foreperson of the grand jury that indicted Albert Woodfox for his 1998
retrial was white. Woodfox's lawyers have presented evidence of the
consistent under-representation of African Americans serving as grand
jury forepersons compared to their numbers in the general population of
the parish in which Albert Woodfox, who is himself African American,
was tried.
Amnesty
International considers the issue of discrimination in the selection
of the grand jury foreperson to be a significant one. The right to
trial, in full equality and free from discrimination, before a
competent, independent and impartial tribunal lies at the heart of due
process of law and requires that justice must not only be done, it must
also be seen to be done. Actual impartiality and appearance of
impartiality are both fundamental for maintaining respect for the
administration of justice. The organisation will continue to monitor
developments in this case.
On 17 April, Amnesty submitted a
petition to the Governor of Louisiana with over 67,000 signatures from
individuals in 125 countries urging that Albert Woodfox and Herman
Wallace be removed from long term isolation.
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Take Action and Ask the Department of Corrections --Where's the Evidence?
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The Angola 3. Left to right: Herman Wallace, Robert H. King, and Albert Woodfox.
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Sign petition here! (below is the full text of the new petition and accompanying statement by Amnesty Intl.)
On
April 17th, Amnesty International submitted a petition to the Governor
of Louisiana with over 67,000 signatures from individuals in 125
countries demanding that Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace be removed
from long term isolation. The two men have spent nearly 40 years in
solitary confinement in Closed Cell Restriction (CCR) at Louisiana State
Penitentiary (known as Angola prison).
Despite the overwhelming
number of signatures in the petition, and the presence of
representatives from local and national organizations as well as
political figures, Governor Jindal refused to meet with the delegation,
and referred the issue to the Department of Public Safety and
Corrections. The Secretary of the Department, James M. LeBlanc, in turn
justified their continued placement in CCR by stating that they were a
danger to prison employees, other inmates and visitors. He also denied
that conditions for the men were inhumane.
After years of
working on the case, Amnesty International is not aware of ANY evidence
to suggest that the men are a danger to themselves or to others. Prison
records show that neither man has committed any serious disciplinary
infraction for decades nor do the prison mental health records
demonstrate that they pose a threat to themselves or others.
Amnesty
International is firm in its belief that conditions for the men in CCR
- 23 hour cellular confinement in stark, tiny cells; limited access to
books, newspapers and TV; no opportunities for mental stimulation,
work and education; occasional visits from friends and family and
limited telephone calls - amounts to cruel, inhuman and degrading
treatment.
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PHOTO: Campaigners handing over a petition signed by more then
67,000 people in over 125 countries to the Governor of Louisiana, 17
April 2012.
© Amnesty International
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Hold
Secretary LeBlanc to account and add your voice to the 67,000 others
to demand that the men be removed from long term isolation.
On 17 April 2012, you
issued a statement that Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace are held
separately from other prisoners to protect prison employees, other
inmates and visitors. Where is the evidence to back up this statement?
Records show that
neither man has committed any serious disciplinary infraction for
decades. Prison mental health records indicate that the men pose no
threat to themselves or to others.
In a recent report, the
UN Special Rapporteur on Torture condemned prolonged isolation as
amounting to torture or inhuman and degrading treatment. He refers to
the case of Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace in his report.
Along with over 67,000 others who signed a petition to Governor Jindal, I urge you to remove Albert and Herman from isolation.
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Keep in Touch with Herman and Albert
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Albert Woodfox #72148 Herman Wallace #76759
David Wade Correctional Center Elayn Hunt Correctional Center
N1 A3 CCR D #11
670 Bell Hill Road PO Box 174
Homer, LA 71040 St. Gabriel, LA 70776
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