WAR ON NY STUDENTS, PUBLIC SECTOR WORKERS, AND POOR

WBAI’s Radio Building Bridges: Your Community & Labor Report 
Monday, January 31, 2011, 7- 8 pm EST, over 99.5 FM or streaming live at http://wbai.org 
     
Produced & Hosted by Mimi Rosenberg and Ken Nash 

******************

 

NYC students demand: don’t close school doors

Bloomberg Stop The Snow Job On Public Schools!

with
. Stefanie Siegel, teacher, Paul Robeson High School
. Lowena Howard, teacher, Paul Robeson High School
. Letitia Ingram-Brown, teacher, Paul Robeson High School
. Lizabeth Cooper, student, Paul Robeson High School
plus
Highlights from the Stop Schools Closing Rally

Bloomberg’s Department of Education (DOE) plans to close 26 more schools this year. Despite the DOE’s claim that these school closings are aimed at reforming schools, they have instead opened the door to privately-run charter schools and have limited school options for those affected. According to the accounts by parents, students and teachers, DOE policies have had the effect of undermining the schools that are slated to be closed, not “fixing” them.  Bloomberg has played a shell game with our most vulnerable children, shuffling them around from closing school to closing school. This process has disproportionately affected students of color, only serving to further perpetuate a separate and unequal school system in New York City.  A discussion about and sounds from a rally for quality resources and support for our public schools, not closings and privatization!
******************

Teachers are seen at a rally outside the Brooklyn Tech High School Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2010, where they were protesting school closings. (Photo by Robert Mecea)

Bloomberg and Cuomo Declare War on Public Sector Workers,
Public Services and the Poor

with
. Arthur Cheliotes, President, Local 1180, CWA
. Diane Savino, NY State Senator

In a one-two punch both Mayor Bloomberg and Gov. Cuomo are attacking public sector workers and their unions. Both are demanding benefit and pension concessions and are threatening large scale layoffs to balance their budgets. Bloomberg also wants what he calls major “reforms” in the
civil service system giving him more power in hiring, and laying off workers. While NYC’s budget currently has a $1.7 billion surplus, Cuomo is projecting a $10 billion deficit next year for because of lower revenue forecasts caused by the recession and decreased federal aid. Many of the cuts Cuomo is considering will unbalance the NYC budget. Yet, neither “leader” is willing to consider taxing the rich to generate more money or cutting outside contracts to save money. They prefer to wage war on public workers, public services and the poor.
*******************
                                    Listen on your Smartphone
WBAI live streams are available on the iPhone, BlackBerry, Android & other smartphones. For more information, go to
http://stream.wbai.org              

                                        Listen When You Want
Building Bridges and most WBAI Programs are now being archived for 90 Days. These links will be live ca. 15 minutes after the program ends.To listen, or download archived shows go to 
               
http://archive.wbai.org/show1.php?showid=bbridges 
Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

NATHANIEL ABRAHAM, IMPRISONED AT 11, FACES MORE OBSTACLES TO FREEDOM

Nathaniel Abraham in recording studio during his brief period of freedom; behind (l) Dr. John Telford, (r) John Cromer

Mother and child re-union in Black America

By Diane Bukowski

ADRIAN, MI – During the 14 years from the time Nathaniel Abraham was 11 to the present, most of which he has spent in prison, the major media nationally has subjected him to unrelenting attacks. But the love and dedication his mother Gloria Abraham-Edwards has for her child has never wavered.

On Jan. 24, she stood firm, as did her son, during a court hearing on two counts of assaulting prison employees at the Adrian Correctional Facility in November. Each charge carries a sentence of two to four years on top of the four to twenty years he is already serving.

Mr. Abraham refused to waive his preliminary exam. It was scheduled, but not held, since court-appointed attorneys there appear to routinely advise their clients to bypass this crucial legal proceeding. A new date was set for April 13.

Ms. Abraham-Edwards, Mr. Abraham’s grandfather and a young relative drove 80 miles from Pontiac over dangerous snow-covered roads to be present.

Nathaniel Abraham in arms of loved one

“We are here for moral support,” Ms. Abraham-Edwards said. “I believe my son, he said he didn’t do it and he is not going to take a plea. I encouraged him to keep his head up. He is a strong young man and he has the prayers of his family and friends going up for him. He’s going to get through this just like he has everything else. I was so glad to see him on his birthday.”

Mr. Abraham, who turned 25 Jan. 19, was transferred to the Bellamy Creek Correctional Facility, 120 miles from Pontiac, and placed in segregation after the November incident.

“We had to see him behind a glass wall, and they had him in shackles,” his mother said. “The last time I went to see him, we could sit down together and I could buy him food. I don’t like seeing him in handcuffs. He had to talk to us on a phone, and it was hard for him to hold it up because of the shackles. I don’t like what’s going on, but the Lord is keeping us, and I give all credit to the Lord.”

Nathaniel Abraham tried as an adult at 11; his feet wouldn't reach the floor in courtroom chair

Mr. Abraham drew national attention as the face of America’s war on Black children in 1997. He was charged with first-degree murder at the age of 11 for shooting and killing 21-year-old Ronnie Green in Pontiac, with an old gun that had no stock and could not be aimed, according to experts who testified at his trial. Green died as a result of what appeared to be random gunplay by a child.

But on front pages locally and nationally, a storm arose during which white America appeared united in calling for Mr. Abraham to be tried as an adult and even to face the death penalty. It was only after the Rev. Al Sharpton and others led marches in front of the Oakland County, Michigan courthouse and famed attorney Geoffrey Fieger took the child’s case, that the judge in the case exercised his option of sentencing him as a juvenile.

When Mr. Abraham emerged from detention at the age of 21, the media once again pounced.

He was photographed leaving prison dressed in what white reporters appeared to think was inappropriate garb—a white suit with a pink tie. Readers commented on newspaper websites that he looked like a “thug.”

Reporters then discovered that the state had made arrangements to pay the initial cost of an apartment for the young man, as part of a routine housing program for ex-offenders, and tuition costs at a community college, while he sought employment. The resulting publicity resulted in cancellation of those arrangements.

Recording company logo

But Mr. Abraham forged ahead. While incarcerated, he had become a talented rapper. Supporters from churches and from the America Works! program helped him find employment utilizing those skills. A promising career was ahead.

“He is employed, he is the President and CEO of New Life Records, and has his first contract with a major recording company, Hits Entertainment Group, to bring out a debut album,” John Cromer of America Works! said in 2008. Links to Abraham’s recordings appeared in newspaper articles in the only positive coverage he ever received.

But other reporters, contacted by an anonymous informant, claimed that Mr. Cromer had taken Mr. Abraham to a nightclub to live the high life. Cromer said in fact they had gone there to meet a leading recording executive.

State Trooper Jay Morningstar during arraignment in killing of Eric Williams

A short time later, in May, 2008, an army of 10 state troopers and Pontiac police officers arrested Mr. Abraham at a gas station where his car had broken down. They said they caught him with hundreds of Ecstasy pills and charged him with a 20-year felony, “delivery and manufacture of a controlled substance.” Among the troopers was Jay Morningstar, who had previously been tried and acquitted by a mostly white jury for gunning down a Black homeless man in Detroit.

Mr. Abraham eventually took a plea deal and was sentenced to four to 20 years for an offense that likely would have resulted in probation for a well-to-do suburban youth. He was due for his first parole hearing this coming August.

But in November, Mr. Abraham’s girl friend went to visit him at the Adrian Correctional Facility.

“She had had her visiting privileges suspended for three months until November 19,” Ms. Abraham-Edwards said. “She went all the way to see him on November 21, but they still wouldn’t let her visit, claiming there were some paperwork problems.”

Michigan Department of Corrections spokesperson John Cordell said in published remarks, “He allegedly assaulted staff at the Adrian Correctional Facility.”

Attorney Daniel Bagdade (l) with Nathaniel Abraham and another attorney during court hearing on drug arrest

Mr. Abraham’s former attorney, Daniel Bagdade, who visited him after the incident, told a different story in published remarks which he told this reporter to use.

“Nathaniel steadfastly denies he ever assaulted any prison guards,” Mr. Bagdade said. He said Mr. Abraham said the guards jumped him after isolating him.  Numerous prisoners report that guards frequently create incidents to interfere with their chances for parole.

“I’ve known Nathaniel for years, and the one thing I can say with confidence is that Nathaniel is absolutely not an assaultive person,” Bagdade said. He said Mr. Abraham was injured by the guards and was frightened by the attack.

In court on Jan. 24, however, Mr. Abraham carried himself proudly, holding his head up as he informed the judge that he wanted his preliminary exam held. He steadfastly locked his gaze on the faces of his family members.

“Since our long ordeal, I have a different view of the media now,” his mother said afterwards. “They like to invade people’s privacy. They don’t know Nathaniel and they don’t know me. To damage someone like they have—they need to leave us alone.”

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 52 Comments

REVOLUTION!! EGYPT, TUNISIA, YEMEN!! DETROIT???

 

People take over streets, torch government buildings in Cairo

BREAKING NEWS: DEMONSTRATE AT DEARBORN CITY HALL TODAY, SAT. JAN. 29 AT 2 PM WITH LOCAL SUPPORTERS OF EGYPTIAN UPRISING

Regional ruling party headquarters is torched amid renewed protests, as death toll from unrest crosses 90.

Jan. 29, 2011

http://english.aljazeera.net

Go to Al Jazeera link above for ongoing coverage of revolutions in Egypt, Tunisia and now Yemen. Live streaming coverage, along with numerous stories, photos and videoes are available.

Also go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzrbySzggWM to watch video from Real News citing continuing U.S. support for Hosni Mubarak’s regime.

Commentary from VOD’s Greg Thrasher after Al Jazeera article.

Tens of thousands of people in the Egyptian capital Cairo have gathered on the streets, in continued protests demanding an end to Hosni Mubaraks’s 30-year presidency.

Egyptian people defy world-wide austerity measures

The demonstrations continue in defiance of an extended curfew on Saturday, which state television reported will be in place from 4pm to 8am local time.

A military presence also remains, but Al Jazeera’s Ayman Mohyeldin said that soldiers deployed to Tahrir Square in Cairo are not intervening in the protests.

“Some of the soldiers here have said that the only way for peace to come to the streets of Cairo is for Mubarak to step down,” he said.

Similar crowds were gathering in the cities of Alexandria and Suez, Al Jazeera’s correspondents reported.

Reports have also emerged that protesters attempted to storm the interior ministry in Cairo, and that the military have been trying to prevent police from shooting at protesters.

All photos from Al-Jazeera

Fears of looting have also risen, and the army on Saturday warned local residents to “protect their property and possessions”.

The Egyptian cabinet have formally resigned in response to the protests, and Ahmed Ezz, a businessman and senior figure in the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) has resigned from his post as chairman of the Planning and Budget Committee.

Protesters ransacked and burned one of his company’s main offices in Mohandiseen, an area of Cairo.

State media reported on Saturday that some protesters held up posters with a cross marked over the face of Ezz, who is chairman of Ezz Steel.

Overnight protests were also held on Friday in cities across the country, in what has been viewed as unprecedented anger on the part of the Egyptian people.

In Alexandria, Al Jazeera’s Rawya Rageh reported that scores of marchers were calling on Hosni Mubarak to step down.

“They are calling for regime change, not cabinet change,” Rageh said.

She said that they were blocking traffic and shouting “Illegitimate, illegitimate!”

Protester outside mosque in Cairo

The Reuters news agency reported that police had fired live ammunition at protesters, but there is no independent confirmation of that report.

 In Suez, Al Jazeera’s Jamal ElShayyal reported that 1,000-2,000 protesters had gathered, and that the military was not confronting them.

ElShayyal quoted a military officer as saying that troops would “not fire a single bullet on Egyptians”.

The officer also said the only solution to the current unrest was “for Mubarak to leave”.

ElShayyal said that 1,700 public workers in Suez had gone on an indefinite strike seeking Mubarak’s resignation.

The latest protests reflected popular discontent with Mubarak’s midnight address, where he announced that he was dismissing his government but remaining in power.

U.S., world banks behind uprising

The several hundred protesters in Tahrir Square demonstrated in full view of the army, which had been deployed in the city to quell the popular unrest sweeping the Middle East’s most populous Muslim country since January 25.

They repeatedly shouted that their intentions were peaceful.

According to the Associated Press, the road leading from Tahrir Square to the parliament and cabinet buildings has been blocked by the military.

Al Jazeera’s Jane Dutton, reporting from Cairo, said the normally bustling city looked more like a warzone early on Saturday morning.

Tanks have been patrolling the streets of the capital since early in the morning, and a statement from the Egyptian armed forces asked citizens to respect the curfew and to avoid congregating in large groups.

An extended curfew has now been ordered by the military, running from 4pm to 8am local time, in Cairo and other major cities.

State television is also reporting that all school and university exams have been postponed.

Rising death toll

Tunisian revolution was victorious

Cities across Egypt witnessed unprecedented protests on Friday, with tens of thousands of protesters taking to the streets after noon prayers calling for an end to Mubarak’s 30-year rule.

The number of people killed in protests is reported to be in the scores, with at least 23 deaths confirmed in Alexandria, and at least 27 confirmed in Suez, with a further 22 deaths in Cairo.

Al Jazeera’s Rageh in Alexandria said that the bodies of 23 protesters had been received at the local morgue, some of them brutally disfigured.

 
 

She added that human rights activists had reported that a further 13 bodies were present at the general hospital.

ElShayyal, our correspondent in Suez confirmed 27 bodies were received at the morgue in Suez, while Dan Nolan, our correspondent in Cairo, confirmed that 22 bodies were present at a morgue in Cairo.

More than 1,000 were also wounded in Friday’s violent protests, which occurred in Cairo and Suez, in addition to Alexandria.

Dutton, in Cairo, said the number of the people on the streets “increased after president Hosni Mubarak’s speech shortly after midnight”.

Poor re-distribute wealth from stores

Regarding the situation in the capital on Saturday morning, she said “there is broken glass everywhere … a lot of the burnt out shells of the police cars have been removed but you are aware that there were hours and hours of skirmishes on the streets of the capital city [last night]”.

The ruling NDP headquarters in the capital is still ablaze, more than 12 hours after it was set alight by protesters.

The Egyptian army said it had been able to secure the neighbouring museum of antiquities from the threat of fire and looting, averting the possible loss of thousands of priceless artefacts.

Armoured personnel carriers remain stationed around the British and US embassies, as well as at the state television station.

Some mobile phone networks resumed service in the capital on Saturday, after being shut down by authorities on Friday. Internet services remain cut, and landline usage limited.

Authorities had blocked internet, mobile phone and SMS services in order to disrupt planned demonstrations.

‘Mobs’ and ‘criminals’

Maged Reda Boutros, a member of the ruling National Democratic Party, told Al Jazeera that the political regime in Egypt was “admitting” that it was not meeting the expectations of the people, and that was why the cabinet was resigning.

Ousted Tunisian President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali

“It shows a response to the demands of the people,” he said.

He alleged that the protests have been taken over by “mobs” from the “lower part of the society”, who are now engaged in “burning, looting and shooting”.

“Now it has turned from a noble cause to a criminal cause,” he said, saying that most of those involved in the protests were criminals.

He said that half of those killed are members of the security forces, who died while acting in self defence.

“People should wait and see what’s going to happen. But if they continue doing protests and letting those criminals loose in a large city of 17 million people … we cannot play with the stability of the country.”

Mohamed ElBaradei, a leading opposition figure, told Al Jazeera that protests would continue until the president steps down. He also stressed that the political “system” will have to change in Egypt before the country can move forward.

He termed president Mubarak’s speech “disappointing”, and called on him to resig. The former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) also expressed “disappointment” with the US reaction to the protests, though he did stress that any change would have to come from “inside Egypt”.

He said that Mubarak should put in place an interim government that would arrange free and fair elections.

ElBaradei added that he was not aware of his reported house arrest.

Friday’s demonstrations involving tens of thousands of people were the biggest and bloodiest in four consecutive days of protests against Mubarak’s government.

 

Greg Thrasher, contributing editor VOD

AMERICA’S POOR IN THE STREETS

By Greg Thrasher 
 
Our government has a long and ugly legacy of influencing our domestic media in all kinds of areas from accurate data about the rates of crime, cancer, wealth, poverty to the truth about the existence of UFO’s and related usual phenomena. The massive scope of technology also lends itself to the government ease in influencing media accounts and information. The barrier between truth and fiction is the most important question in the media and it is a question that no longer is under the privy of media corporations.

Our government has secretly spied on civil rights leaders and invoked national security themes to get our media outlets to partner with them on the creation and development of propaganda and disinformation. Our media outlets have partnered with the government on all types of filtered news that is reported to the American public.  On many occasions this interference with the free flow of information, data and knowledge has been welcomed by our political parties and our leaders in both the private and public sector. 

MLK Day in Detroit at Martin Luther King HS Jan. 17

When the news accounts involve foreign affairs and military concerns the injection and excuse of national security surfaces, which provides cover and rationales for our government’s control, filtering and manipulation of news and information. The events in Tunisia & Egypt scare the ruling class in America, from concerns about the economic fallout to the notion that America’s poor will parrot the protests of those in the streets of Tunis & Cairo.
 
It is to longer a secret or a conspiracy in the modern world many governments engaged in propaganda and information for a number of reasons.  It is not a far-fetched fiction that those in the ruling class and our political parties fear the possibility that America’s poor will take to the streets and engage in an American regime change.
 
The poor and underclass here in America share the same misfortunes , poverty, hopelessness and impotency as those in the streets of Tunisia and Egypt. The plight of the poor is a universal condition and international boundaries are not relevant nor a barrier to those suffering common fates and realities. There is hunger and homelessness right here in Detroit, whose streets share the visuals of any third world country. 

Families of striking prisoners in Georgia protest retaliatory beatings

It is therefore incumbent to understand how close to the edge our nation is to a civil war right here on Main Street in America, from foreclosures to high unemployment to educational systems that fail our inner city youth to prisons and jails which warehouse large proportions of America’s population.
 
These are perilous times for the entire world the events in the streets of foreign nations matter here in streets of America as well. The importance of news outlets like Voice of Detroit should not be overlooked and under-appreciated.

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments

FIGHT!!! TO STOP TAKEOVER OF DETROIT’S WATER!

 No Racist Takeover! Keep Your Dirty Hands Off Detroit Water System!Videotape by Kenny Snodgrass of Press Conference held by Detroit City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson Jan. 27, 2011 in front of Coleman A. Young Municipal Center.

Kenneth Snodgrass
Author of
“From Victimization to Empowerment
The Challenge Of African American Leadership
The Need of Real Power” website: www.trafford.com/07-0913

eBook available at http://ebookstore.sony.com/search?keyword=Kenneth+Snodgrass

KennySnod – 205 Video’s on YouTube at www.YouTube.com/KennySnod

 Stop Water Takeover

Dear Community Leader: 

On January 20, 2011, State Representatives Heise and Kowall introduced House Bill No. 4112 seeking to ‘take over’ The City of Detroit’s water system (a water system which was paid for by Detroit citizens, and which is wholly owned by The City of Detroit). 

As you know, Detroit’s water system—the third largest in the nation—has been subject to other take-over legislation in years past; however I am convinced that this will be our toughest fight! I am asking that you stand with us during a press conference to be held this Thursday, January 27, 2011 at 2 p.m. at the Spirit of Detroit statue at Woodward and Jefferson. Then it will move inside to the Erma Henderson auditorium, 13th Floor of the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center; and immediately thereafter attend a brief strategy session in my office on the 13th floor of the CAYMC (light refreshments served). During the strategy session we will outline plans for a rally in Lansing, discuss messages to send to Governor Rick Snyder, and outline other organizing efforts to stop this latest water take over legislation. 

Please join us at the press conference, and if you are able to bring a position paper opposing House Bill No. 4112 along with members of your organization to stand with us, we would be appreciative! 

You can access a copy of House Bill No. 4112 at Heise water bill 2011-HIB-4112, or request a copy during the press conference, which will be convened by State Senator Bert Johnson, State Representative Shanelle Jackson, and Members of The Detroit City Council. 

 Jo Ann Watson 

Sandra James 

Executive Asst./Scheduler 

Council Member Jo Ann Watson 

Detroit City Council 

2 Woodward Ave., Suite 1340 

Detroit, MI 48226 

(313) 224-4535 (O) (313) 224-1524 (F)   

City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson

THE PEOPLE MUST FIGHT!! TO STOP WATER THEFT 

Detroiters paid for, built and own DWSD; Watson plans peoples’ fight against Rep. Heise’s bill, march on Lansing  

By Diane Bukowski 

DETROIT – Not only Detroiters, but people in the entire region served by the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD), and its 43 million customers, will suffer if a bill proposed by State Rep. Kurt Heise (R-Plymouth), previously head of Wayne County’s Department of Environment under Executive Robert Ficano, comes to fruition. 

H.B. 4112  proposes not only regionalization of DWSD governance as Heise claims, but actual seizure of DWSD assets by a pseudo-public authority, and operation by a private entity. Heise is also calling for the refinancing of DWSD’s entire $5.2 billion debt, an interest-rate windfall for Wall Street. 

John McCulloch, Oakland Co. Water Resources Commissioner, Pamela Turner, former Interim Director DWSD, and Kurt Heise when he was Director of Wayne Co. Dept. of Environment under Exec. Robert Ficano

“I’m the only candidate who has worked for over 15 years with – and against – the Detroit Water & Sewer Department on complex litigation and water and sewer rate disputes,” Heise declared in his campaign literature last year. “I’m the only candidate in Michigan with a plan to create a regional authority for suburban customers to assume control of the DWSD System and put it in the hands of a private operator.” 

Private for-profit operation, regional control involving more politicians in the pockets of greedy contractors, and higher debt payments to the banks will not only mean higher water and sewerage rates for Detroit in particular, but for residents of all eight counties and 126 communities the system serves. 

Click on Heise water bill 2011-HIB-4112 to read the entire document (it is co-sponsored by State Rep. Eileen Kowall (R-White Lake); see part two of this story for an analysis of the bill’s provisions.)   

Detroit Wastewater Treatment Plant

Detroit City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson says she is not waiting in the wings to see how Heise’s bill pans out in the Republican-dominated state legislature or in the hands of Governor Rick Snyder. She plans to mobilize the people of Detroit to wage war against Heise and his collaborators to save the city’s most prized jewel. 

“Detroit’s water system – the third largest in the nation– was paid for by Detroit citizens, and is wholly owned by The City of Detroit,” Watson said in a release. “It has been subject to other take-over legislation in years past; however I am convinced that this will be our toughest fight!” 

She called for Detroit community leaders and others to join her in a Jan. 27 press conference (see above) and plan a mass march on Lansing to head off the theft.  

Maureen Taylor, president of the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization, said, “The people of Detroit will not stand for a takeover of the Water Department by private or external sources. Instead, the current Board of Water Commissioners, which was nothing more than a rubber stamp for the biggest thefts already committed against Detroiters, should be replaced by a People’s Water Board to oversee contracts and the department.” 

The Board of Water Commissioners is appointed by Detroit’s Mayor and includes representatives from the tri-county area. 

Watson said State Sen. Bert Johnson and State Rep. Shanelle Jackson are co-convenors of the Jan. 27 press conference. 

State Sen. Bert Johnson

State Rep. Shanelle Jackson

“This blatant attempt to steal an asset from the City of Detroit is as misguided in substance as it is divisive in style and the City and its allies must stand united against the bill,” Sen. Johnson said in a release. He contradicted two reasons Heise used in introducing the bill: high water rates, and corruption in DWSD allegedly demonstrated by the “Kilpatrick Enterprise” indictments. 

Johnson said DWSD rates are among the lowest in the nation. 

Detroit’s Lake Huron Water Treatment Plant, built and paid for with bonds issued by the City of Detroit

“If people living in the suburbs are paying too much for their water, the real culprits are their own city leaders,” Johnson said. “The roughly 125 communities served by the department do a lot of upselling. For example, Eastpointe charges their consumers 305.67% more than the wholesale cost of water from Detroit. Garden City charges 136.61% more. Oak Park upsells by 224.18% and Rep. Heise’s own town, Plymouth, charges 119.51% extra.” 

Johnson said that since Mayor Dave Bing is now in control, the corruption of the Kilpatrick era is a thing of the past. 

However, Bing was a member of U.S. District Judge John Feikens’ Business Leadership Group (BLG), formed in an effort to get Detroit to cede control of DWSD voluntarily. That body ultimately negotiated the sale of the massive 21-mile Macomb County Interceptor, in violation of Detroit’s City Charter, which mandates a vote of the people of Detroit before any utility is sold in whole or in part. Bing’s administration authored the sale documents. 

U.S. District Judge John Feikens, now retired

U. S. District Judge Sean Cox now oversees DWSD consent decree

Also serving on the BLG were Bing’s close ally Anthony Earley, CEO of DTE, representatives of Ford and GM, and movers and shakers like DWSD contractor James Nicholson of PVS Chemicals, a major contributor to both Bing and Kilpatrick’s campaigns. 

(Click on http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=3644 to read The Feikens Enterprise” and on http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=3624 to read “The History of the Feikens Enterprise.”) 

Feikens claimed that only a federal mandate, not state law, could overrule Detroit’s Home Rule Charter. He said, however, that he did not want to use his authority to take DWSD away completely. However, it is not clear whether his successor, U.S. District Court Judge Sean Cox, whose name was drawn at random to handle the consent decree, will have even those reservations. 

George W. Bush appointed Judge Sean Cox

Former President George W. Bush appointed Cox to the federal bench. He is a member of the notorious, ultra-conservative Federalist Society. He is also the brother of former State Attorney General Mike Cox, the only Republican politician to OPENLY support the anti-affirmative action Proposal 2. 

Oakland County Water Resources Commissioner John McCulloch wasted no time taking advantage of Cox’s oversight. On Jan. 26, he asked Cox to appoint a five-member regional board to run the system. Detroit’s Mayor, representatives from Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties and a fifth member named by Cox would comprise the board. 

“To hell with regional cooperation,” remarked Oakland County Executive L. Brooks Patterson. 

Representatives for both Bing and Heise’s former boss Ficano were asked if they supported the bill, had discussed it with either Heise or Gov. Snyder, or supported any other measures including privatization. They were also asked what actions they planned to take to stop the bill if they did not support it. 

To date, Bing’s office has not responded to the request for comment.   

Mayor Dave Bing and Oakland County Executive L. Brooks Patterson.

Mayor Dave Bing and Oakland County Executive L. Brooks Patterson.

Crain’s Detroit Business reported that Bing “said that he thinks people lack data about the system and that a reasonable conversation should occur once data is amassed.” Crain’s also reported that the Mayor “plans to begin carrying out his plan to resize the city of Detroit in the second quarter of 2011.” 

 That statement speaks volumes when linked with the city’s ownership of the mammoth DWSD. 

Ficano said in a statement, “I’ve had several discussions with the Mayor, and have faith in his leadership. I believe in giving him an opportunity to correct the mistakes and practices by the previous administration, and allowing him to move forward with an accountable, transparent operation. At this time, I have not had any discussion with Representative Heise regarding the bill.” 

Wayne Co. Exec. Robert Ficano with Bing at 2009 Mackinac Island Conference

Ficano was a key originator of state legislation that seized control of Detroit’s Cobo Hall and turned it over to a regional authority. 

Bing’s remarks as reported by Crain’s were made at a luncheon meeting of the so-called “Big Four:” Bing, Ficano, Oakland County Executive L. Brooks Patterson, Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel. Crain’s said Hackel spoke against the takeover bill, but expressed confidence in Bing as “one of the nicest men I’ve ever met.” 

Crain’s reported that Patterson claimed the system has been financed largely by federal tax dollars and suburban ratepayers. He completely ignored the fact that Detroiters have paid for billions in bonds that built DWSD. 

The positions taken by these politicians give all the more weight to Watson’s call for immediate action.   

Ford Exec. and BLG member Tim O’Brien (l) heads Southeast Michigan Water Quality Consortium; Heise was a member

Heise claims close ties with both the BLG and Judge Feikens, arising from numerous previous roles. He may be a rookie state legislator, but he is no rookie in dealing with water and environmental issues and the politicians (of both parties) involved. 

He served as Ficano’s head of the county Department of Environment and Wayne County Drain Commissioner from 2003-09. During that time, according to his resume, he was: 

  • Leadership Team Member of Southeast Michigan Water Quality Consortium (headed by Ford Motor Co. Executive Tim O’Brien of the BLG, this Consortium along with the BLG initiated the sale of the Macomb County Interceptor.)
  • A member of DWSD Director’s Council.
  • DWSD Technical Advisory Committee Bylaws Subcommittee
  • Co-Chair of Rouge Gateway Project and former chair of Rouge River Remedial Action Plan Advisory Council.
  • Principal organizer of Alliance of Rouge Communities and Co-Chair of Organizational Committee.

Dearborn Heights City Hall

From 1994 to 2003, he was the Dearborn Heights Mayor’s Deputy and Assistant City Attorney. He represented Dearborn Heights on its Rouge River stormwater management plans, Downriver sewer system consent decree, and its stormwater permit compliance issues. 

(Click on http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=3436 to read “One Man’s War Against Detroit Contractor Corruption,” which deals specifically with several disastrous Rouge River Outfall tunnel contracts.) 

Heise received  substantial campaign contributions from the Bolger Restore Michigan PAC. Newly-elected State Rep. Jase Bolger (R-Marshall) is now Speaker of the House of Representatives. That PAC in turn was funded by the Business Leaders for Michigan, Mortgage Bankers, Michigan Bank, and Dow Corning PAC’s, among others. 

Speaker of the House Jase Bolger (R-Marshall)

DTE CEO Anthony Earley

James Nicholson, PVS Chemicals, heavyweight Republican fundraiser

The DTE Energy PAC (BLG member Anthony Earley), The Commanders Majority Fund (which received $134,000 from BLG member James Nicholson along with funds from many utilities and insurance companies), Michigan Insurance Coalition PAC, the Bank of America PAC, Associated Builders and Contractors, and many other big business interests also heavily funded Heise. 

KEY PROVISIONS OF HEISE/KOWALL’S H.B. 4112 

 

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

DFT Presidential Challenger Steve Conn Declares Victory, Demands New Election to Replace Fraudulent Vote Count

(Press Release) Posted by Danny Weil Education Jan 24, 2011

 “This isn’t Florida, and the DFT is Not a George Bush Union,” Declared the Real Winner, Steve Conn

Steve Conn at school board meeting Dec. 6, 2010

In a hotly contested runoff election for President of the Detroit Federation of Teachers, challenger Steve Conn of Defend Public Education/Save Our Students, (DPE) declared victory after the Election Committee refused to conduct a fair recount. The vote count separated Conn from incumbent Keith Johnson by only 41 votes, with as many as 700 votes uncounted.  Dozens of ballots are missing, and teachers have signed affidavits stating that they voted and demand that their votes be counted.

“The DFT Election Committee rejected DPE’s demand for a hand count, and denied DPE candidates the right to observe the recount, violating DFT’s bylaws,” stated Joyce Schon, attorney for DPE. “Every state in the nation does a hand count when an election is this close,” Schon said.

“DPE has filed an internal union grievance which will be heard at the Executive Board on February 3, and at the general membership meeting on February 10, if it hasn’t been resolved,” noted Schon. “DFT members are circulating a petition calling for a new runoff election, since the ballots are now tainted,” Schon observed.

DPS Czar Robert Bobb and DFT Pres. Keith Johnson during last DFT contract negotiations; Johnson has done nothing to oppose massive school closings, lay-offs, privatization of DPS

Steve Conn is leading the AFT in organizing teachers’ opposition to AFT President Randi Weingarten’s policy of collaboration with Arne Duncan, US Secretary of Education. In the first organized opposition to the national AFT leadership since 1974, Conn and other AFT members from around the country ran on the Defend Public Education/Save Our Students/Equal Opportunity Now/By Any Means Necessary (BAMN) slate for national office in July 2010.

 “Arne Duncan has declared Detroit ‘ground zero’ for his policies of degrading and privatizing public education,” stated Conn, a longtime supporter of BAMN, the Coalition to Defend Public Education, Integration and Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary, a youth-led civil rights group that has played a key role in fighting to defend public education.

Pres. Barack Obama and Arne Duncan in Grand Rapids, Michigan; both are charter school supporters

“Detroit teachers, students, parents and community members have fought hard against program cuts, public school closings, any increase in charter schools, and the hyper-segregation and inferior education Duncan’s plans promote,” Conn said. “We defeated a mayoral takeover in Detroit, and we will make our fight to defend public education in Detroit the model for the nation,” Conn concluded.

Contact Steve Conn at 313-645-9340

Watch video of swearing-in of Keith Johnson at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6Z6mqjVO1o .

VOD editor: The title posted with the video, “Steve Conn shoves AFT President Dave Hecker”  appears inaccurate, since no such action is seen. In fact, two women DFT members (white and Black) are seen confronting Hecker and taking the mike from him.  There is evidence of mass disagreement from a large number of DFT members at the meeting, who are standing and chanting, “New Vote.”

This video was posted on comments for the Daily Censored article, with the following remarks:

Concerned1000 says: January 24, 2011 at 6:28 pm  Conn is psychotic as can be seen in this video.

Brad Benson says: January 25, 2011 at 3:21 am To Concerned, It was hard to tell from the video exactly which one is Mr. Conn. Nor did it appear to me that anyone in the video is “psychotic”. If the above article regarding irregularities in the election is correct, then Mr. Conn and the other people have every reason to interrupt a swearing in ceremony in which a minority is attempting to usurp the rights and the will of a majority.

As an outsider, living in Florida, I have no other interest in this matter, except that I am interested in the various issues surrounding the failure of our education system. If Mr. Conn is making a stand against privatization, charter schools and the reisegregation of our schools based upon the crackpot ideas of pundits, film makers and corporate “benefactors”, then he is standing for all of our children.

No legitimate teachers’ union should be supporting the Arne Duncan’s and Chris Christie’s in this world.

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments

VICTORY! FOR DPS BUS ATTENDANTS, STUDENTS, PARENTS; DPS MOBILIZES ON MLK DAY

 

Bus attendants on way to Lansing Jan. 11; Uolanda Payne second from left

 

More battles to come as DPS initiates apartheid-style ID checks, adds high-paid top staff, plans split district and massive school closures

Includes photos from Martin Luther King Day Legacy March at MLK High School, Jan. 17, 2011

By Diane Bukowski

DETROIT—Detroit Public Schools (DPS) czar Robert Bobb rescinded the lay-offs of 88 bus attendants for special needs children Jan. 13, after a busload of parents and attendants told the State Board of Education he was violating federal mandates, and a parent filed suit in federal court, on behalf the district’s 15,000 students with disabilities.

MLK Day: KiJuan Jackson, MLK High senior, delivers "I Have a Dream" speech

But workers and parents alike said more battles are coming, and that they want Bobb removed immediately as Emergency Financial Manager for the district.

“I’m grateful that God softened Bobb’s heart to call us back to work Jan. 18,” said attendant Uolanda Payne. “I’m glad I can keep my benefits for my son. They are really needed. Bobb was about to put the students in jeopardy. However, they are still in jeopardy because he is closing schools and crowding older students in with younger ones.”

Bobb’s press representative Jennifer Mrozowski said in a statement that DPS “will not proceed with any layoffs of bus attendants at this time to ensure that the district meets its obligation to safely transport all students, special education and general education.”

MLK Day: It's about the children

Payne traveled on the bus to Lansing Jan. 11, from outside a school bus terminal on Conant on Detroit’s east side. The trip was organized by the Coalition to Restore Hope to DPS, We the People of Detroit, and other concerned individuals who filled 53 seats on the bus.

 “I’ve spent 10 years as a bus attendant, a very hard job especially in the freezing cold,” Payne said. “I get up at 4 a.m. to get there. There is no heat or air conditioning on half our buses. The bus drivers can’t watch children in wheelchairs and kids with autism running up and down the aisle hitting little Billy with a stick. Meanwhile, what is Bobb doing buying a $5,000 desk?”

Advocates demand Bobb’s immediate removal

Russ Bellant and Helen Moore help plan strategy on bus to Lansing

Helen Moore, leader of Keep the Vote No Takeover, said, “We’re here to take care of our babies, to make sure that Bobb does no more harm than he already has. We are demanding his immediate removal as Emergency Financial Manager. The 13th and 14th Democratic Congressional Districts and the Detroit Federation of Teachers have all passed resolutions asking the state to oust him.” 

Paula Johnson, parent of special needs student Joshua Johnson, a White Elementary fifth-grade student, sued in federal court Jan. 13. Her attorney Robert Fetter of Miller Cohen PLLC filed a request for an injunction against the lay-offs, on behalf of Joshua and all other special needs students. It said lay-offs would cause “irreparable harm.”

Marguerite Maddox and Sandra Hines, leader of Coalition to Restore Hope to DPS, on bus to Lansing

“Federal law mandates these services as a condition of receiving federal funds,” the suit says. “The District is reducing a mandated service to children with disabilities and special needs, so that it can use the funds provided for this service elsewhere within the District.”

It says Joshua Johnson suffers from autism and verifies Payne’s description of the problems such children face.

“His condition causes him to have problems in confined locations, eye contact, touching, and different odors or sounds,” the suit explains. “Over-exposure to sensory stimuli causes those with autism to engage in disruptive behavior, tantrums, and even violence against themselves or others. He also has a tendency to run if he suffers from a tantrum.” Read the entire lawsuit at Bus lawsuit

During the State Board of Education meeting, State Superintendent of Schools Mike Flanagan and board members were visibly stunned by the testimony presented by Detroiters, and clearly worried that the district and state might face federal action if Bobb continued on his course.

Aurora Harris demands federal investigation of DPS special ed funds 

MLK Day Liberty and Justice for ALL

Parent Aurora Harris, whose child is also autistic, is a member of the DPS Special Education Wayne-RESA Parent Advisory Committee and a representative of Concerned Parents of Special Ed Students in DPS.  She demanded a federal investigation of the district’s use of special needs funds and treatment of students with disabilities.

 “Why is the Detroit Public schools district targeted as a proving ground for blatant discrimination against special needs students and used to test how many IEP’s can be violated without parents knowledge,  how many federal laws and IDEA laws can be broken, including the destruction or elimination of Special Education?” Harris asked.

Aurora Harris

IEP’s are “Individual Education Plans” for children with special needs, while IDEA stands for the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. Harris said Bobb laid off the attendants using the excuse that not all parents had asked for bus attendants in their IEP’s.

“We feel that this is a manipulation of the IEP, whereby many of us for up to 20 years have never been asked or told to write that we need a bus attendant for transportation,” Harris said. “No notification was given to parents. Even my principal did not know about it. Robert Bobb wants to save $2 million by placing our children in harm’s way.”

MLK Day Nolan Middle School

Parent Frances Williams testified that the last time she received her child’s IEP, the page where the parent is supposed to sign had been removed.

“The district thinks it can do things without parent’s involvement, that we don’t have any rights,” Williams said.

Harris said Bobb has refused to give an accounting of special ed funds, who is controlling them, and how parents are supposed to access them. Aside from the bus attendant lay-offs, she said there are further IDEA violations.

Other violations include lack of bi-lingual staff, and those trained to deal with blind and hearing-impaired

MLK Day: Students demand voting rights, self-determination

“There are no bilingual translators at the Welcome Center, in Administration, in schools for enrollment, or at the bus terminals to service non-English speaking students or parents when emergencies arise,” Harris told the Board. “We are requesting a bi-lingual emergency hotline and that bi-lingual staff and resource persons be reinstated. There is no one to service the blind and hearing impaired. Resources like Occupational Therapy, PT and speech have been eliminated.”

She demanded that Flanagan and the State Board investigate the situation, but also demanded federal intervention.

“We would like a full investigation by the Department of of all persons, consultants, and companies receiving and spending federal funds for Special Education and Title 1,” Harris told the Board. “We request a full audit, and full public report of all Federal funds coming to the District, how the funds were spent, the names of the consultants and companies that were paid.”

MLK Day: students join in prayer before march, with UAW support

Justice, The IRS, and the FBI

Harris also decried conditions in special ed schools, saying some are rat-infested, parents are not given copies of curricula for the students, and Bobb has canceled liability insurance for adult spec ed students.

Russ Bellant told the Board that Bobb has refused all requests for financial disclosure through the Freedom of Information Act, and ordered DPS employees not to reveal information.

Bobb has appointed more top staff, no Superintendent

MLK Day: Award-winning MLK High band must recruit donations in street while Bobb hires high-paid administrators

But Bellant said he has discovered that Bobb has appointed multiple new Assistant Superintendents in addition to the three indicated on the district website as of July 1, 2010. That website indicates Assistant Superintendents make up to $175,000 a year. Bellant said most of the new appointees are from the Cleveland school district, where Barbara Byrd-Bennett, DPS’ current Chief Academic and Accountability Officer, was previously Superintendent.

According to documentation obtained by the Voice of Detroit, the assistant superintendents are Derrick Coleman, Frank Ivezej, Annette Knox, Rebecca Luna, Leoleo Maberrasi, Shirley Mobley-Woods, and Wilma Taylor-Coslen. Two executive directors are Jeron Campbell and Jack Elsey. James Ray is listed as Superintendent of School Design. Erin Troy is Chief of Staff for Operations, Sherry Ulery is Chief of Teaching and Learning, and Tracy Martin is Chief of Staff for Academics.

Dr. Gloria House

Ray, Troy, Ulery and Martin are at the top of the food chain, reporting directly to Byrd-Bennett, while the others listed report to them. Their salaries are unknown.

There is currently no Superintendent for the district, since Bobb removed Teresa Gueyser, claiming the board had no right to appoint her. Community advocates are supporting Dr. Gloria House to take the post. She is currently a Professor of English at the University of Michigan Dearborn, spent 27 years teaching at Wayne State University, and has a long history of activism in the community.

MLK Day Visionary Principals inspired students

However, Board President Anthony Adams earlier appointed a Leadership Committee for his transition team, which is charged with the superintendent search. It is headed by Bill Brooks, chair of the first state reform school board during former DPS CEO Kenneth Burnley’s tenure. During that time, thousands of DPS workers lost their jobs, and dozens of schools were closed, while lucrative private contracts to Compuware, Aramark, and others were handed out like candy.

Whether Brooks and Anthony will support a candidate of House’s stature and progressive history is questionable. They have indicated they are conducting a nationwide search.

Apartheid ID checks for parents at school doors

Parents also told the Board that they are now required to swipe their driver’s licenses or state ID’s through machines at Martin Luther King, Jr. and Northwestern High Schools, in a pilot program meant to be instituted throughout the district.

MLK Day: Sign in back says "In freedom we were born; in freedom we must live"

In a Jan. 12 release, the District confirmed the allegations.

“Visitors to Detroit Public Schools high schools, career technical schools and the district’s new DPS Police Department Command Center will soon be put through on-the-spot background checks as part of a new security clearance system aimed at making campuses safer for students and staff,” said the release.

“The system, which is being rolled out gradually to 33 sites, will instantly scan visitors’ driver licenses and state ID cards and cross-check the information with sex-offender registries throughout the United States and Canada. School security personnel can also conduct checks using visitors’ names and date of birth. It will eventually be set up at every DPS school.”

MLK Day 2011 Educating Detroit and the nation

Moore said one parent camped outside Martin Luther King, Jr. High School all day in protest, while she was attempting to see her child inside.

“I called [Board President Anthony] Adams’ and Bobb’s offices, and I was told this was not a violation of the parents’ right to privacy,” Moore said angrily. “We believe they are trying to keep the parents out, especially the parents that have raised complaints.”

The district alleged in its release that only convicted sex offenders are being targeted.

“The system will not check additional criminal databases, so it will not indicate whether individuals have outstanding warrants or other legal issues,” the release said.

But parents said they do not trust the district not to use the ID checks for other purposes. There is already a sex offender registry on the Michigan Department of Corrections website if DPS administrators want to screen school visitors by name.

 

MLK Day 2011: Jim Crow is dead

Split district would mean more funding for charter schools, 2nd class education for other students

Bellant also asked why details of a split district plan Bobb said he has submitted to the state have not been published on the district’s website or made available to the public.

Bobb said he submitted it today,” Bellant said. “My son graduated from DPS two years ago. The last governor collaborated with policies that were very destructive for our schools. I am hoping that our new leadership is not taking this plan from Bobb at face value. The district lost 22,000 students during his term, higher even then the number of students who left when [state appointed CEO Kenneth] Burnley was in office.”

MLK Day: Washington Here We Come

Bobb announced Jan. 5 that he would propose three options to the new state government for  DPS financial re-structuring.

Option one would involve a “split district,” which would place the entire burden of the district’s alleged $327 million deficit on a 9,000 student section of DPS.  Those students would populate an “old district.” State revenue from tobacco settlement funds would then be used to wipe out the “old district’s” debt.

In exchange, the district would enact draconian “reforms” based on the federal Race to the Top initiative, including eliminating teacher seniority rights. Legislation to mandate those reforms for the state did not pass last year after the U.S. Department of Education did not choose Michigan as a benefactor of Race to the Top funding.

Option two involves massive school closures and lay-offs of DPS staff, along with regionalization of DPS services involving the city, county, and Wayne RESA.

 

MLK Day: We March for Jobs

Option three would take post-Katrina New Orleans as a model for DPS schools. There, a large number of the city’s Black and poor population has not been allowed to return. Immediately after Katrina, the state of Louisiana took over the school district. Seventy percent of  New Orleans children now attend charter schools.

Joe Rose, Communications Director for the United Teachers of New Orleans,  said after the state takeover, “Every teacher in New Orleans was fired. There were 7,500 school employees, everybody from cafeteria workers, truck drivers and custodians to teachers, and there were about 4,000 teachers. Solid middle class employees, career professionals who had dedicated their careers to helping try to educate the children in one of the neediest cities in the country, a city with one of the highest poverty rates, as everybody saw in the days immediately following Katrina.”

Go to http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=719 for full story on destruction of public services including housing, education and hospitals after Katrina.

MLK High's award-winning band; DETROIT'S CHILDREN BEFORE BANKS!

Whether the district actually has a $327 million deficit is questionable. Figures from the DPS adopted budget for 2010-11 show that it has a $0 deficit for that school year, although it has a negative fund balance of $332,102,661. (See chart below showing DPS figures and notes questioning actual debt amounts, increases in expenditures for contractual services, etc.)

State Superintendent of Schools Mike Flanagan said at the Jan. 11 meeting that the State Board of Education has limited authority to investigate the parents’ allegations, except for those dealing with IEP (Individual Education Plan) issues, and that it is “the governor’s call on whether to renew Bobb’s contract.” Bobb has said he would like to remain in office at least until the end of this school year.

Karinda Washington (r), Michael Joseph of the UAW, and principals of MLK, Renaissance, Cass Tech, Pershing, Osborn, and Southeastern High Schools, and Nolan Middle School, organized the Second Annual MLK Day Legacy March; dignitaries attending included State Rep. Coleman A. Young, Jr., Councilman James Tate, and Charter Commissioner Tonya Myers-Phillips

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

FREE DAVONTAE SANFORD!

 
 
 

Taminko Sanford (center), mother of Davontae, with his family outside court July 29, 2010/Photo Diane Bukowski

Serving 37-90 years since age 14 for four drug-related murders, despite confession by another man, police testimony that he is innocent

By Diane Bukowski

DETROIT – Davontae Sanford is now 18. He has spent the last four years of his short life in  adult prisons, convicted of murdering four people on Runyon Street on Detroit’s east side on Sept. 15, 2007, when he was 14. He is 5’6,’’ slightly-built, blind in one eye, and “developmentally disabled.”

Vincent Smothers

Shortly after Davontae was sentenced to 37 to 90 years in prison in 2008, Vincent Smothers, now 28, of Shelby Township, confessed to the Detroit police on videotape that he and a different man committed the murders as part of a series of drug-related hits.  Highly placed members of the police department have testified they believe Davontae is innocent, including a former chief of homicide who says Davontae was with him at the time of the murders.

“Davontae’s a warm, loving person who the kids always said was my favorite,” said his mother Taminko Sanford. “He was born on Thanksgiving Day, and I always felt he was my gift from God.”

Davontae is her first son, the second oldest of five children, and she along with his stepfather and siblings have waged a relentless campaign since his arrest to free him, garnering broad-ranging support.

Davontae at 14

“Davontae was about to start the ninth grade at Osborn High School the day after his arrest,” Ms. Sanford said. “He loves rap and computers. He is so close to his brother and his three sisters. His brother has all Davontae’s letters from prison pasted up all over his bedroom walls, and his little sister has all his childhood photos on hers.”

Davontae has 1249 Facebook supporters from all over the world, including the United Kingdom and Sweden.  He has support from media personalities like Bill Proctor of Detroit’s Channel 7, who runs his own Innocence Project. His case has received extensive and generally sympathetic coverage from the Associated Press and Detroit’s daily media.

The Rest of Their Lives (sentencing children to life without parole in the U.S.) Human Rights Watch

Elish Delaporter of the UK is following his case on her MySpace website, part of her campaign against this country’s exclusive practice of sentencing juveniles to life in prison without parole. That policy is expressly condemned by the UN Commission on the Rights of the Child.

But in a seemingly never-ending series of evidentiary hearings since July, 2009, Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy is vigorously fighting Davontae’s motion for a new trial, citing what his defense attorney Kim McGinnis calls a “classic false confession.”

During the most recent hearing Jan. 14, in front of Davontae’s trial judge Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Brian Sullivan, Assistant Prosecutor Joseph Puleo once again ignored another of McGinnis’ requests that the prosecution grant “use” immunity to Smothers. That would allow him to testify in court about his role in the murders without fear of having the prosecution use his testimony to charge him in the cases.

Wayne Co. Prosecutor Kym Worthy

Puleo said he is worried about Smothers’ constitutional rights, because he could face life without parole if he admits to the killings.

Smothers is already serving 50-100 years in maximum security on nine counts of second-degree murder and three counts of assault with intent to commit murder, along with various felony charges, stemming from other cases in which he testified he was a hit man for a drug ring.

McGinnis called the plea deal for such a number of hit killings “virtually unheard of,” and Proctor called it “the deal of the century” in news coverage of the sentencing on July 23 of this year.

Judge Craig Strong at Smothers sentencing

Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Craig Strong, who sentenced Smothers, even pleaded with him, “You cannot bring back those who were killed but you can correct wrongs for those who were wrongfully convicted of killing people that you killed.”

Proctor reported that Strong “seemed highly concerned about a pre-sentence report that indicated Smothers had confessed to murders that were not a part of the plea deal. It spelled out in part how Smothers had confessed to the murder of four people on Runyon Street on Detroit’s east side and how 16-year-old Davontae Sanford was in prison for those killings.”

The Associated Press quoted Smothers’ attorney at the time, Gabi Silver, saying, “The police have his statements. It’s not him who doesn’t want to correct things.”

A You Tube videotape of portions of the sentencing, along with others related to the Smothers cases, can be viewed at http://wn.com/%22vincent_smothers%22.

Smothers is now contending that his confessions in the cases for which he was convicted were coerced, and has appealed. Among his contentions is that the police threatened to charge his wife if he did not confess. He is represented by Attorney Mitchell Foster, also of the State Appellate Defenders’ Office.

The prosecutor’s office does not appear so concerned about Davontae’s constitutional rights.

Davontae in court at age 17

McGinnis said that during the child’s questioning by police, neither his mother nor an attorney was present. Davontae signed and initialed a typewritten document drawn up by a detective, despite being blind in one eye, and according to McGinnis, reading at a third-grade level. There is no videotaped record of the confession except one in which the detective reads the confession back to him.

“It was a classic false confession,” McGinnis said. “Davontae saw the police lights after the killings were discovered around the corner from his house, and walked up to the police to find out what was going on. They told him, ‘You know what’s going on,’ and took him downtown. Twenty hours later, he signed a confession which contained only the details that the police already knew at the time.”

Robinson house on Runyon Street where killings occurred

The victims in the killing were “Michael Robinson, 33; D’Angelo McNoriell and Brian Dixon, who were in their early 20s, and Nicole Chapman, 25. Valerie Glover, 30, was critically wounded but survived the attack. A 7-year-old boy was found unharmed.” according to published reports. In his confession Davontae claimed he committed the killings with a different weapon, an M-14, than the ones used in the killings, an AK 47 and a .45 caliber pistol, according to McGinnis. 

“Those are the weapons that Vincent Smothers uses, and the whole crime is his exact MO,” McGinnis said in published remarks.

Ballistics evidence, delayed due to the shutdown of the Detroit police crime lab two years ago, is still to be introduced in upcoming evidentiary hearings.

Three accomplices are also identified in Davontae’s confession, but they were never charged, leaving a question as to how one child could kill four people in an alleged drug house.

“Smothers gave a confession that was very detailed and clear and implicated another man, Edward Davis,” McGinnis said. “The things he says he did are what the police say Davontae did. The woman in the back room who survived said the killer talked to her in a soft voice that was sounded 30-35 years old, but later changed her testimony to say it was an adolescent voice. In his confession, Smothers admitted to going back to speak to her.”

She added, “The prosecutor has spent a lot of energy trying to tie Smothers to Davontae, but has never been able produce any such evidence. It is absurd to think that professional contract killers were going to allow a 14-year-old boy to tag along with them.”

Detroit’s retired chief of homicide, Commander William Rice, who spent 25 years on the force, was dating Davontae’s great-aunt Cheryl Sanford at the time of the Runyon Street killings. Rice testified Oct. 28, 2009 that he was with Davontae at her house at the time of the murders, from 8 p.m. to 11:45 p.m., and that he left to take another man home to Mt. Clemens and then take Davontae home.

How much training does a cell tower forensics expert need?

But during the November hearing, Assistant Appeals Prosecutor Patrick Muscat challenged Rice’s testimony.

A Detroit police investigator, Arthur Wimmer, testified. He said he is assigned to the Violent Crimes Task Force composed of the DPD, the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF), the MDOC, the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office, and other agencies at all levels.

Wimmer said he had 120 hours (three weeks) of specialized training in cell tower forensics conducted by the FBI and private corporations, and was allowed to testify as an expert witness.  Michigan currently has no licensing process for such experts.

Wimmer claimed Rice’s cell phone records showed he was in Mt. Clemens, a city about 30 miles east of Detroit, at 11:18 p.m. the night of the murders.

McGinnis challenged cell tower testimony as sometimes inaccurate. She said later that the testimony may have shown that Rice was off base in his exact estimates of time, but did not discount Davontae’s presence with his family for most of the time prior to the killings.

“He would not have had time to prepare, or to hook up with Smothers and get to the site to commit the murders,” McGinnis said.

Thumb Correctional Facility houses many younger prisoners, is Security Level 2

A Department of Corrections official also testified about alleged “gang” materials and graffiti found in a search of Davontae’s cell in the Thumb Correctional Facility. The official claimed scars on Davontae’s arms were remnants of gang tattoos.

“Anything that happened after the night of the murders is not relevant,” McGinnis objected. But Judge Sullivan allowed the testimony to go on record.

“The tattoos were about the movie ‘Bloodline’,” Ms. Sanford said. “Both Davontae and his brother had them. They just stand for their connection to each other, nothing else. They were separated from each other for part of their lives.”

In addition to Rice, Detroit Police Department investigators Gerald Williams and Ira Todd, who helped take Smothers’ confession, have testified that Smothers admitted to the Runyon Street killings and stated that Davontae was not involved. Todd, who was also a member of the Violent Crimes Task Force, has filed a whistleblower lawsuit against Detroit’s former Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick.

Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick

His lawsuit, filed by attorney Michael Stefani, says, “During the continuing investigation, it was determined that Smothers was a killer for hire for a notorious Detroit drug gang that regularly contracted for the murders of members of rival drug gangs as well as dissident members of their own organizations.”

In the lawsuit, Todd claims he was removed from the Task force, demoted and otherwise mistreated because his investigation into the Smothers’ killings led him to Smothers’ alleged accomplice, Ernest Davis, and to Davis’ cousin James Davis of Kentucky. Todd said James Davis claimed to have a “business relationship” with Kilpatrick, and that when he reported that, his investigation was shut down and he was transferred.

Neither AP’s Muscat nor Puleo would comment outside of court on the case.

Assistant Prosecutor Maria Miller, who is chief communications officer for Worthy’s office, said, “Because the case remains in progress we will not comment on issues directly related to it outside of court.  It was appropriate for the APA handling the case to also not comment outside of court. The case is in open court and our assistant prosecutor is responding in court.””

Just prior to Smothers’ sentencing, the jail was locked down after guards discovered that he had been able to obtain a cell phone while locked up.

Rose Cobb

Taminko Sanford says she believes that may indicate he had connections with law enforcement officials. One of the people Smothers confessed to killing was Rose Cobb, wife of Detroit police sergeant David Cobb. Smothers said Cobb hired her to kill his wife outside a CVS pharmacy on E. Jefferson near their home, as she waited in the car while her husband was in the store.

Although the police department arrested Cobb, Worthy never charged him in the murder. Cobb was later found hanging from a tree, an apparent suicide.

Miller did not respond to a question regarding whether Smothers may have been a hit man for corrupt police officers.

During the hearing Nov. 23, Davontae appeared polite and happy to see his mother and other family members, but there was an air of quiet desperation about him.

Sanford said Jan. 12 that she was very worried about Davontae because she had not heard from him for two weeks.  He was recently transferred from Michigan’s Thumb Correctional Facility, which houses a large number of younger prisoners, to the Michigan Reformatory at Ionia, with Level Four prisoners over the age of 17. In Michigan’s prisons, Level Five is the maximum security grade.

Michigan Reformatory at Ionia houses males 17 and older, Levels II and IV

“Davontae used to call me every day, sometimes more than once a day,” Sanford said. “I’ve been praying to God to let me hear from him so that I know he is OK.  It’s a new atmosphere for him and I’m so worried because I’m afraid that he is losing hope. He can get very depressed.”

Davontae’s next court hearing is tentatively set for January 28, 2010 at the Frank Murphy Hall of Justice in Detroit.

Davontae’s Facebook Page is Free Davontae Sanford at http://www.facebook.com/#!/group.php?gid=108713425818908.

 

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 6 Comments

SUPPORT LUCASVILLE PRISONERS HUNGER STRIKE: PHONE INTERVIEW WITH BRO. HASAN, SUPPORT PETITIONS PRESENTED ON MLK DAY, JAN. 15

Siddique Abdullah Hasan

To hear a current phone interview with Siddique Abdullah Hassan on DBA Press, by reporter Beau Hodai, go to https://dbapress.com/archives/448.

Hodai also expects to publish an updated story on the Lucasville case by Jan. 17 at https://dbapress.com

SIGN THE ONLINE PETITION to the Obama Administration and the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction NOW! It will be delivered to OSP Warden David Bobby at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 15.  A listing of all of the signers of this online petition will also be delivered.

ADD YOUR NAME TO THE STAUGHTON LYND OPEN LETTER

Note from Staughton Lynd:
Date: Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 11:11 AM
Subject: Open Letter in support of OSP hunger strikers

Friends,
Greetings.

Lucasville uprising brothers

Below please find the text of an Open Letter signed by more than 500 persons in support of the OSP hunger strikers, Keith LaMar, Siddique Abdullah Hasan, and Jason Robb…
 

The Open Letter has been signed by famous persons like Noam Chomsky, by individuals in Ireland, Norway, Italy, Greece and Nicaragua, and by ordinary Ohioans.

The letter will be delivered to OSP Warden David Bobby at 1 p.m. on Saturday, January 15, the anniversary of Dr. King’s birthday. If you live near enough, you are invited to join us at the church parking lot next to the OSP entrance driveway for this purpose.

 
A small delegation will carry the letter into OSP to leave with the visitation officer. If different ones of us have been able to visit with the Three on Friday and Saturday morning, we will report on those conversations.

On Saturday the Three will have been going without food for almost two weeks.

Staughton Lynd

Staughton Lynd, author, national social justice activist

On Jan. 3, four prisoners held in Ohio State Penitentiary, a supermax prison started a hunger strike to protest the highly restrictive conditions they have been subjected to since they were moved to the prison in 1998. These prisoners are Bomani Shakur aka Keith LaMar, Siddique Abdullah Hasan, Jason Robb and Namir Abdul Mateen aka James Were, all received death sentences as the result of wrongful convictions on charges related to the 1993 prison uprising in Lucasville, Ohio. Hasan and Robb helped negotiate the settlement of the Lucasville uprising, preventing a massacre such as the one in Attica in 1971 which resulted in more than forty deaths.

In his statement of his reasons for the hunger strike Bomani states, “..we have undergone penalty on top of penalty, kept from fully participating in our appeals, from touching our friends and families, denied adequate medical treatment.we who have been sentenced to death must be granted the exact same privileges as other death-sentenced prisoners.” ..To see Bomani’s complete statement, go to http://iacenter.org.

The four prisoners have been kept on the highest security designation, “Level 5” throughout their time at OSP. Their solitary confinement is conducted in such a way as to ensure no contact with other prisoners even during showering and “recreation”. The doors to their cells are sealed to prevent sound transmission. During visits, they are shackled even while confined within a booth, separated from their visitor by bullet-proof glass, while other death-row prisoners can have contact with their visitors through an opening in the glass.

Lucasville: The Untold Story of a Prison Uprising, by Staughton Lynd

The good behavior of these prisoners is selectively ignored during their annual reviews by prison authorities because of their alleged crimes during the Lucasville prison rebellion. They were told in writing that “your placement offense is so severe that you should remain at the OSP permanently or for many years regardless of your behavior while confined at the OSP.”

While the appeals of the prisoners are at different stages, the results have not been encouraging. Attorney Staughton Lynd, who has done exhaustive investigation of their cases, has documented a clear pattern of deliberate use of perjury by prisoners who were rewarded for their false testimony. Key witnesses have recanted their testimony in recent years. The prisoners have maintained their innocence on all rebellion-related charges.

Please sign on to the online petition below to support the prisoners’ right to have their security levels fairly evaluated and reclassified so that they may participate in the small privileges afforded to other death row prisoners. The harsh treatment of these prisoners violates their constitutional rights and is widely recognized as not only inhumane but as a form of torture.

The wrongful convictions which placed these men on death row must also be set aside. The charges must be dropped entirely or the men must receive new trials.

Over 800 signers including 60 organizations have sent over 220,000 messages to officials.

SIGN ONLINE  NOW AT http://www.iacenter.org/prisoners/lucasvillehungerstrikepetition

 
 

Warden David Bobby, Ohio State Penitentiary

Text of Staughton Lynd Open Letter

TO: Warden David Bobby, Ohio State Penitentiary
Director Gary Mohr, Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction
Chief William A. Eleby, Bureau of Classification Ohio Department of Rehabilitation

 
  We the undersigned call for an end to isolated “supermax” imprisonment in Ohio State Penitentiary. We are especially concerned about the cases of Siddique Abdullah Hasan (Carlos Sanders); Bomani Shakur (Keith LaMar); Jason Robb; and Namir Abdul Mateen (James Were), who are on hunger strike in protest against their conditions of confinement. We understand that they have taken this course of action out of total frustration with their hopeless situation at OSP.

These men have been kept in isolation continuously since they were sentenced to death for their alleged roles in the 11-day rebellion at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility (SOCF) in Lucasville, Ohio in April 1993.

Hasan and Robb were two of the three men who negotiated a peaceful surrender in that rebellion and their actions undoubtedly saved lives.

Ohio State Penitentiary, Youngstown; Lucasville brothers' hunger strike is happening here

Throughout their more than seventeen years of solitary confinement, these four men have been subjected to harsher conditions than the more than 150 other men sentenced to death in Ohio. The conditions under which they are confined prevent them from ever being in the same space as another prisoner. Judge James Gwin of federal district court noted with amazement during the trial of the prisoners’ class action, Austin v. Wilkinson, that death- sentenced prisoners at the highest security level in the Ohio State Penitentiary wanted to be returned to Death Row!

The four have suffered “Level 5” top security isolation since OSP was opened in 1998. This essentially means that they live in 23-hour lockup in a hermetically sealed environment where they have almost no contact with other living beings – human, animal, or plant. When released from their cells for short periods of “recreation” they continue to be isolated from others. During occasional visits, a wall of bullet-proof glass separates them from their visitors. They remain shackled, despite the fact that they could do no harm in these secure spaces. A few booths away, condemned men from death row sit in cubicles where a small hole is cut from the security glass between them and their visitors. They can hold their mother’s hand. With a little effort, they can kiss a niece or a grandchild. They do not have to shout to hold a conversation.

Hasan, LaMar, Robb, and Were experience annual “security reviews” but their outcome is predetermined.

The prison authorities have told them, in writing: “You were admitted to OSP in May of 1998. We are of the opinion that your placement offense is so severe that you should remain at the OSP permanently or for many years regardless of your behavior while confined at the OSP.”

The lack of a meaningful review violates the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment of the US Constitution. Keeping men in supermax isolation for long periods clearly violates the Eighth Amendment prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment. Moreover, the emphasized words above directly violate the explicit instruction of the Supreme Court of the United States in Wilkinson v. Austin.

These men are being held in solitary confinement permanently, until they are put to death by Ohio or their convictions reversed. This not simply long-term solitary confinement, but in essence permanent solitary confinement.

Other prisoners sentenced to death for alleged crimes comparable to or worse than those for which Hasan, LaMar, Robb, and Were were found guilty have been moved off of Level 5: to Death Row, to Level 4 at OSP, and out of OSP entirely. One of the four Lucasville defendants asks, “Must I have a mental breakdown in order to get off Level 5?”

We demand that the Ohio prison authorities remove these four men from Level 5 “supermax” security and that they end the cruel practice of long-term isolated confinement.

Jules Lobel, Vice President, Center for Constitutional Rights, Professor of Law, University of Pittsburgh
Christine Link, Executive Director, ACLU of Ohio
Noam Chomsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
David Goldberger, Professor Emeritus of Law, Ohio State University
Barbara Ehrenreich, author, academic, activist
Mike Ferner, National President, Veterans for Peace
Immanuel Wallerstein, Academic and writer
Boaventura de Sousa Santos, University of Coimbra, Distinguished Legal Scholar, University of Wisconsin
Edward S. Herman, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Prof. Gabriel Palmer-Fernandez, Director Dr. James Dale Ethics Center, Youngstown State University
Andrej Grubacic, Author and lecturer at San Francisco Art Institute
Peter Linebaugh, Historian, University of Toledo, Ohio
Michael Albert, founder, Znet
Professor Thomas Mathiesen, KROM – The Norwegian Associarion for Penal Reform, Oslo, Norway
Jana Schroeder, Former American Friends Service Committee Ohio Criminal Justice Program Director
Jesse Lemisch, Professor of History Emeritus, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Denis O’Hearn, Professor of Sociology, Binghamton University – SUNY
Ellen Kitchens, CURE-Ohio, Inc.
Christian G. De Vito, Associazione Liberarsi – Italy
Lorry Swain, migrant rights activist, Ohio
Robert W. McChesney, Gutgsell Endowed Professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Jason Jaffery, Development Director ACLU of Ohio Foundation
Kathie Izor, Colorado CURE Board
Raj Patel, author and scholar
Katherine Soltis, Chair, Cleveland Coalition Against the Death Penalty
Ioanna Drosou, Greek Initiative for Prisoners’ Rights
Immanuel Ness, CUNY, editor Working USA
Ron Keine, Asst. Director Witness to Innocence
Carlos Ivan Ramos, Ph.D., Executive Director, Hispanic UMADAOP, Cleveland
Michael Parenti, author and scholar
Veronica Dahlberg, Board member, ACLU Cleveland Chapter
Professor Phil Scraton, Law School, Queens University Belfast
Sam Bahour, Management Consultant, West Bank, Palestine
Bob Fitrakis, Editor, Free Press, Columbus, Ohio
Faye Harrison, Southern Human Rights Organizers’ Network
Reverend Dorsey R. Stebbins, Cincinnati, OH
Herbert P. Bix, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian, SUNY-Binghamton
John Polanski, ordained minister, Mineral Ridge, Ohio
Judith Stanger, retired teacher, Boardman, Ohio
James Gilligan, M.D., Prof. of Psychiatry and Law, New York University
James E. Ray, ordained minister, Poland, Ohio
Marcus Rediker, Historian, University of Pittsburgh
John Stoffer, Elder of Presbyterian Church, Salem, Ohio
Kathleen McGarry, attorney, New Mexico
Mary Ann Meaker, Ohioans To Stop Executions
Paulette F Dauteuil, The Jericho Movement for PP’s/POW
Sarah L. Duncan, retired teacher, Vienna, Ohio
Fr. Joseph E. Mulligan, S.J., Nicaragua
Jim Jordan, assistant for autistic children, Vienna, Ohio
Joe Lombardo, co-coordinator, United National Antiwar Cmty (UNAC)
Andrew Lee Feight, Associate Professor of History, Shawnee State University
Jane Stoffer, retired drug counselor, Salem, Ohio
Margaret J Plews, Arizona Prison Watch
Peter Rachleff, Professor of History, Macalester College, Saint Paul, Minnesota
Lynn Thompson Bryant, Presbyterian pastor, Akron, Ohio

And more than 400 others.

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments

NEW BEATINGS OF LEADERS OF GA. PRISON STRIKE

 
 

GA prisoner advocates with poster showing beaten prisoners at press conference Jan. 6/Photo Kristi E. Swartz AJC.com

Link to video of press conference at 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=quKL-n4C0OU&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Locked down, exploited and mistreated

FinalCall.com News


By Charlene Muhammad and Starla Muhammad -Staff Writers-
Updated Jan 4, 2011 – 12:31:55 PM

Concern rises about inmates allegedly beaten by guards in Georgia strike and mistreatment of prisoners detained in institutions across the country

(FinalCall.com) – Like thousands of inmates scattered in prisons across the state of Georgia, Terrance Bryant Dean participated in an eight-day peaceful protest to highlight inhumane conditions in the prisons.

Days later he was brutally beaten by guards at Macon State Prison, his family and a coalition of supporters charge.

 
 

Terrance Dean (GDOC photo)

When his mother Willie Maude Dean and members of the Concerned Coalition to Respect Prisoners’ Rights attempted to visit him at the Atlanta Medical Center on Dec. 31, the hospital claimed her son was no longer there and the corrections department claimed he was moved to Jackson State Prison the night before, according to an alert The Final Call received from Coalition co-chair Elaine Brown.

Ms. Brown said the Coalition found out about the beating during its second fact-finding visit to Smith State Prison on Dec. 30. Its first prison visit was to Macon on Dec. 20.The Coalition asserts the beating was in retaliation for the protest, which began in early December.

In addition, Ms. Dean said the Georgia Department of Corrections has given no information about her son’s condition or his whereabouts.

The mother told Coalition leaders after their latest visit that Macon State Warden Gregory McLaughlin told her that Terrance was in an isolation cell, but the mother believes he was already in the hospital.

 
 

Miguel Jackson after beating (see post farther down for GDOC photo before beating)

The family of a second inmate, Miguel Jackson alleges he was severely beaten by upwards of 20 guards Dec. 31 during what is called a “shakedown” at Smith State Prison near Glennville, Ga. in which corrections officers search prisoners’ cells. Upon finding nothing, said Mrs. Delma Jackson, Miguel’s wife, the officers accused Mr. Jackson of having “something.” Mr. Jackson was pepper sprayed, handcuffed and beaten repeatedly with hammers resulting in a fractured nose and 50 stitches to his face, said Mrs. Jackson. Guards also attempted to throw him over the railing from the second floor, she said.

And because the family has not been allowed to see him, his wife said they worry whether or not he may have a concussion or internal injuries. Upon seeing pictures of her husband, Mrs. Jackson said she and other family members drove New Year’s Day, three and a half hours from Atlanta, to check on his status. Their visit was denied by corrections personnel, she said. This was after the family waited 90 minutes to be given a sheet to fill out, requesting a visit. “We didn’t even want to sit there and visit, we just wanted to see that he was okay and they denied us that right,” Mrs. Jackson told The Final Call.

 
 

GA NAACP Pres. Edward DuBose and Concerned Coalition to Respect Prisoners' Right hold press conference in Atlanta Jan. 6 demanding better conditions for prisoners and end to beatings/Photo Kristi E. Swartz AJC.com

was awaiting a reply to its voice message request for an interview with the Department of Corrections’ Public Affairs Office. The latest update on its web page is dated Dec. 15 and indicates that four facilities had returned to normal operations.The Final Call. She was upset that the prison still had not contacted her or the family about whether Mr. Jackson was in the infirmary with injuries. “That is our loved one, he’s a human being and their treating him like an animal,” she said. At press time, Mrs. Jackson said her husband’s fractured nose as of Jan. 3 still had not been reset and she worried the violent encounter will affect him psychologicallyWhen she asked prison officials why visitation was denied, all officials said was that there was an “incident” and the only one authorized to approve a visit would be the warden, who was not there, Mrs. Jackson continued.

 
 

Smith State Prison GA

The prisoners’ strike included Hays, Smith, Telfair, Macon State Prisons, and other facilities. Inside the institutions, inmates refused to come out of their cells to petition officials to be paid for work given that they must pay for medical services, better medical care and better quality food, more self-improvement and educational programs, consistent disciplinary policies and a clear parole policy.

Coalition spokespersons said that beating occurred around the same time it was negotiating access to certain prisons to investigate conditions, and even as the delegation visited Macon State, the corrections department was apparently covering up the inmate’s reported retaliatory beating by several CERT (Correctional Emergency Response Team) members.

Witnesses reported to the Coalition that CERT officers restrained Terrance Dean after an alleged dispute with a guard, dragged him from his cell in handcuffs and leg irons, removed him to the prison gym and beat him unconscious.

The beating remained unreported by corrections officials even though the Coalition specifically raised questions about reports of retaliatory beatings, said the group. Questions were also asked about the status and whereabouts of 37—or more—men the corrections department identified as strike “conspirators,” the Coalition said.

The Coalition formed to help support the prisoners’ calls for reform and includes the NAACP, the Nation of Islam, the ACLU of Georgia, the U.S. Human Rights Network, All of Us or None, and The Ordinary People Society. Among other concerns is the potential cover up of an attempted murder.

 
 

Where is GA Congressman John Lewis?

“This agenda just got jumped up 10,000 times, not by us, but by them, these men who are suffering inside these walls.They’re the spark that lit the prairie fire and hopefully we who are on the outside that have united around their particular interests in Georgia can keep this going.The coalition has attracted a lot of people but the interesting thing is where in the hell is John Lewis? The coalition is growing but absent in any kind of way is the Congressional Black Caucus,” Ms. Brown said, referring to Congressman John Lewis (D-Ga.) and other federal lawmakers.

She told The Final Call that few political officials from Georgia have addressed the issue. But State lawmaker Roberta Abdul Salaam has been very supportive, said Coalition leaders. The Coalition has reached out to CBC Chair Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) and Rep. Lewis but have not received a response, said Ms. Brown.

 
 

GA State Rep. Roberta Abdul Salaam

“Everybody else in the world has come in without us sending a message to them, but not them. Where is the CBC? These men are their constituents, especially John Lewis, Tyrone Brooks (a state representative), and other Black leaders in Georgia?” asked Ms. Brown.

“We need them to do something; bring the federal government in on behalf of these men … . This is a disgrace that these people came into office on the blood of our people like Fannie Lou Hamer who gave up her eye and her life … The duty of Black elected officials here is clear and they have failed to do their duty to these men and address this question. And I’m saying they should come on back home before we have to start talking about what we’re doing about their failure,” Ms. Brown said. Ed DuBose, head of the Georgia state NAACP, is co-chair of the Coalition.

Coalition: Inmates complained of retaliation after peaceful strike

 
 

Ajamu Baraka at international conference against the death penalty

“They (inmates) got shipped out of their home institutions and were dispersed across the state.We think that they were primarily dispersed into two facilities but we have not had access to them yet,” said Ajamu Baraka, director of the U.S. Human Rights Network, and a member of the delegation that visited Smith State Prison.

He said, “among information received was that prisons only fed the inmates bologna sandwiches for six days—all to break the back of the strike. And then they released everybody and announced to the world that everything was fine. But the information we got was that the inmates understand that they struck a blow for their rights (and) that they may have to strike again to make sure that people understand how serious this situation really is,” Mr. Baraka told The Final Call.

After the visit, he said, the Coalition’s concerns over conditions grew, particularly since Macon was supposed to be a model facility. For example, he said, “the hole” or isolation units, consist of 7 x 12 size cells and inmates are double bunked in them 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Although inmates are supposed to get an hour out for recreation, the delegation learned that they hardly ever do for months at a time, Mr. Baraka added.

Mr. Baraka said he feels one reason prison authorities moved to shut down the strike quickly was because it could serve as a possible model for prisoners across the country.

But the outcome of the action in Georgia will determine whether there will be more and similar uprisings across the U.S., he predicted.

 
 

Former Pres. Bill Clinton responsible for Prison Litigation Reform Act, which took away prisoners' rights to sue for mistreatment

“The conditions in these prisons across the country are such that it’s amazing that we haven’t had more explosive situations or strikes because you have overcrowding, brutality, neglect, and the inability of prisoners to address these issues because of the Prison Reform Litigation Act passed by the Clinton administration, which has made it difficult for you to go to court to try to get the judiciary to intervene to deal with these inhumane conditions,” Mr. Baraka continued.

According to legal analysts, former President Bill Clinton passed the Prison Reform Litigation Act in 1996 to combat frivolous lawsuits brought by prisoners, in an effort to unclog an already back-logged U.S. judicial system.

But Human Rights Watch said the federal law should be amended because it denies prisoners equal access to justice by singling out their lawsuits for burdens and restrictions that apply to no one else.

Racially biased policies and the prison economy

All of these issues are part of the larger problem with having a prison economy, said Attorney Michelle Alexander, a civil rights advocate and author of “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness.”

 
 

The New Jim Crow, by Michelle Alexander

She told The Final Call she doesn’t believe profit was the primary motive for the drug war and mass incarceration at the outset.

Nonetheless, the numbers are daunting.In 2007, nearly 2.3 million people were locked up in U.S. prisons, the highest incarceration rate in the world. Nearly one million Black men and women are incarcerated, 41 percent of total inmates.

According to criminal justice statistics by the NAACP, Blacks are incarcerated at nearly six times the rate of Whites; one in six Black men had been incarcerated as of 2001; and one in 100 Black women are currently in prison. The U.S. is five percent of the world population yet has 25 percent of the world’s prisoners, according to an NAACP fact sheet.

This mass incarceration comes out of racial politics stirred up by the Republican Party, Atty. Alexander argued. Essentially, she said, the GOP exploited the fears and anxieties of poor, working class Whites by launching a movement, promising to “get tough” on “those people” and built a campaign around crime and welfare to mobilize poor and working classWhite voters to defect from the Democratic Party and join the Republican Party in droves.

“But now that the war on drugs and mass incarceration has gained such steam, there’s a whole range of interests that has found that they can profit from caging human beings and it’s not just the private prison companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange but it’s a whole range of corporate interests,” she said.

“You know, taser gun manufacturers, phone companies that gouge prisoners and their families, the private health care providers that provide typically abysmal health care to prisoners, and prison guard unions,” all of whom now lobby for harsh criminal justice policies to try to ensure their profits and jobs will continue for a foreseeable future, Atty. Alexander said.

Back in the day, prisons used to have their stock prices posted in the front of the facilities, because guards had employee stock options, according to Alex Friedmann, associate editor of Prison Legal News and president of the Private Corrections Institute, a non-profit advocacy group that opposes the privatization of prisons.He spoke of his past experience of 10 years of incarceration.

“When the guards came into work, they could see how well the company was doing … so they had a vested interest to make sure that the company did well, so that meant cutting back on costs, so if you had to screw prisoners out of something or remove something from them to save money and increase your bottom line, that’s what you would do. … It went along the lines of a for-profit industry, you know, ‘These are little money signs, just $45 a day per diem that we make for keeping them in prison, so it’s not really a person, just a number with a dollar sign in front of it,’ ” Mr. Friedmann said.

But soon employee morale suffered when the stock spiraled downward and people came to work only to find out that their entire savings had been wiped out, he said.

Mr. Friedmann echoed Atty. Alexander’s sentiments that the correctional system exploded in the 1980s and after the military industrial complex went downhill, the prison industrial complex arose. Security resources, law enforcement, and military got funneled into the war on drugs and crime rose, but it’s really a war on Americans, citizens accused of crime and recreational drug use, he asserted.

“Our justice system is not only racially skewed but moreso it’s class-based.Prison Legal News approaches it from the standpoint that the criminal justice system is primarily management for poor America. … You don’t see a lot of rich people because we have a two-tiered justice system: The poor go to prison and the rich tend to get drug treatment or probation or home confinement or GPS monitoring or something else,” Mr. Friedmann said.

 
 

Prison overcrowding in California

The problem, say civil and human rights activists, amounts to a systematic pattern of over-incarceration that needs to be addressed particularly since more than half of the millions of people in U.S. prisons are non-violent offenders. Chara Fisher Jackson, legal director of the ACLU of Georgia, says the issues of prison overcrowding, lack of access to health care, inhumane treatment and other abuses are happening nationwide, but people have a right to basic human rights regardless of their circumstances.

Alternatives to expensive incarceration

Inmate advocates argue that the nearly $70 billion being spent nationally on corrections each year could be better used on non-vengeful alternatives, like drug treatment and programs that are mental-health focused.But instead of a rehabilitative approach, the country takes a retributive one that requires not an eye for an eye, but an eye and 20 years to life, Mr. Friedmann said.

He cited home monitoring, work service, day fines, split confinement, like weekends in jail or work days and evenings in jail as a few alternative solutions.

The main thing that people need to see is that prisoners are human beings and 95 percent of them will be re-entering their communities, he said.

The options are people who have been abused, degraded, humiliated, and treated like slaves or people that have been helped, rehabilitated, and serviced through programs, the prison reform advocate continued.

“I think that would be a simple solution, but not for our country,” he said.

 
 

America's new slavery AP photo

Nathaniel Ali, executive director of the inmate and ex-offender education and resource advocacy group National Association of Brothers and Sisters In & Out of Prison, asserted that problems highlighted by the Georgia inmates exist in institutions nationwide

These conditions are a continuation of policies tied to economics and “slaveocracy”—prisons profiting off the backs of inmates and their families.

There is a real connection to maintaining poverty through the prison industrial complex, said Mr. Ali. Excessive charges by phone companies for telephone calls as just one example, he added.

Phone calls, price gouging and family suffering

 
 

Chain gang Alabama 2008

Activists added though prisons scoff at and punish prisoners for using cell phones, the system generated the need for phones because of price gouging for calls and denying inmates access to their families.

“The excessive charges for telephone calls has been an issue for years but now companies are beginning to diversify because there is money to be made,” but not just by MCI, Mr. Ali said.

“What is happening is larger companies are subcontracting with smaller companies who are in turn, also billing telephone calls. So in essence, inmates and their families are being double billed for one phone call. If the first minute is $3 and something then it’s going to end up being $6 and something … . Companies are cashing in with the digital technology with what they know is going to be profitable,which is the inmates wanting to hear somebody’s voice on the other end of the line,” he said.

“The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan said, ‘Justice is a human need, therefore justice is a human right,’ ” said Nation of Islam Student Prison Reform Minister Abdullah Muhammad.

He said the needs and rights of families are critical. “The high prices for phone calls cause some family members to block calls from jails and prisons, which can negatively affect family relations and anything that disrupts family or is against the general welfare of the family is therefore against the aim and purpose of God and creation,” Min. Muhammad said.

According to Prisoners.com, a Pennsylvania-based nonprofit organization: An inmate may open an account with the telephone company and give them money in advance. However, in that instance the prisoner pays about $6.16 for a 15 minute conversation. Comparable service for persons not in prison costs about 75 cents.

“Somebody’s getting rich on the backs of prisoners and their families,” notes the site.

Prisoners.com goes on to note that for collect telephone calls, the inmate’s family must pay about $7 for a 15 minute conversation. If the phone call is disconnected before the allotted time, reconnection fees may apply.

For inmates, who in some cases make as little as $20 to $30 per month, a 30 minute telephone call to a loved one may cost half-a-month’s wages.

Related news:

Prisoners’ strike becoming movement for justice (FCN, 102-30-2010)

‘Lockdown for liberty!’ exposes prison conditions (FCN, 12-14-2010)

Inmates Allegedly Beaten With Hammers After Peaceful Protest

By Boyce Watkins, PhD on Jan 7th 2011 10:38AM

Reports are coming out of Georgia that prison guards have retaliated with violence in response to the Georgia Prison strike that took place last month. According to Georgia State NAACP President Edward Dubose, inmates have been beaten with hammers and other foreign objects allegedly in retaliation for their participation in the strike. President Dubose says that one inmate has been beaten beyond recognition and another has suffered significant brain damage.

Georgia prisoners

“They said they [officers] were hitting inmates with hammers,” Williams told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “They [guards] said an inmate was trying to escape.”

The Department of Corrections has remained stoic and silent on the matter, even to the point of denying that a prison strike ever took place. But advocates for inmate human rights have argued all along that the conditions in Georgia prisons are simply unacceptable.

“Family members are frantic and mothers are crying and anguished after learning their loved ones have been badly injured. We cannot allow those cries to go unanswered,” said President Dubose. “Since the start of the December 9 peaceful work stoppage and appeal for reform and respect for human rights, some inmates have been targeted and others have simply disappeared. We are urging the Department of Corrections and Governor-Elect Nathan Deal to act now to halt these unjust practices and treat these men like human beings.”

Prisoners forced to shine guards' shoes, reminiscent of slavery times

In the course of the strike, the inmates demanded access to education, better healthcare, fair parole decisions, the right to a fair wage for their work (which is currently unpaid), job training programs and an escape from cruel and unusual punishment. Although inmates are not paid for their labor, many of them are charged for routine healthcare and phone calls to their families. Some have argued that it is inconsistent for someone who is unpaid for their work to be expected to pay for prison services. In a conversation I had with President Dubose, he mentioned that there are reports of inmates even being forced to shine shoes for guards and give them haircuts, which he connects to a form of slavery.

The Concerned Coalition to Respect Prisoners’ Rights held a press conference earlier this week to respond to the reports of violence against inmates. One of the conference co-chairs, Elaine Brown, said “These new developments have increased our fears and our legitimate call for more access to inmates.”

The group, in conjunction with the NAACP, plans to file a lawsuit or civil rights complaint about the abuses taking place against inmates.

“We believe there’s more” abused prisoners, DuBose told the Atlanta Journal Constitution. “They [prison officials] won’t let us get close to them.”

While the individual case of the Scott Sisters was certainly significant in its own right, the Georgia Prison strike represents the greatest opportunity for reform of our nation’s broken criminal justice system. Nearly every African American in this country has a brother, sister, father, child or other relative who has had their future crippled by the historically-slanted justice system here in the United States. The time is now to support the efforts of inmates to at least ensure that they are given access to basic human rights and the opportunity to come back to their communities as productive members of society. This is not a black thing or a criminal thing, it’s an American thing.

One of the points being consistently made on this issue is that helping inmates have access to basic human rights is not a matter of being soft on crime. At this point, the prison industrial complex is the largest creator of criminal activity in our society. When inmates are left uneducated, sexually/physically abused, unemployed and permanently marginalized from society, their likelihood of committing crime is that much greater. Being tough on crime means being tough on recidivism, and right now, the prison system is solely designed with a profit motive that provides incentives for incarcerating as many people as possible. That is why the United States is a world leader in the number of people it has behind bars. Apathy from citizens and lawmakers is one of the tools being used by corporation captains to make money off slave labor (yes, this is literally slave labor, since the 13th Amendment clearly states that slavery is allowed for those who’ve been convicted of a crime). The temptation to enslave more Americans only grows with globalized wage pressure from nations like China and India, leading some corporations to lay off workers so they can “hire” prison inmates for almost nothing.

Pres. Obama should intervene to support GA prisoners' just demands

President Dubose informed me that Congressman John Lewis took the liberty to reach out and offer support. It is my greatest hope that other members of the Congressional Black Caucus will see the urgency of this matter in their own states and do the same. Additionally, Attorney General Eric Holder and President Barack Obama should have it impressed upon them that there is a very serious and urgent need for the two most powerful black men in America to directly confront the system that is destroying the lives of so many black boys. One of out of every three black boys born this decade is expected to spend time in state or federal prison. We must all come together to save them.

 Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and the “Never Going Back” initiative to challenge mass incarceration. To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here.

Update on GA Prisoner Beatings

By Julianne Hing

Color Lines

http://colorlines.com/archives/2011/01/naacp_retaliatory_abuse_of_georgia_prison_inmates.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+racewireblog+%28ColorLines%29

At least three inmates at two Georgia prisons were severely beaten by prison guards as a measure of retaliatory abuse, the NAACP of Georgia charges. The alleged beatings followed prison visits by a delegation of civil rights advocates, which came on the heels of an inmate strike that drew national headlines last month. 

One inmate at Macon State Prison in Oglethorpe, Ga., sustained injuries to the back of his head and spent several days in the intensive care unit, said Edward DuBose, the president of the Georgia state chapter of the NAACP. DuBose said that the NAACP had received reports and cell phone photos of two Smith State Prison inmates whose bloodied, bruised faces confirmed reports of violence there.

DuBose told Colorlines the incidents happened immediately after he and other prisoner rights advocates visited Macon State Prison on Dec. 20 and Smith State Prison on Dec. 30. “It’s ironic that after each visit we received information that an inmate was beaten the very next day by prison guards,” DuBose said. “There’s a clear message the guards are sending to inmates about speaking out and we’re trying to get to the bottom of this.”

DuBose said that prison officials at Macon State Prison allowed family to meet with the abused inmate from Macon after he was released from the hospital, but that Smith prison officials had not let anyone have contact with the two abused inmates there. “We were able to see [photos of] their injuries, they had facial injuries and you can see knobs, protruding knobs, on their faces,” DuBose said.

The inmates who were allegedly beaten up did not speak with the fact-finding delegation when it visited, DuBose said. The Smith prisoners, who advocates say have since been secreted away by prison officials, were thought to be organizers of the multi-prison strike that took place in December, though.

During that strike, inmates in at least four Georgia prisons stayed in their cells for almost a week and refused to report for work duty. They were protesting overcrowding and inhumane conditions in the prisons and called for better nutrition and health care, access to educational resources and fair compensation for their work.

At the time, Elaine Brown, former chair of the Black Panther Party, whose newly formed Concerned Coalition to Protect Prisoners’ Rights has advocated for the Georgia inmates, said that inmates reported being beaten up by prison guards as punishment. Brown said that inmates also had their hot water and heat turned off during the strike. Hays State Prison in Trion, Macon State Prison in Oglethorpe, Telfair State Prison in Helena, and Smith State Prison in Glennville were all locked down by prison officials for days.

The fact-finding delegation was able to confirm many of these grievances, said DuBose. The organizations plan to release a report of their findings. DuBose said the NAACP was also in talks with the Department of Justice and would be sending its findings to the Georgia state legislature’s judiciary committee for further investigation. 

“The magnitude of the abuse by the guards warrants an intervention by the federal government,” said DuBose, adding that “the information we have gathered suggests that the Department of Corrections should rethink what’s happening in its prisons and join us in engaging in prison reform.”

“We are a law enforcement agency and do everything possible to uphold, not break, laws,” the Georgia Department of Corrections said, the New York Times reported.

 Press Conference on Georgia Prisons

Posted on January 8, 2011 by denverabc

 A press conference was held Jan. 6, 2011  at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta to publicize NEW CHARGES OF INMATE BEATINGS

Reports from Prison Visits Set Off Coalition Appeal to DOC and Governor-Elect for More Access.

The Concerned Coalition to Respect Prisoners’ Rights, formed to support the interests and agenda of thousands of Georgia prisoners who staged a peaceful protest and work strike initiated early last December, will host a press conference this Thursday.

Terrance Dean, 49 is among leaders of GA prison strike who have sustained severe beatings by guards since prison visits by Concerned Coalition

The mothers and other family members of Terrance Dean and Miguel Jackson, inmates reportedly brutally beaten by guards at Macon State and Smith State Prisons in connection with the strike, will be in attendance.The press conference follows reports of violent abuses of these men and others and the findings of fact by Coalition delegations after visits to two prisons in December. These reports have increased fears of the targeting of and retaliation against inmates on account of their peaceful protest for their human rights and raise the urgency for immediate reform.

“These new developments have increased our fears and our legitimate call for more access to inmates,” said Elaine Brown, Co-Chair of the Concerned Coalition to Respect Prisoners Rights.

Ed Dubose, Coalition Co-Chair and president of the NAACP of Georgia, stated,”Family members are frantic and mothers are crying and anguished after learning their loved ones have been badly injured. We cannot allow those cries to go unanswered. Since the start of the December 9 peaceful work stoppage and appeal for reform and respect for human rights, some inmates have been targeted and others have simply disappeared. We are urging the Department of Corrections and Governor-Elect Nathan Deal to act now to halt these unjust practices and treat these men like human beings.”

Miguel Jackson has also been beaten by GA prison guards

Black, brown, white, Muslim, Christian, Rastafarian prisoners, including those at Augusta, Baldwin, Calhoun, Hancock, Hays, Macon, Rogers, Smith,Telfair, Valdosta and Ware State Prisons, joined a peaceful work stoppage December 9, 2010, refusing to come out of their cells as part of a petition to the corrections department.

Among concerns expressed by inmates were not being paid for their labor; being charged excessive fees for basic medical treatments; language barriers suffered by Latino inmates; arbitrary, harsh disciplinary practices; too few opportunities for education and self improvement; and unjust parole denials.

Coalition leaders attending the press conference will be Mr. Dubose, Ajamu Baraka of the U.S. Human Rights Network, Pastor Kenneth Glasgow of The Ordinary People Society, Chara Jackson of the ACLU of Georgia, along with Abdul Sharrief Muhammad of the Nation of Islam.

The prisoners have been petitioning the corrections department for their human rights, including wages for labor, decent health care and nutritional meals, a halt to cruel and unusual punishments, and an end to unjust just parole decisions.

By Sadiku (posted on Concerned Coalition to Respect Prisoners Rights Facebook Page, separate from the GA prisoners’ demands outlined in other articles on VOD).

A Ten Point Plan approach toward the prison industrial complex:
1. We want an end to all prisons within the United States of America.
2. We want all prisoners to have access to education. Toward any degree level they desire as long as they are making progress that is independently monitored by an outside source.
3. We want all prisoners to have voting rights in their home districts and that their count in the census data be toward their home districts from which they receive all of their support – mental, spiritual, familial and financial.
4. We want all prisoners stationed as close to their home districts as is possible.
5. We want prisoners to be fed decent foods which they can literally grow right on the prison grounds.

6. We want all prisoners to receive a fair wage for a fair days work. Including those working in the prison industries. All children should receive a support check from the state/federal government if their fathers are working in the prisons.

7. We want all prisoners to receive all the necessary medical & dental care and any doctors who want to volunteer to work in the prisons be allowed to do so. All prisoners should preventative medical treatment.

8. We want the stigma removed from inmates who have been convicted so that they may seek and become gainfully employed upon return from the prison.

9. We want an independent review panel with considerable investigative powers to investigate prisons that are receiving inmate complaints of inmate abuse by other inmates and guards. We know that much of the inmate on inmate abuse is guard instigated and sanctioned and a blind eye is turned on these situations through bribery and corruption.

10. We want the rip off of families to stop through the force high telephone costs and forced purchases of goods through only prison sanctioned companies which is a monopoly whereby the families can ill afford to pay these exorbitantly high costs.

These are the demands and neither should they be changed or relinquished or altered.

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

GET on the BUS to LANSING with DPS PARENTS TUES. JAN. 11

LATEST INJURY TO DPS STUDENTS: LAY-OFF OF BUS ATTENDANTS

From Aurora Harris Detroit Parents With Special Ed Students 

1/09/2011

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment