Police witnesses from earlier cases to testify against suspect in cop’s death

 

Prosecutor Trczinski examines witness June 7 as defense attorney Susan Reed and Jason Gibson listen

 Case against Jason Gibson continues despite contradictory evidence, allegations that shoot-out took place at cop drug house 

 By Diane Bukowski 

DETROIT – Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Cynthia Gray Hathaway ruled Nov. 12  that police witnesses and evidence from two previous cases against Jason Alexander Gibson can be presented in his trial for the alleged murder of Detroit police officer Brian Huff . The trial is scheduled for Feb. 28, 2011. 

Gibson faces 18 felony counts related to Huff’s death and the wounding of three other cops during a shoot-out May 3 at 20263 Schoenherr, just south of E. Eight Mile. 

20363 Schoenherr--cop drug house?

A neighborhood resident and a high-ranking former law enforcement official, who requested not to be identified for their protection, have alleged it was generally known that the duplex was a drug house run by Detroit police. 

Despite this outstanding issue, Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy and Assistant Prosecutor Thomas Trczinski are proceeding full speed ahead with the case against Gibson. They allege that he alone killed Huff, wounded three other officers, and somehow survived a shoot-out with numerous cops, sustaining only a gunshot wound to the leg. 

Hathaway said evidence from Gibson’s previous cases is “relevant” to the current charges. 

Officer Brian Huff, killed May 3

“It shows a lack of fear on the part of the defendant to interact with police officers in a confronting type of way,” Hathaway said. “I will permit the evidence to be introduced. It shows a lack of mistake on the part of the defendant in knowing who he’s dealing with, his familiarity with police officers.” 

Hathaway thus upheld a highly controversial legal maneuver used by Trczinski, involving Michigan Rules of Evidence (MRE) 404b motions. She said she will issue special jury instructions at Gibson’s trial regarding the earlier cases to avoid prejudicing the jury. 

Gibson’s defense attorney Susan Reed objected that the cases were not relevant because they show Gibson does not attack police when approached by them, but instead flees. 

Huff partner Joseph D'Angelo

Gibson has not even been tried on charges in the most recent case, involving three counts of weapons possession in November, 2009. That case is currently before Hathaway. 

Gibson earlier pled guilty to “attempted disarming of a peace officer” and “attempted possession of a controlled substance less than 25 grams,” related to a November, 2007 arrest. Wayne County Circuit Court Judge David Groner sentenced him to a term of three years probation in that case. 

A media frenzy erupted when Gibson was charged with Huff’s death. It was directed both at Hathaway, who initially released him on a $20,000 bond in the 2009 case, according to computer court records, and at Groner for sentencing him to probation in 2007. 

Neighbor Paul Jameson said he heard thumps, not shots, went into backyard with gun

Michigan Rule of Evidence 404b says, “Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith.  It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, scheme, plan, or system in doing an act, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident when the same is material, whether such other crimes, wrongs, or acts are contemporaneous with, or prior or subsequent to the conduct at issue in the case.” 

Federal Rule of Evidence 404b uses identical language. 

Trczinski contended that Gibson’s previous cases showed intent, motive, “the actus reus of resisting and obstructing,” and his “identity as a shooter.” He cited a legal precedent from a case in which a defendant was acquitted to justify using evidence from Gibson’s 2009 case, which has not yet been adjudicated.  Continue reading

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

MUMIA MUST LIVE AND BE FREE! END THE RACIST DEATH PENALTY!

  

Mumia supporters outside Philadelphia courthouse Nov. 9

Eyes of the world on Philly appeals court hearing Nov. 9   

By Diane Bukowski 

To hear Mumia Abu-Jamal himself speak on his case, and the plight of all prisoners, go to: http://www.democracynow.org/2009/4/16/without_struggle_there_is_nothing_mumia 

This article has also been published in the San Francisco Bay View National Black newspaper at http://sfbayview.com/2010/mumia-must-live-and-be-free-end-the-racist-death-penalty/

PHILADELPHIA – Tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets outside the U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals here and around the world Nov. 9, demanding that Mumia Abu-Jamal must live and be free, and that the U.S. must abolish the death penalty and end racist killings and brutality by police.

The U.S. Supreme Court ordered the three-judge appeals panel hearing Abu-Jamal’s case Nov. 9 to determine whether it should re-instate his death penalty. In 2008, the panel upheld a lower court judge’s 2001 decision overturning the sentence due to flawed jury instructions. 

NYC councilman Charles Barron, of Freedom Party and Black is Back, discusses Mumia's case outside Philly courthouse Nov. 9

“We shouldn’t even be talking about whether Mumia gets the death penalty or a life sentence,” New York City Councilman Charles Barron, a member of the Freedom Party, said before the hearing. 

“People all over the world are calling for his freedom. What happened to him can happen to all of us. As Angela Davis said, ‘If they come for me in the morning, they will come for you at night.’ We all have the right to freedom, to self-determination, to be able to rebel against a racist system without being framed.” 

Abu-Jamal is an esteemed journalist, author and revolutionary activist popularly known as the “Voice of the Voiceless.” He was president of the National Association of Black Journalists when he was arrested in 1981 for allegedly killing Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner. 

Supporters chant "Brick by brick, wall by wall, we will free Mumia Abu-Jamal"

He has been on death row for 29 years, where he has pursued his vocation relentlessly, reporting on prisons in the U.S., writing on national and international affairs, and authoring six books. Mr. Abu-Jamal began his career at the age of 14 as a reporter for the national Black Panther newspaper. 

On Nov. 9, he remained in the state prison at Waynesburg, Pennsylvania where he is housed on death row. But his words were conveyed earlier by phone from death row Oct. 23 and heard by thousands at an Oakland, California rally for justice for Oscar Grant. Grant, a young father, was shot in the back and killed by transit police officer Johannes Mehserle in 2009, as he lay prone on a train platform. 

Demonstrator protests police killings of 7-year-old Aiyana Jones in Detroit. Sean Bell in NYC, Oscar Grant in Oakland CA

“Oscar Grant could have happened in Richmond, LA, Roxbury or North Philly and the state’s response would have been the same—just doing their job,” Mr. Abu-Jamal said. “Only phone cameras made any difference at all, and of course, people who would not let it go, people like you. So fight on—to quote the late great Kwame Toure, organize, organize, organize.” 

French government, union and anti-death penalty officials joined members of the German Network to Free Mumia and noted leaders from across the U.S. to attend Abu-Jamal’s hearing in Philadelphia. 

Countries who are members of the European Union are required to repudiate the death penalty. 

The eyes of the world were on Philly

“No human being should be able to decide who has to die, especially if there was no fair trial beforehand,” Clothilde Le Coz, a French citizen from Reporters without Borders said. “In France and throughout Europe, it is the general feeling that the U.S. still has a lot of hard work on justice to do.” 

LeCoz met with Abu-Jamal for six hours Aug. 29 in prison. (See accompanying interview.) 

Busloads of supporters from New York to Virginia, along with Philadelphians, some from the MOVE organization and the New Black Panther Party, rallied outside. They chanted, “Brick by brick, wall by wall, we’re going to free Mumia Abu-Jamal,” and “Hell no, the death penalty got to go.”  Continue reading

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Mumia Abu-Jamal : “I am an outlaw journalist”

Mumia Abu-Jamal, the Voice of the Voiceless

Interview published on 3 September 2010

Reporters without Borders

On August 29th, 2010, Reporters Without Borders Washington DC representative, Clothilde Le Coz, visited Mumia Abu-Jamal, prisoner on death row for nearly three decades. Ms. Le Coz was accompanied by Abu-Jamal’s lead attorney, Robert R. Bryan, and his legal assistant, Nicole Bryan. The meeting took place in room 17 of the State Correctional Institution (SCI) in Waynesburg, Greene county, Pennsylvania.

Reporters Without Borders: As a journalist who continues to work in prison, what are your latest reports focused on?

Mumia Abu-Jamal: The prison population in the United States is the highest in the world. Over the past year, for the first time in 38 years, the prison population declined.

Some states, like California or Michigan, are taking fewer prisoners because of overcrowding. State budgets are restrained and some prisoners are released because of the economic situation.

Prisons in America are vast and the number of prisoners is immense. It’s impressive to see how much money is spent by the US government and how invisible we are. No one knows. Most people don’t care. Some journalists report when there is a drama in prison and think they know about it. But this is not real : it is sensationalist. You can find some good writings. But they are unrealistic. My reporting is what I have seen with my eyes and what people told me. It is real. My reporting has to do with my reality. They mostly have been focusing on death row and prison. I wish it were not so. There is a spate of suicides on death row in the last year and a half. But this is invisible. I broke stories about suicide because it happened on my block.

I need to write. There are millions of stories and some wonderful people here. Among these stories, the ones I chose to write are important, moving, fragile. I decide to write them but part of the calculation is to know whether it’s helpful or not. I have to think about that. As a reporter, you have a responsability when you publish those kind of stories. Hopefully, it will change their lives for the better. Continue reading

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

HON. BEVERLY HAYES-SIPES HAS PASSED AWAY

36th District Court Judge Beverly Hayes-Sipes, Beverly Bantom, Judge Denise Morris Photo Hour Magazine

From: Gchatman6@aol.com 

I have been informed by her brother, Ellis Hayes, Jr., that his sister, the Honorable Beverly J. Hayes-Sipes (36th District Court in Detroit) has passed away. She was a dear friend and an outstanding jurist and will be missed by all who knew her. 

Services will be held Thursday, November 11, 2010 at Hartford Baptist Church.  Family Hour at 10:00 a.m.  Funeral at 11:00 a.m.

 

Please keep the family in your prayers.

George A. Chatman
Attorney at Law
gchatman6@aol.com
313 961-5007 office
313 595-6789 cell

Judge Beverly Hayes-Sipes

(Bio from 36th District Court website)

Judge Beverly Hayes-Sipes was elected to the 36th District Court bench on Nov. 5, 2002. She gives the glory to God and sincere thanks to her family, friends and the citizens of Detroit for this great honor. Continue reading

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 8 Comments

FICANO APPOINTEES FEAST, WORKERS FACE FAMINE

AFSCME County local presidents and members celebrating filing lawsuit against Ficano Oct. 21 at AFSCME HQ

UNION LOCALS SUE COUNTY EXEC 
By Diane Bukowski
(Story on $700 million county jail coming shortly)

DETROIT – Shortly before Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano announced plans for a new $700 million jail complex,  union presidents representing county workers from four locals  unions announced they had filed suit against him in Wayne County Circuit Court Oct. 21.

 They said that in violation of state and county law,  Ficano has furloughed the lowest-paid county employees one day a week and eliminated their health insurance, while paying exorbitant salaries to hundreds of appointees and recently giving them hefty raises, in addition to top-of-the-line furniture for their offices.(See chart at end of story for list of appointees.)

 The county workers’ contract expired Sept. 30, 2008. Attorney Eric Frankie contends in the locals’ lawsuit that they “have sought without success to negotiate in good faith a successor agreement that is fair to the Plaintiffs and recognizes the financial situation of the County of Wayne.”

Despite repeated rulings against Ficano by state fact-finders, Frankie said, Ficano forced weekly furlough days on union members beginning in February, and has eliminated their health insurance.

“You can’t change the employees’ conditions while fact-finding is going on, “ Frankie said. “ But Ficano has disrupted our workers’ health insurance, forcing them to make medical choices regarding whether they can continue dialysis, treatment for sickle cell, and other chronic illnesses.”

County executives Robert Ficano and L. Brooks Patterson engineered Cobo Hall takeover

The lawsuit says, “The Fact Finder’s report did not adopt the Defendants’ proposal for draconian concessions, including a 10 percent wage cut not shared by Defendant’s appointees. Rather the Fact Finder recommended that an aggregate five percent wage reduction across each bargaining unit was warranted, as well as other proposals fairer to plaintiffs.”

It also says that the Fact Finder ordered negotiations to continue through November 18.

“We are asking the judge to force the county to make our employees whole for everything they have lost,” Frankie said.

Joyce Ivory, President of AFSCME Local 1659, said Ficano cut the workers’ health insurance off the day after they voted down his most recent contract demands, even though they had agreed to make some concessions.

“He backdated lay-offs to the first of the month to do this,” Ivory said. “Ficano has no regard for the citizens, workers, and taxpayers of this County. Our members are losing their homes, their cars as well as their health insurance even if they have continuing disabilities. Sixty percent of my members are single mothers who rank among the lowest-paid workers.” Continue reading

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Killer cop Johannes Mehserle sentenced to two years with double credit for time served; shot Oscar Grant in back in 2009

  GO TO:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nrqf_7nki8Y&feature=player_profilepage 

 

Supporters of justice for Oscar Grant rallied outside the courthouse during the sentencing hearing for his murderer, former BART police officer Johannes Mehserle. – Photo: Youth Radio

By Nishat Kurwa, Youth Radio, posted by San Francisco Bay View newspaper

 

This summer, Johannes Mesherle was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter. The case was moved to Los Angeles after large street demonstrations and riots followed the shooting. After more than a year and a half of legal wrangling and community unrest, Judge Robert Perry has just issued a sentence in the case of Mehserle, the former BART police officer found guilty of involuntary manslaughter in July for the Jan. 1, 2009, shooting of Oscar Grant in Oakland.

Johannes Mehserle was sentenced to two years in prison, a fraction of the maximum sentence he could have received. Judge Perry gave double credit for his time served, bringing the total to 292 days of credit. Mehserle could have faced between four and 14 years for the charge, but legal analysts widely speculated the sentence would be on the shorter end of that spectrum. Involuntary manslaughter charge carries a maximum of four years in prison, but a gun enhancement could have added an additional 10 years.

Analysts seized on the disparity between the sentence and the enhancement, arguing that involuntary manslaughter suggests an accidental killing but that the gun enhancement suggests intentional use of a deadly weapon. That discord meant that Judge Perry could draw a wide range of interpretations based on the jury’s findings.

The incident led to multiple violent protests in downtown Oakland and stirred up racial tensions and the city’s long history of unease between the police and the community. Mehersle, a white man, was videotaped from multiple angles, shooting Grant, an unarmed Black man, on the Fruitvale BART platform.

Protests are scheduled in Oakland today. City offices are closing early and many businesses are shutting down early in advance of demonstrations. Unlike the July verdict when members of the community and media widely anticipated violent outbreaks, no one is quite sure what the community’s response might be today. Some businesses had boarded up their windows in advance of today’s sentencing but only a fraction of those that shuttered this summer for the verdict.

The final chapter in the case has yet to be written. It’s widely expected Mehserle’s attorney will appeal the verdict.

Nishat Kurwa, as news director for Youth Radio [10], where this story [11] first appeared, leads a team of adult and youth staff producing across Youth Radio’s broadcast and online outlets. Before coming to Youth Radio, she was the producer of KMEL’s public affairs show, Street Knowledge with Davey D, and is currently also a news producer at KCBS Radio in San Francisco. In 2002, she was the co-creator and executive producer of KPFA’s Islam Today, the first program by and about Muslims on U.S. public radio. In 2004, Kurwa was named a Salzburg Seminar Fellow. Contact Youth Radio at 1701 Broadway Ave., Oakland, CA 94612, (510) 251-1101, youthradio@youthradio.org [12].

youthradio [13] | Nov. 5, 2010

After the peaceful rally in Frank Ogawa Plaza, a march headed to the Fruitvale BART station gets interrupted on International Boulevard as police block off the streets. Police and protesters then began a game of cat and mouse in East Oakland where police finally surround protesters on Sixth Avenue and East 17th Street. An estimated 150 protesters were then arrested.

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

COUNCIL VOTES TO BUY 100% of CITY POWER from DTE, shut down Mistersky

  • Four-year, $150 million contract approved 6-2 by members who got paid by DTE
  • Councilwoman Watson says Charter requires a vote of the people
  • Residents, workers firmly oppose deal
  • DTE meanwhile to get $253 million rate increase

  By Diane Bukowski 

 (This story updates and combines information from earlier Voice of Detroit posts.)

DETROIT, Nov. 3— The City Council today approved a $150 million four-year contract with DTE Energy to buy 100 percent of power previously generated by the Public Lighting Department (PLD) from the private utility.   

PLD powers and maintains the city’s street lights and traffic signals, over 890 public buildings, and Detroit’s city’s public safety communications network, including 911 and its automated dispatch system, according to its website. 

  The vote essentially came down to who got paid. Only Council members JoAnn Watson and Brenda Jones voted “no.” 

DTE-RELATED PAYMENTS TO CITY COUNCIL MEMBERS, 2009

Counciil members Gary Brown, Saunteel Jenkins and Charles Pugh

CHARLES PUGH:  Hiram Jackson, PLD contractor,  $500; Bertram Marks, DTE attorney $1000; Kirk  Lewis,  Bing Group  $2,000 (Bing on DTE Board 20 yrs)

GARY BROWN:  DTE ENERGY PAC  $3400;  Bertram Marks $750; Hiram Jackson $500 

SAUNTEEL JENKINS:  DTE ENERGY PAC $2000; Joyce Hayes-Giles, DTE top exec. $500; Covanta, DTE supplier  $1,000;  Hiram Jackson  $500 

Ken Cockrel, Jr.:   DTE ENERGY PAC  $4,000;  

Brenda Jones: DTE ENERGY PAC: $4,000; James Tate: Covanta Energy $1,000;  Andrew Spivey:  Hiram Jackson  $500

(These do not include numerous large contributions from the Detroit Regional Chamber, Detroit Renaissance and other entities DTE belongs to.)

 

Mayor Dave Bing, close ally of DTE

Anthony Earley, DTE CEO, chaired Bing's inaugural

Mayor Dave Bing, who sat on DTE’s board for 20 years  and has several DTE employees working on loan to the city, introduced the contract. DTE’s CEO Anthony Earley chaired Bing’s inaugural earlier this year. 

Both were members of a “business leadership group” set up by U.S. District Judge John Feikens in 2008 that paved the way for privatization and regionalization of the city’s largest asset, the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department.  

“The City Charter says the city cannot close or sell a public utility without a vote of the people,” Watson stormed prior to the vote. “Buried in the language of this contract is a provision that it ‘eliminates the necessity for Mistersky Power Plant to produce electric power.’ We can be sued for this.”  Continue reading

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Putting Black Parents In Jail, And Other Matters

PROSECUTOR KYM WORTHY

A Critical Analysis

by David Rambeau
 
Anybody who advocates putting more black people in jail should have to undergo psychiatric examination.  Thus, our Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy and two of her sycophants, Detroit City Council President Charles Pugh and Council President Pro Tem Gary Brown, should schedule their examinations immediately.  If they are already in treatment, perhaps they need their dosages strengthened.

It seems Worthy is campaigning for parents of Detroit public school children who fail to attend parent-teachers meetings to be imprisoned for three days.  The only reason reported in the media is that the prosecutor alleges a connection between youth crime and detention and the failure of parents to attend parent-teacher sessions.  LOL.  Sometimes it rains while the sun is shining.  Sometimes there’ll also be a rainbow.  They accompany each other; they don’t cause each other.  Unless you think it’s the trees that make the wind blow.
 
Worthy isn’t the first Detroit political leader to display a need for therapeutic examination.  Former Detroit Councilwoman Monica Conyers and her chief of staff Sam Riddle also displayed emotionally peculiar behavior which ultimately landed them in jail.  Detroit Public School Financial Overseer Robert Bobb has also exhibited megalomania on a grand scale to the detriment of Detroit’s teachers, parents and school children.  Maybe there’s something in the water.
 

DPS CZAR ROBERT BOBB

Others in need of serious therapeutic attention include a growing list of Detroit public officials: our ex-mayor, his ex-chief of staff, several of the ex-mayor’s appointees, a posse of Detroit Public School officials indicted for fraud, embezzlement and theft of cash and school supplies, and our functionally illiterate ex-chairman of the Detroit School Board sentenced to two years probation for repeatedly and obnoxiously fondling himself during a series of official meetings with the school superintendent. Continue reading

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

FBI’S REAL REASONS FOR ASSASSINATION OF IMAM LUQMAN ABDULLAH

The International Council for Urban Peace, Justice and Empowerment is a coalition of chapters and affiliates in over 35 cities. We represent the largest grassroots, national, international coalition and network of faith and community based organizations, activists and organizers dedicated to peace, justice and empowerment, ending gang warfare, violence and crime.

On behalf of the grassroots people of Detroit and America we are issuing a statement on the “extra judicial execution” or targeted assassination of Imam Luqman Abdullah (of Detroit 10-28-2010)

All of the affiliates of the International Council for Urban Peace, Justice and Empowerment have stated for the record that Imam Luqman was the victim of a conspiracy that was intended to characterize him, his mosque, their members and his national affiliated relationships as criminals by the government putting together paid criminal informants to infiltrate a mosque and engage in provocateuring in a community that is economically depressed and socially challenged (to commit crimes).

Imam Luqman Abdullah speaks on behalf of Imam Jamil Al-Amin in 2008, the year before his assassination by the FBI

Our independent investigation has uncovered a consistent line of lies by the government, and we have been given what is so called “classified information” by law enforcement in Georgia and Michigan that the Imam was targeted because of his relationship to Imam Jamil Al-Amin (formerly known as H. Rap Brown the 60’s civil rights activist).

In addition, the National Ummah was actively involved in organizing the most successful Urban, (Gang) Peace and Justice effort in history, which resulted in a ten (10) year drop in gang related shootings, homicides, other violence and negative activity.

Young marcher demands “Free Imam Jamil Al-Amin” during march on Pentagon

According to some documents that have been uncovered, Imam Luqman, who was actively involved in visiting Imam Jamil in prison in Georgia was accused of being inciteful by Federal Bureau of Prison Investigators (their ideas of inciteful were asking questions and raising issues like health and his human rights which triggered a death sentence), although the Georgia State Bureau of Prisons did not accuse him of that.

His visits were peaceful and the climate was non- threatening. However, it was alleged according to the federal government that Imam Jamil was too powerful in the Georgia State Prison and that he was a threat to the status quo because of his ability to perhaps call for work stoppages, and hunger strikes. There is no evidence of Imam Jamil being involved in those types of activities. But as a result of that, he was transferred to the Supermax Prison in Florence Colorado.  Continue reading

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

No Work Today! Justice For Oscar Grant! ILWU Shuts Bay Area Ports

ILWU shuts down northern California plants to demand justice for Oscar Grant, killed by police

See video at: California dockworkers shut down ports to support Oscar Grant family

ILWU Shuts Bay Area Ports October 23, 2010 

On October 23, 2010, the ILWU (International Longshoreworkers Union) shut down Northern California ports to support a rally for justice for Oscar Grant. Grant was murdered by BART policeman Johannes Mehserle. Thee ILWU and other unions are demanding that the killer get a full  sentence of 14 years. This was the labor action to protest the growing repression  of Black and Latino youth by police forces. Other unions joining the ILWU included the Oakland Education Association, SEIU 1021, CUE-IBT UCB and rank and file  members of BART ATU 1555. 

For copies contact Labor Video Project (415)282-1908

Produced by Labor Video Project laborvideo.blip.tv www.laborvideo.org

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment