GENOCIDE! STATE, S.A.D.O SUBJECT MICHIGAN JUVENILE LIFERS TO MORE ‘CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT’

U.S. Judge O’Meara dismisses motion challenging constitutionality of JLWOP state statutes; motion for reconsideration still pending

Deadline of Aug. 24 looms for prosecutors’ motions on re-sentencing; they have re-recommended JLWOP for 80%; SADO cooperating as defense 

No transparency: Wayne Co. Pros. Kym Worthy filed motions f0r either JLWOP or term of years for 147 prisoners; they are not in court records 

Charles Lewis’ court record still missing, no motion to dismiss his case has been filed by SADO; Worthy has re-recommended JLWOP for him 

Issues remain for other juvenile lifers 

By Diane Bukowski 

August 16, 2016 

Rosie Lewis with her son Charles after his imprisonment in 1977.

Rosie Lewis with her son Charles after his imprisonment in 1977.

DETROIT— “This amounts to genocide,” Rosie Lewis, mother of Michigan juvenile lifer Charles Lewis, who has been in prison for 41 years since the age of 17, said. “They keep our men locked up forever, so they cannot have children and grandchildren.”

She was returning with this reporter from a hearing July 28 in front of U.S. District Court Judge John Corbett O’Meara on the constitutionality of Michigan state statutes passed after the U.S. Supreme Court 2012 ruling in Miller v. Alabama. The USSC declared juvenile life without parole unconstitutionala violation of the Eighth Amendment as “cruel and unusual punishment.

Judge O’Meara ruled in Hill v. Snyder in 2013 that ALL of the state’s juvenile lifers were parole eligible, citing Miller. 

“. . .a lifetime in prison is a disproportionate sentence for all but the rarest of children, those who crimes reflect ‘irreparable corruption,” U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy said in the subsequent Montomery v. Louisiana decision, handed down Jan. 25, 2016.

OMearabox_0001Despite Attorney Deborah LaBelle’s testimony July 28 that state prosecutors have re-recommended juvenile life without parole for 80 percent of Michigan’s juvenile lifers, on Aug. 3 Judge O’Meara handed down an unexpected ruling. He denied a motion for an injunction preventing further actions by courts until the constitutionality of the state statutes, MCL 769.25 and MCL 769.25a, can be determined. (See links to statutes at end of story.)

The motion was made by LaBelle, the American Civil Liberties Union, and Attorney Ron Reosti. 

Judge O’Meara has not yet held a hearing on the plaintiffs’ motion for re-consideration filed Aug. 12. (See box at left for synopses and links to motions at end of story.)

But state prosecutors are moving full speed ahead to meet an Aug. 24 deadline for filing re-sentencing motions, in some cases without sufficient trial records and other information needed to have a legitimate Miller re-sentencing hearing.

The State Appellate Defender’s Office (SADO) was appointed by the state and county prosecution officials as defense counsel in these re-sentencings, for those without paid counsel. It is co-operating with the prosecution in going forward. It earlier refused to challenge the state statutes as the ACLU has done.

Several of Wayne County’s juvenile lifers have reported to VOD that they received letters indicating the prosecutor was recommending either life without parole AGAIN, or a term of years.

Worthy released a statement July 22 saying JLWOP was being sought for 63 Wayne County juvenile lifers, 40 percent of the total, with 81 receiving recommendations for a term of years. She along with most county prosecutors including Oakland County’s Jessica Cooper has long been a fervent advocate of juvenile life without parole, even testifying at state legislative hearings.

Wayne Co. Prosecutor Kym Worthy at swearing-in in 2004, with adopted daughter Anastasia. She has since adopted twins according to news reports, but appears to have no compassion for Black youth as a whole. Ninety-eight percent of Wayne County’s juvenile lifers are Black.

“Although we had a short amount of time under the statute, we gave a considered and thoughtful review. We combed trial transcripts, prison records, and numerous other documents,” she claimed.

But Charles Lewis, who has spent 41 years in prison for a crime that VOD research showed he did not commit, told VOD he received a letter saying Worthy is seeking JLWOP again for him, with no reasons cited.

Court personnel testified in post-conviction hearings this year in front of Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Qiana Lillard that Lewis’ entire court record, consisting of three cartons of files, has disappeared. His court register of actions shows only entries beginning in the year 2000. There is no official court file on those either, only a sketchy file of documents with no records of action related to the post-conviction hearings kept in Judge Lillard’s office, which the court reporter threw together after VOD’s request to view it.

Under previous Michigan Supreme and Appeals Court rulings, Lewis should have had his conviction vacated and been released pending a possible new trial. The previous rulings are People v Adkins, 436 Mich 878; 461 NW2d 366 (1990),  in which the Michigan State Supreme Court vacated the conviction of the defendant because court reporter files containing his guilty plea were lost. He was released from prison. Earlier Courts of Appeals found similarly in People v Jones, and People v. Horton. (See links at end of story.)

Charles Lewis at age 57.

Charles Lewis at age 57.

“I think that my case is the test case for how missing transcripts and files will be dealt with in the future,” Lewis wrote to VOD. “I also think that if I can successfully challenge the juvenile statute that it will help other similarly-situated juveniles in the future. Right now I’m 57 years old and the best years of my life are behind me. So, I fight to make things better for those coming behind me. Hopefully, if I play my part they won’t have to go through what I’ve gone through.”

Attorney Valerie Newman of SADO is coordinating its defense for Lewis and other state juvenile lifers. Since SADO took over his case,  no further hearings on locating his files or his demand for a dismissal of his conviction have been held. Neither Newman, SADO Deputy Director Michael Mittlestat, SADO Director Dawn Van Hoek, nor State Rep. Rosemary Robinson have yet responded to emails from VOD requesting to know why a motion to vacate Lewis’ conviction has not been filed under SADO’s legal obligation to their client.

(For full email, see: http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Media-inquiry-to-Valerie-Newman-et-al-re-Charles-Lewis-1.pdf)

Atty. Valerie Newman at Feb. prayer breakfast for Davontae Sanford. Newman has received most credit in the mainstream media for Sanford

Atty. Valerie Newman at Feb. prayer breakfast for Davontae Sanford, charged at the age of 14 for four drug-related murders in 2007. Newman has received most credit in the mainstream media for Sanford’s release. However, innocence clinic Attys. David Moran and Megan Crane filed the 2015 motion asking for his exoneration, spending extensive time on the matter. Instead, Newman and an atty. from Dykema Gossett negotiated a settlement for “dismissal without prejudice” of the charges, meaning they can be brought back. Sanford is NOT exonerated.

Newman  told VOD, “The State Appellate Defender Office will vigorously represent all clients in post-Montgomery matters, when appointed by courts to do so.  SADO is Michigan’s only statewide, state-funded, public defender office.  Like the Attorney General, SADO has received some state funding to support litigation in the juvenile lifer cases.  Because prosecutors are seeking life without parole sentences in a large number of cases, and many contested hearings will result, SADO will seek additional funding to support its duty to provide constitutionally adequate representation to its clients.”

Worthy amended her July 22 press release in response to VOD’s questions on the Lewis case.

“In the cases where we recommended life without parole many of the juveniles committed disturbing crimes, and once they were in prison they continued to commit crimes, and have had serious misconduct issues well into mature adulthood,” Worthy said without specifics.

“These are facts that simply cannot be ignored. However, I think that before the re-sentencing hearings begin, that we will receive more records and documents related to the some of the 60 offenders that we will continue to review, because this may cause a different recommendation in some cases. All of our reasoning in these cases will be revealed in court at the re-sentencing hearings.”

Although Worthy said motions had been filed in court July 22, there are none listed in individual files, contrary to law making all such court records available to the public. VOD has left a message for Chief Judge Pro-Tem Timothy Kenny requesting copies of these records.

Edward Sanders

Other juvenile lifers have told VOD they too were notified of prospective prosecutor motions in their cases, but raised some issues.

“The prosecutor agreed to have me resentenced to a term of years,” Edward Sanders, who has served 41 years for a 1975 drive-by killing in which he was not the shooter, wrote. “As you noted, they may very well seek a 40-60 years sentence. I will request 25-40 because the MDOC may very well not give us our good-time which would reduce any sentence to time served. The ACLU is seeking to make this happen as well. I am looking for work as a paralegal. If I have a job offer before I get back to court it may very well give me the low end of the sentence!”

The state statutes bar consideration of good time for juvenile lifers, although it is allowed for every other category of prisoner.

Sanders, incarcerated at Chippewa Correctional Facility, wrote regarding another prisoner there.

Matthew Bentley at 14, when he was charged, and today.

Matthew Bentley at 14, when he was charged, and today.

“This is to inform you about Matthew Scott Bentley. His attorney Douglas R. Mulkoff wrote him and said [he] spoke to Huron County Prosecuting Attorney Timothy Rutkowski. He informed me that they have filed a notice of their intention to go forward seeking the LWOP sentence against [him]. The case will go before Richard Knoblock’s successor Judge Prill. . . .[Mulkoff] asked him if any family members were taking a hard line and he said yes, the daughter who lives in Pennsylvania is taking a hard line wanting you to not get a term of years sentence. He asked that Mr. Bentley not lose hope and that his office will not give up.”

Bentley was 14 when he broke into a home, stole a gun, and shot the homeowner. He told the Guardian that he regretted his action at that very second. Nothing is said in Miller about consultation with the families of victims, but such language was included in Michigan’s statutes.

Henry Hill, Jr.

Henry Hill, Jr.

Keith Maxey, currently 25

Keith Maxey

Bentley is one of the original plaintiffs in the ACLU’s Hill v. Snyder case. Henry Hill was originally the first plaintiff. LaBelle has said that he too is facing a prosecutor recommendation of life without parole. Another plaintiff, Keith Maxey, is facing the same recommendation. Maxey is only 25 and recently was denied surgery for life-threatening problems by the Michigan Department of Corrections. Both Hill and Maxey are from Detroit, in Wayne County, where Prosecutor Kym Worthy’s office made the recommendations.

It is not known what recommendation Worthy made for Cortez Davis, one of three key juvenile lifers whose cases reached the Michigan Supreme Court under Miller. The MSC ruled against them, saying Miller was not retroactive.

Their cases, along with that of Charles Lewis and several others, made it on appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, which remanded them back to the Michigan State Supreme Court after the Montgomery ruling on retroactivity. The MSC remanded the cases to the trial judges or replacements, but stating they are to be re-sentenced under the challenged state statutes.

Judge-Vera-Massey-Jones-Photo-Legal-Aid-and-Defender-Association

Judge Vera Massey-Jones

Cortez Davis 2

Cortez Davis

But Cortez Davis’ case is unique. His sentencing Judge Vera Massey-Jones ruled in 1994 that juvenile life without parole was unconstitutional, and refused to sentence Davis to that term.

Michigan Appeals Courts overturned that sentence and Massey-Jones’ subsequent rulings after Miller was handed down. In the order below, Judge Massey-Jones again scheduled a re-sentencing hearing for Davis in 2012, but Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy appealed her order and got it overturned. Judge Massey-Jones was set to retire in 2015. It is not currently known if she will return to hear Davis’ re-sentencing or whether another judge will be assigned.

DAVIS orderDavis recently contacted VOD.

“I would like for you to show that the rehabilitation process works and show that it has worked in me,” he said. “Like I told you before, in 1994 I was sentenced to 10 to 40 years and that sentence was taken from me by the Michigan Court of Appeals [citing] the statute that my sentencing judge (Hon. Vera Massey Jones) declared unconstitutional according to the Eighth Amendment at that time. Eighteen years later, in 2012 the United States Supreme Court declared that the same statute that Judge Jones found to be unconstitutional was in fact unconstitutional, therefore, requiring my original sentence to be re-instated.

Eighth AmendmentIn addition to not being the shooter, I am very sorry for the life that was taken and I accept responsibility for my actions, but the current law does not take into consideration that some juveniles were just aiders in a robbery or drug deal, but never had any intentions on anyone getting hurt. Like myself, I never thought that far ahead. I was homeless and just wanted a place to get out of the cold for awhile and I agreed to do something that had never crossed my mind before. However, violence was never something that I just went out and did.”

He added, “The MDOC does not offer lifers anything beyond a GED where education is concerned due to making those with close release dates a priority. If you take a look at my accomplishment as it relates to education, you’ll find that my determination fostered by my recognition for change in myself led me to succeed more than the average prisoner that did not have life. In other words, not knowing if I would ever get out of prison did not stop me from changing my life for the better. I still saw reasons to change and become a better person and now I hope to show society that I am able to live among them and be an asset and not a burden. I want to help with crime prevention. I know that I can reach young people. I do it now with the GOALS program here talking to at risk youths.”

“I ask just for a chance,” he concluded. “My trial judge saw something in me that I did not, but I dedicated my life to making her vision a reality and it is now my vision. I see myself the way I need to be seen and that is as a productive citizen.

Timothy Kincaid

Juvenile lifer Timothy Kincaid, now 54, was 16 when he was charged as an accomplice to an older man in three 1976 murders. VOD attended a hearing June 27 on a post-Montgomery motion for relief from judgment in his case.

“I didn’t think there was any reason for doubt after the Miller v. Alabama ruling, ” Wayne County Circuit Court Judge James Callahan said. “I’ve had a jury treading water since August of last year on another [juvenile lifer] case.”

It was not decided whether judges or juries would handle juvenile re-sentencing cases until a joint Court of Appeals panel ruled July 21 in the case of Kenya Ali Hyatt that judges would be responsible.

Kincaid’s attorney, Gerald Evelyn, said he was “guardedly optimistic” that Callahan would give Kincaid the minimum sentence of 25 years and that he would be immediately paroled. He said a woman who was injured during the multiple murders and is in a wheelchair plans to come to court to ask for Kincaid’s release.

Kincaid’s  friend, now Minister Ervin Bell, attended the June 17 hearing.

Minister Ervin Bell

Minister Ervin Bell (Facebook photo)

“I’ve known him since childhood,” Min. Bell said. “Me and little Tim hung out together just about every day. But I clearly remember the day that [an older man] pulled up on us in his ’77 Fleetwood. Tim was blinded by the flash. Whatever part he played in the murders, he was forced to play. He was not the type to try to hurt anybody.”

Another post-conviction hearing was held Aug. 5, with Kincaid present. A hearing is set for Sept. 29 at 9 a.m. in front of Judge Callahan, likely for Kincaid’s Miller re-sentencing.

As in Kincaid’s case, juvenile lifer Damion Todd was forgiven by the mother of a young woman killed during a shoot-out between two groups of teens. She was on Todd’s visiting list for years until he was moved and her health declined. He said she told him, “I forgive you Damion, and I want you to promise me that when you come that you won’t let me and your family down.”

“I am constantly in a state of anxiety as I eagerly await future Miller/Montgomery re-sentencing hearings, and/or a Hill parole board hearing. I am prepared, as I have just finished completing another class . . . sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee and the National Lifers of America geared toward either one of these proceedings. Currently I am helping a few other men to facilitate a class for our group of juvenile lifers.”

Damion Todd

Damion Todd (r) with brother and mother

He said earlier, “From a personal standpoint, while never glorifying this tragic ordeal, I yearn for the opportunity to educate not only at-risk youth, all youth. The consequences of one bad choice will not only change the course of your life, but it will also administer so much psychological harm and pain on the lives of people that you don’t even know. As a man, I refuse to allow anyone’s life that has been tragically lost go in vain, and don’t at least try to open the eyes and ears of some at-risk youth.”

One key sentence in his letter summed up the plight of juvenile lifers in Michigan, which has the second highest number in the country, as well as 2,270 across the U.S.

“Although one of my immediate personal goals is to be the best person I can be under these circumstances, I am constantly and diligently working towards becoming a productive FREE MAN in society which is something I’ve never experienced before BECAUSE I CAME TO PRISON AS A CHILD.”

The-cost-of-incarceration-INFOGRAPHIC-1024x620

Related documents:

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Hill-v-Snyder-injuntion-denied-8-3-16.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Hill-v-Snyder-reconsider.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Kenya-Hyatt-COA-ruling-July-21-2016.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Juvenile-lifers-mcl-769-25a-3.pdf

Related articles:

http://fairsentencingofyouth.org/2016/06/16/colorado-eliminates-life-without-parole/

http://fairsentencingofyouth.org/2016/06/07/philadelphia-da-will-no-longer-seek-jlwop/

http://fairsentencingofyouth.org/2016/05/27/iowa-supreme-court-bans-life-without-parole-sentences-for-children/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/08/02/michigan-files-for-jlwop-for-80-of-juvenile-lifers-fed-court-wants-all-parole-eligible/

 http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/07/26/worthy-others-want-large-portion-of-juvenile-lifers-to-die-in-prison-despite-ussc-rulings/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/06/02/stop-torturing-michigans-juvenile-lifers-with-state-delays-freedom-now/

http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/3/9/un-expert-slams-us-as-only-nation-to-sentence-kids-to-life-without-parole.html

http://www.detroitnews.com/story/opinion/2016/06/02/prisoner-re-entry-detroit-comeback/85268614/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/05/24/free-charles-lewis-innocent-juvenile-lifer-who-has-spent-41-years-in-state-prisons/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/05/18/michigan-juvenile-lifers-score-6th-circuit-appeals-court-victory-in-hill-v-snyder/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/04/30/why-is-juvenile-lifer-charles-lewis-still-in-prison-16-yrs-after-his-case-was-dismissed/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/04/12/dying-in-prison-michigan-juvenile-lifers-get-new-hope-under-montgomery-still-face-obstacles/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2014/03/06/mich-supreme-court-hears-3-key-cases-today-re-ussc-ruling-barring-mandatory-juvenile-life-without-parole/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/02/12/u-s-judge-rules-all-michigan-juvenile-lifers-eligible-for-parole/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/02/12/juvenile-lifer-reflects-on-hill-ruling-by-judge-omeara/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/01/10/michigan-juvenile-lifers-justice-delayed-is-justice-denied-re-sentencing-in-key-detroit-case-cortez-davis-jan-25/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/10/28/michigans-juvenile-lifers-want-state-to-comply-with-u-s-supreme-court-ruling/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/10/28/michigans-juvenile-lifers/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/08/16/michigan-challenges-u-s-supreme-court-ruling-on-juvenile-life-without-parole/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/07/02/us-supreme-courts-juvenile-lifer-decision-brings-hope-to-thousands/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/07/02/nations-high-court-ends-mandatory-life-without-parole-sentences-for-youth/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/03/18/us-supreme-court-to-hear-key-juvenile-lifer-homicide-cases-march-20-2012/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/03/04/juvenile-lifer-anthony-jones-wins-new-sentence-battle-for-justice-for-all-juvenile-and-parolable-lifers-still-needed/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/11/12/us-supreme-court-agrees-to-hear-juvenile-lifer-cases-could-have-major-impact-in-michigan/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/11/11/why-michigan-has-more-juvenile-life-sentences-than-almost-any-other-state/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/09/06/battle-for-juvenile-lifers-picks-up-steam-in-michigan-california/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/03/06/voice-of-juvenile-defendants/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2010/11/24/aclu-lawsuit-challenges-life-without-parole-for-michigan-juveniles/

#FreeMichiganJuvenileLifersNOW, #SaveOurChildren, #PrisonNation, #ENDMassIncarceration, #SchooltoPrisonPipeline, #Breakdownthewalls, #Beatbackthebullies, #Blacklivesmatter, #BlacklivesmatterDetroit, #Blackkidslivesmatter#StandUpNow, #StopWaronBlackAmerica, #StopWaronourYouth, #Michissippigoddam

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MICHIGAN FREEDOM RIDERS PACK 6TH CIRCUIT IN CINCI TO OVERTURN ‘JIM CROW’ EM LAW PA 436

Fifty-two percent of African-Americans in the state are under EM rule. The spirit of the Three/Fifths Compromise lives on in Michigan.”–Atty. Sanders

Opponents of “Dictator Act” 436 came from Flint, Detroit, Pontiac, Cincinnati, among other locations

Attorneys: justice will happen not in courts, but by taking it to the streets

Story by Diane Bukowski

Videos by Leona McElvene (except Democracy Now video on Flint water)

August 9, 2016 

Detroit activist Les Little led busload from his city.

CINCINNATI, OH—Busloads of angry opponents of Michigan’s Emergency Manager (EM) Law, Public Act 436, descended on the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals Aug. 4 to hear their attorneys’ oral arguments in front of a three-judge panel appointed by both former Bush Presidents. The 22 plaintiffs in the case, Phillips et al. v. Snyder, are asking the court to find the law broadly unconstitutional.

“This draconian law has only been used on African-American cities,” said long-time Detroit activist Les Little, organizer of one busload. “It’s nothing but Jim Crow in the 21st century. There is a steady flow of fascism creeping into our cities and across America. This is the most important case of our time.”

The Michigan Legislature passed PA 436 in the dead of night over the 2012 Christmas break, recalling Ku Klux Klan members who, torches blazing, galloped through Black communities in the South for decades, lynching, raping, and pillaging. The law allows Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder to remove duly-elected city and school district officials and appoint mini-dictators with full executive and legislative powers instead. He has done so only in majority-Black cities and school districts, which have been stripped of their public assets and even dissolved, in the case of the Detroit Public Schools.

Voters in 83 out of 86 counties repealed PA 436’s identical predecessor PA4 in November, 2012, only to see it replaced with a law made referendum-proof by inserting minor fiscal appropriations clauses.

Video above: Edith Lee Payne, who as a teenager marched with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Washington D.C. in 1963, comments on her reasons for going to Cincinnati. She is currently the Executive Director, Lee-Lovett Foundation (LLF).

The new Freedom Riders included city officials and residents of Flint, poisoned by lead-contaminated water under Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder’s EM Darnell Earley, Detroit school board members whose district has just been abolished under the same EM, Detroit city workers and retirees reeling from cuts imposed under an illegal bankruptcy filed by EM Kevyn Orr, and Pontiac city officials whose city has been stripped of its assets under a series of EM’s.

Pontiac City Council member Kermit WIlliams

Pontiac City Council member Kermit Williams

Pontiac City Councilman Kermit Williams, a plaintiff in the case, wore a T-shirt proclaiming: WE CAN LEAD.

“Sixty-thousand people in Pontiac have lost our city,” Williams told VOD during the ride to Cincinnati.

“After six years and three EM’s, 90 percent of the city has been privatized. We lost our Fire Department to Waterford, where EM Schimmel lives. Out of an original 800 city workers, we may have 35 left. They sold our water treatment plant, our golf course and even our cemeteries without the approval of City Council. They privatized the Buildings and Safety department and janitorial services. The EM signed a three-year snow contract with an outfit that had never plowed snow before. They don’t go from curb-to-curb, only down the middle of the street.”

But he said, “The saddest part for me is the 70 and 80 year old ladies who come to my office crying. They have lost any hope for democracy.”

Freedom Riders from bus organized by Les Little disembark in Cincinnati. On the way back, they were delayed by a flat tire but kept their spirits high.

Freedom Riders from bus organized by Les Little disembark in Cincinnati. On the way back, they were delayed by a flat tire but kept their spirits high.

The courtroom was packed with union members wearing green AFSCME T-shirts (Michigan AFSCME Council 25 is also a plaintiff), and others from Michigan’s beleaguered Black majority cities, as well as AFSCME supporters from Cincinnati. Additional chairs had to be set up in the rear to accommodate the overflow.

Sr. Judge Richard Suhrheinrich

Sr. Judge Richard Suhrheinrich

Judge John A. Rogers

Judge John A. Rogers

Judge Richard Griffin

Judge Richard Griffin

Senior Judge Richard F. Suhrheinrich, appointed to the bench in 1990 by the first Pres. George Bush, and Judges John M. Rogers and Richard Allen Griffin, appointed by former Pres. George W. Bush, listened to the oral arguments, allowing one-half hour per side.

Attorneys John Philo , Julie Hurwitz and Herbert Sanders argued for the plaintiffs from Detroit, Flint, Pontiac and Benton Harbor, listed below:

Elena Herrada, Russell Bellant, Catherine Phillips, Joseph Valenti, Michigan AFSCME Council 25, Tawanna Simpson, Lamar Lemmons, Donald Watkins, Kermit Williams, Duane Seats, Juanita Henry, Mary Alice Adams, William Kincaid, Paul Jordan, Bernadel Jefferson, Dennis Knowles, Jim Holley, Charles E Williams, Michael A Owens, Lawrence Glass, Deedee Coleman and Allyson Abrams

PA436box2They are appealing U.S. District Court Judge George Caram Steeh’s ruling of Nov. 19, 2014 in the case. Steeh dismissed eight of nine claims at the state’s request, upholding only the claim based on the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment, which cited the discriminatory use of Emergency Managers only in Michigan’s majority-Black cities.

Steeh, who heard oral arguments in the case April 29, 2014, clearly waited for U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes’ approval of the Detroit bankruptcy plan, despite having promised a speedy ruling after the oral argument.

The plaintiffs later had Steeh dismiss their Equal Protection claim without prejudice, meaning it can be brought back, then appealed the case as a whole to the Sixth Circuit, Key arguments from their brief (at  ) are at left.

Philo told the Sixth Circuit judges there is no precedent for PA 436 in U.S. history. He noted that both the Sixth Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court, while allowing states a lot of discretion under the 10th Amendment, have never approved replacing elected legislative representatives with appointed individuals. The plaintiffs argue in their brief that city and school board officials are by definition state legislative representatives.

“The Supreme Court has long held that the Voting Rights Act (VRA) of 1986 protects minority voters from having their votes canceled out,” Hurwitz argued. “PA 436 clearly violates Section 2 of the VRA. Votes end up meaning nothing when an Emergency Manager is appointed. PA 436 is unprecedented. This is not a voting dilution case but a voting elimination case, in which all governmental legislative authority in predominantly African American communities is completely vested in an Emergency Manager.”

Below: “Democracy Now” interview with Flint resident Nayirrah Shariff of the Flint Democracy Defense League

Sanders argued that PA 436 violates both the 1st and the 13th Amendments. He turned and waved his arm at Flint and Detroit residents crowding the court, telling the judges they were there to challenge the catastrophic poisoning of Flint’s water system, and the elimination of the Detroit Public School district under Emergency Managers.

“PA 436 singles out elected officials and deprives them of their right to speak within government on behalf of their electors,” Sanders said. “The right to vote at local levels has a significant impact on voters’ lives. . .For example, at one time the elected Detroit school board determined the curriculum and schoolbooks for Detroit students, but that power was taken away under PA 436.”

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder, a/k/a PA 436 Slavemaster.

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder, a/k/a PA 436 Slavemaster.

He noted that voters do not have an opportunity to take action against PA 436 as Judge Steeh claimed. The state legislature inserted  fiscal appropriations clausea into it, making it referendum-proof under the state constitution.

To back up Hurwitz’ VRA claim, Sanders listed some of the 12 predominantly white cities not under EM control, but with similar or identical fiscal scores to majority Black communities that have EM’s. Although the state argued it no longer uses the fiscal scoring system, Sanders said it had been used through 2012.

“They include Crystal Falls, 98 percent white with a ranking of 7, Dearborn Heights, 83 percent white with a ranking of 8-9, and Jackson city, 68 percent white with a ranking as high as 7 at one time,” Sanders said. “Fifty-two percent of African-Americans in the state are under EM rule. The spirit of the Three/Fifths Compromise lives on in Michigan. It’s the same way slaveowners used slaves to enhance their political influence. They now put private profit-seeking corporations in charge of government. Just ask the people of Flint, and the parents of DPS students who are here today.”

Below: Freedom Riders on bus sponsored by AFSCME Council 25.

The crowd had difficulty keeping silent as Attorney Ann M. Sherman, representing defendants Gov. Snyder and former State Treasurer Andy Dillon, spoke.

“The plaintiffs challenge the wisdom of the Michigan legislature in passing PA 436,” Sherman said. “It does not run afoul of the Constitution. It is a restorative, temporary measure for the benefit of the state and its credit ratings. Local governments are a creature of the state. . . .The state does get to govern its municipalities. It has just reorganized local entities.”

Judge Rogers asked why powers like a school board’s authority over curriculum, which do not affect finances, are taken away under PA 436.

Below: Andrea Clark, leader of Mothers of Murdered Children, rode the bus to Cincinnati. Crime rates in cities affected by PA 436 have risen due to increasing poverty (59 percent of Detroit’s children live in poverty) brought about by measures like privatization of city jobs and services.

“Michigan for decades had Emergency Financial Managers who could only act in terms of financial decisions,” he said. “It has had decades of laws that have not fixed the situation. . . Can they just get tired and have everything run by the state?”

Judges Suhrheinrich and Griffin also asked at various points about the racial disparity in the application of PA 436.

Sherman claimed local elected officials are not removed from office, but just have their powers suspended temporarily. She said local governments can appeal the state’s rulings and even vote to remove the EM.

In fact, as noted in the plaintiffs’ brief, the Governor can simply appoint another EM after declaring another financial emergency.

Bill Davis, Pres. of DAREA (l) marches with protesters against 30,000 tax foreclosures in Wayne County on June 8, 2015.

Bill Davis, Pres. of DAREA (l) marches with protesters against 30,000 tax foreclosures in Wayne County on June 8, 2015.

“It’s temporary for a long time,” Bill Davis, President of the Detroit Active and Retired Employee Association (DAREA) said after the hearing. “Slavery lasted for hundreds of years.”

DAREA and other groups appealed the Detroit bankruptcy declaration to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals. Oral arguments on that case were held last month. DAREA packed that hearing as well.

AFSCME member Gerald Thompson reacted, “They were so disingenuous—don’t talk about disparate impact, the city is a creature of the state. Evidently the air you breathe, the land you have are creatures of the state as well. EM’s create the friends and families plan; they have a monopoly over citizens’ lives.”

Sayeed Sanders

Sayeed Sanders, interviewed by VOD during the bus ride, gave a broad analysis of the situation.

“They knew Detroit was a city with a strong union and Black movement background,” he said. “They couldn’t bring neoliberalism* into the U.S. without taking away the people’s democratic rights here and in Michigan. They are privatizing everything to make a profit.

“For the past 30 years, both Democrats and Republicans have bought into Reaganite policies, market solutions. Even President Obama didn’t move to deal with unemployment and foreclosures. There is no profit in keeping people in their homes. Even Obama’s health care program makes sure the insurance companies make a profit. Bernie Sanders at least signaled that the role of the government was to provide services, but the profit motive is so strong nobody in power cares. During the Democratic Convention, Hillary Clinton brought [retired Marine Corp.] General John Allen on stage. They’re talking about more war—a preview of things to come.”

Retired Marine Corps. General John Allen, who marched on stage with U.S. military veterans, spoke to chants of "USA!" "USA!" at Democratic National Convention.

Retired Marine Corps. General John Allen, who marched on stage with U.S. military veterans at the Democratic Nat’l. Convention, spoke to chants of “USA!” “USA!” responding to his war rhetoric.

The PA 436 Freedom Riders rallied on the steps of the Potter J.Stewart courthouse after the hearing, chanting, “No Justice, No Peace,” and listening to their attorneys’ analysis of the events, as heard in the videos in this story, courtesy of Freedom Rider and long-time community activist Leona McElvene.

Below, attorneys speak after hearing. Shown in front of video at the beginning is DAREA President Bill Davis.

Below, Attorney Herb Sanders is interviewed by Sayeed Sanders.

*VOD: Neoliberalism is a global free market economic philosophy that favors austerity for the people, privatization of government functions for profit, the deregulation of markets and industries, and other policies. It has dominated the world scene for the last 30 years, with the financial crisis of 2007-08 being one of its ultimate results.

To hear complete oral arguments, go to http://www.opn.ca6.uscourts.gov/internet/court_audio/aud2.php?link=recent/08-04-2016%20-%20Thursday/15-2394%20Catherine%20Phillips%20v%20%20Richard%20Snyder.mp3&name=15-2394%20Catherine%20Phillips%20v%20%20Richard%20Snyder

Related documents:

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Hill-V-Snyder-Plaintiffs-brief-7-25-16-1.pdf

Related stories:

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2014/11/20/judge-denies-all-but-pa-436-lawsuit-equal-protection-claim-after-detroit-bankruptcy-over/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/08/16/state-stays-lawsuits-vs-em-law-pa-436-citing-detroit-chapter-9-bankruptcy-filing/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/06/30/detroit-retirees-pack-6th-circuit-in-bankruptcy-appeals-we-fight-because-were-right/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2015/10/16/flint-water-and-the-no-blame-game-true-files-fed-complaint-re-disparate-impact/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2015/06/16/authority-approves-bankruptcy-theft-of-detroits-water-system-retirees-begin-referendum-campaign/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2015/10/13/will-regional-takeover-of-detroit-water-make-residents-of-6-counties-drink-flint-water/

BI-PARTISAN DEAL LED TO FLINT WATER POISONING FOR PROFIT: THE KAREGNONDI WATER AUTHORITY (KWA)

#JailSnyder, #OverturnPA436, #EndJimCrow, #Justice4Flint, #WATERISLIFE, #StopWaronBlackAmerica, #StandUpNow, #Beatbackthebullies, #Save Detroit, #SaveDPS, #SaveOurChildren

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TELFORD FIGHTS ATTACK; DETROIT SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS RUNNING ‘SPEED’ SLATE ON NOV. BALLOT

Some of Detroit's current school board members and supporters attended state loan board meeting in Lansing July 18 to protest theft of $1.5 B in DPS assets, $385 M more in debt.

Some of Detroit’s current school board members and supporters who attended state loan board meeting in Lansing July 18 to protest theft of $1.5 B in DPS assets, $385 M more in debt.

11-member SPEED slate runs in Nov. Detroit Board of Ed elections

Detroit News slams slate and Superintendent candidate Telford

By Dr. John Telford

Aug. 8, 2016

(VOD ed. note: Former DPS Superintendent Dr. David Snead endorsed this article wholeheartedly, sending it in an email to dozens of his contacts.)

Dr. John Telford

Dr. John Telford

Dr. David Snead in 1994.

Dr. David Snead in 1994.

It would appear that the Detroit News thinks I’m Public Enemy Number One (click on the News’  web tab, below).  Actually, their very real fear that I may  get elected has given my Detroit School Board candidacy some good publicity via this  August 5 editorial.


It masqueraded as a legitimate news article, even though this editorializing “article” clearly contains either carelessly or intentionally wrong information about me and [the] reform SPEED platform for Detroit schools, as well as neglecting to acknowledge how the schools got into their present sad fix.

[That was] an entirely unwarranted state takeover commencing way back in 1999, at which time the district had a $114 million surplus and student test scores that were at the state midpoint and rising, but which now has a billion-dollar deficit and scores that are the worst in America except for those of the stolen and failing EAA schools.

Detroit News editor Nolan Finley and writer Ingrid Jacques

Detroit News editor Nolan Finley and writer Ingrid Jacques celebrate dissolution of Detroit.

Anyone who has read my 2010 autobiography ‘A Life on the RUN – Seeking and Safeguarding Social Justice’ available at Amazon Books by typing in Dr. John Telford (www.AlifeontheRUN.com ), knows that I have opposed this disenfranchising state control of DPS and also that I never supported the teaching of ‘Ebonics,’ as Ms. Jacques erroneously asserts.

Quite the opposite–I supported and continue to propound a counter-Ebonics instructional antidote for written and spoken non-standard dialects, and I set forth this instructional antidote in my Superintendent’s Academic Plan when I served pro bono in that capacity for ten contentious months in 2012-2013 as the democratically elected board’s appointee, wherein I clashed on an almost hourly basis with the gubernatorially-appointed Emergency Financial Manager of DPS.

Eight of those good Board members–LaMar Lemmons, Elena Herrada, Tawanna Simpson, Juvette Hawkins-Williams, Wanda Redmond, Patricia Johnson-Singleton, Rev. David Murray, and Ida Short have formulated an eleven-member SPEED Slate of candidates along with me and Victor Gibson and Yolanda Peoples, and I urge you and your friends to vote for me and for six other members of our SPEED Slate for the seven positions on the “new” School Board, which Board is being reduced from the former Board’s number of eleven. ( my acronym ‘SPEED’ stands for ‘Saving Public Education with Excellence in Detroit.’)

Detroit School Board member Elena Herrada with others announcing class action lawsuit for DPS students.

.Detroit School Board members Elena Herrada, Lamar Lemmons, John Telford with others announcing class action lawsuit for DPS students.

Every Detroit voter needs to be aware that the ‘disloyal opposition’ will back corporate-collusive Board candidates financially with the conspiratorial intent to see all Detroit schools chartered within two to three years and thus capture that billion-dollar market for their corporate overseers.   Support your grass-roots-friendly SPEED Slate, which incidentally  is endorsed by longtime schools activist Helen Moore–and e-mail me at drjohntelfordedd@aol.com or call me at 313-460-8272 for specifics regarding our SPEED Agenda and why SPEED-committed candidates must be elected to save our once-exemplary pre-state-takeover Detroit Public Schools and our resultantly educationally cheated schoolchildren.  Any candidates who decline to commit to the SPEED agenda are either naively unaware of what is viscerally at stake here or are indeed wolves in the woods whose refusal to commit to the SPEED Agenda will flush them out of the woods and expose their true intentions.

See: Ingrid Jacques of the Detroit News attacks John Telford’s DPS board candidacy:

http://www.detroitnews.com/story/opinion/columnists/ingrid-jacques/2016/08/04/jacques-keep-bad-actors-dps-board/88282088/

DPS students: their future is at stake.

DPS students: their future is at stake.

Related from VOD

Lawsuit against DPS dissolution:

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/DPS-BE-lawsuit-Court-of-Claims.pdf

State Financial Review Committee package on DPS dissolution bills, etc.

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/FRC-Meeting-Packet-6-24-16_1-Special-Meeting-for-DPS-Oversight.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/The-Parthenon-Group-1.pdf

Related VOD stories:

“JIM CROW! GENOCIDE!” STATE LOAN BOARD APPROVES THEFT OF $1.5 B IN DPS ASSETS, $385 M IN LOANS

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/07/07/wall-street-greed-death-of-detroit-public-schools-fight-back-in-court-on-streets/

http://www.globalresearch.ca/detroit-public-schools-a-case-study-in-american-apartheid/5534407

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/04/24/state-war-on-detroit-public-schools-continues-selling-black-children-to-the-highest-bidder/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/05/06/genocidal-snyderrhodes-plan-harms-detroit-public-school-children-workers-residents/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/03/29/detroit-kids-in-danger-bills-end-dps-pay-off-banks-with-state-control-tax-levies-closings-charters/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2014/11/15/detroit-bankruptcy-plan-genocide-in-usas-largest-black-majority-city-rich-get-95-9-poor-get-13-5/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/12/04/detroit-bankruptcy-eligibility-decision-unprecedented-worst-in-the-country/

#SaveOurKids,  #SaveOurChildren#SaveDPS, #StopSchoolClosings, #MoneyforEducationnotforBanks, #MoneyforEducationnotforwar, #BlackLivesMatter, #BlackLivesMatterDetroit, #BlackEducationMatters, #Beatbackthebullies, #StandUpNow, #StoptheWaronBlackAmerica, #DefendPublicEducation

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DID BALTIMORE COUNTY POLICE VIOLATE THE CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS OF KORRYN GAINES?

VIDEO ABOVE: KORRYN GAINES’ FAMILY OUTSIDE HOSPITAL, DENIED RIGHT TO SEE KODY, 5, SHOT BY POLICE

Korryn Gaines, 23, mother of 2, shot and killed by Baltimore County police

Son Kody, 5, wounded during confrontation

Police had no SEARCH WARRANT, brought out armored vehicles against mother and child

grio logo

Opinion

By Chuck Hobbs | August 6, 2016

Ever since Korryn Gaines, 23, was killed in her home in Randallstown, Maryland earlier this week, a number of black women have taken to social media to express their concerns that black men seem unconcerned when black women are killed during law enforcement encounters. While some black men have chosen to take exception and engage in a rhetorical war with respect to these assertions, as a black man and lawyer, I felt that my energies and expertise would be better suited to argue what I and many Americans already believe, which is that Gaines, 23, and a mother of two children, had her constitutional rights violated by law enforcement.

Korryn Gaines, 23, with baby

Korryn Gaines, 23, with baby

One of the most frustrating aspects of being a black lawyer is hearing judges recite the mantra that all citizens are to receive equal justice under the law, while knowing full well that such often is an illusory concept with respect to blacks.

Police officers are presumed to know that the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution generally protects citizens against unreasonable search and seizures. While the police have to secure a warrant to enter into someone’s residence, federal and state courts have further recognized that officers must utilize a “knock-and-announce” rule that, in theory, protects the security, privacy, and property interests of people in their homes. Now, there are exceptions to this rule, most notably that if officers believe that forcible entry is necessary to apprehend an armed individual suspected of committing a violent felony offense, they can burst into a residence or in some drug cases, if police fear that the occupants will destroy evidence, they can burst into a residence.

But with respect to Gaines, she was neither a violent fugitive or suspect nor a dope dealer; the warrants that were being served on Gaines were for misdemeanors. As such, one must question why the police obtained a key from her landlord and attempted to enter her residence despite not having the aforementioned exigent circumstances?

Now, it is important to note that Gaines had a prior encounter with law enforcement that has been uploaded to YouTube where she questioned their authority to draft tickets or otherwise detain her. Whether the officers who went to her apartment to serve the misdemeanor warrants knew this in advance has yet to be determined, but according to reports in the Baltimore Sun, when they used the key, the chain latch prevented their entry and at that point, officers kicked the door in, allegedly observed Gaines pointing a shotgun at them, and backed out of the apartment. After an hours long standoff, a SWAT officer shot and killed Gaines and wounded her five year old son.

It has been very frustrating to read comments on both social and traditional media where people have dismissed Gaines death as being her fault because “she was crazy” or because she did not follow commands from the police. First, while rarely discussed, under common law, citizens have a right to resist unlawful commands from law enforcement up to and including deadly force. Knowing that Gaines often spoke out against bad police practices, how do we know for certain that Gaines was not in fear that law enforcement was there to retaliate?

Philando Castile

Philando Castile

For those who would answer this question by suggesting that had she just complied, that she would be alive, I remind that Cliven Bundy’s followers, most of whom were white, did not comply with orders to remove themselves from federal property and they were not shot within hours of the first commands to leave. I also point out that Philando Castile’s compliance with providing his license and notifying St. Paul, Minnesota police Officer Jeronimo Yanez that he had a concealed weapons permit still did not prevent said officer from killing him.

The U.S. Constitution does not provide for a fascist police state in which law enforcement officers are endowed with a right to kick down doors, shoot first and ask questions later.

One of thousands of Black Lives Matter protests

One of thousands of Black Lives Matter protests

The Framers of the Constitution were absolutely opposed to such unfettered authority based upon their experiences of unreasonable searches and seizures by the British government during the colonial era. But with the issue of police encounters with private citizens having become politicized, with the Black Lives Matter Movement championed by progressives being countered by conservatives who insist that there is a war on the police, it is vitally important that law enforcement officials are forced to follow the letter of the laws that govern their rights and responsibilities in all situations, but especially where the potential use of deadly force is concerned.

Attorney Chuck Hobbs

Attorney Chuck Hobbs

I sense that had such caution been used this week, if the police had allowed Gaines’s mother, Rhonda Dormeus, to speak with her daughter or had crisis negotiators been given more time to quell the situation at Korryn Gaines’s apartment, that she most definitely would still be alive and not yet another hashtag clamoring for justice.

Chuck Hobbs is a trial lawyer and award winning freelance writer based in Tallahassee, Florida. Follow him on Twitter @RealChuckHobbs

RELATED STORIES:

MICHIGAN SUPREME COURT UPHOLDS RIGHT TO RESIST POLICE MISCONDUCT

MICHIGAN COURT RE-INSTATES CRIMINAL CHARGES AGAINST MARYANNE GODBOLDO

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MICHIGAN FILES FOR JLWOP FOR 80% OF JUVENILE LIFERS; FED. COURT WANTS ALL PAROLE ELIGIBLE

Atty. Bryan Stevenson of the Equal Justice Initiative, whose own grandfather was killed by a group of teens, appears at the beginning of this video. He won U.S. Supreme Court rulings banning death sentences for juveniles, life without parole for juveniles in non-homicide cases, and finally, Miller v. Alabama, which abolished mandatory JLWOP.

U.S. District Court Judge Corbett O’Meara conducted hearing July 28, originally ordered all juvenile lifers eligible for parole after 10 years

“Michigan has thumbed its nose at the U.S. Supreme Court which said LWOP appropriate only for the rarest child”—Atty. Deborah LaBelle

State statutes challenged–allow JLWOP re-sentencing without cause, and 25-60 years maximum for those given term of years

Prosecutors want “cradle to the grave” sentences–only one juvenile lifer has lived past 60 years in prison

By Diane Bukowski

July 31, 2016

MDOC denies Keith Maxey vital surgery offered pro bono.

MDOC denies Keith Maxey vital surgery offered pro bono.

Ann Arbor, MI – After a July 28 federal court hearing on efforts by Michigan’s county prosecutors to re-sentence 80 percent of the state’s juvenile lifers to life without parole, Attorney Deborah LaBelle ardently advocated for juvenile lifer Keith Maxey with representatives of State Attorney General Bill Schuette’s office.

“It took us years to get a doctor to donate his services for the ileostomy surgery that Keith desperately needs,” LaBelle told Assistant AG’s Eric Restucci and Margaret Nelson. “But yesterday the Department of Corrections called the hospital to cancel his surgery appointment, and now our doctor has to leave the state for seven months.”

The AG’s representatives didn’t have any solution or apparent concern about this life-threatening situation.

Maxey, now 25, was 16 when he was shot multiple times during a robbery gone bad involving drug dealers without drugs and buyers without money. He was the only one without a gun, LaBelle told VOD, but was sentenced to natural life for felony murder. He is among 80 percent of the state’s juvenile lifers that prosecutors want to die in prison.

Maxey’s treatment typifies this state’s attitude toward its 363 juvenile lifers, according to LaBelle’s presentation in front of U.S. District Court Judge John Corbett O’Meara.

U.S. District Court Judge John Corbett O'Meara

U.S. District Court Judge John Corbett O’Meara

O’Meara ruled in 2013 that ALL Michigan juvenile lifers are eligible for parole after serving 10 years, in a lawsuit filed by LaBelle and the American Civil Liberties Union in 2005.

The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals essentially upheld Corbett O’Meara’s ruling May 11. They sent it back to him for possible revisions in light of Montgomery, and to allow time to challenge the constitutionality of two 2014 state statutes under which prosecutors want to handle the JLWOP re-sentencings.

“After Miller there was such hope, but then we had to wait four years for the Supreme Court to rule in Montgomery v. Louisiana that Miller was retroactive,” LaBelle said. Her co-counsel were Daniel Korobkin of the American Civil Liberties Union in Michigan, and Ron Reosti. The National ACLU is also a signatory to the case.

“Now we face a painful situation where state prosecutors are filing for most juvenile lifers to get the same sentence again, dashing hopes once more,” LaBelle said. “Michigan has thumbed its nose at the U.S. Supreme Court which said that LWOP is appropriate only for the ‘rare and unusual’ youth offender.”

JLWOPboxlighterAfter Montgomery, many of the state’s juvenile lifers who contacted VOD were so filled with hope that they began having friends and family members find jobs, education and housing for them, thinking their release was only months away.

In actuality, no hearings are expected until the Michigan State Supreme Court rules on two cases. Tia Skinner, now 23, was convicted of felony murder, but her case is still pending a state Supreme Court ruling on whether a jury, not a judge, must consider Miller factors. An appeal is also pending in the case of Kenya Hyatt, who was re-sentenced to JLWOP although he is also 23 and has had no opportunity to show his capacity for rehabilitation.

LaBelle said one-third of the state’s juvenile lifers did not actually commit a murder. They were convicted of felony murder basically for being in the company of the killer, frequently an older individual.

County prosecutors rushed to file notices of intent to re-sentence juvenile lifers by July 22, prior to the July 28 date set by Judge Corbett O’Meara to hear a motion for a preliminary injunction pending a determination of the constitutionality of the state statutes. He earlier granted a temporary restraining order against the prosecutors pending the full hearing, but the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals said he did not have the authority to grant a TRO, only to hear the motion for an injunction.

In her amended motion for a preliminary injunction, LaBelle says state statute MCL 769.25a, under which state prosecutors want to re-sentence juvenile lifers, is unconstitutional. It does not give individualized attention to each lifer as required under Miller, assessing numerous mitigating factors related to the offender’s youth and background. For those not re-sentenced to JLWOP, it requires sentences ranging from 25 to 60 years, and does not allow consideration for earned “good time. See statute at http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Juvenile-lifers-mcl-769-25a-2.pdf

Atty. Deborah LaBelle has fought for the rights of juvenile prisoners for decades.

Atty. Deborah LaBelle has fought for the rights of juvenile prisoners for decades.

“Here, only one youth has made it past serving 60 years before dying in prison, so these are cradle to the grave sentences,” LaBelle said.  “Michigan is on an island standing on the wrong side of history.

Twelve State Supreme Courts have ruled in line with Montgomery that Miller is indeed retroactive, making a total of 17 states that outlaw JLWOP in whole, and five more that outlaw it in part. The U.S. Department of Justice has concurred, so federal juvenile lifers are being re-sentenced under Montgomery.

Philadelphia had the highest number of juvenile lifers of any jurisdiction in the U.S., a total of 300. But the city’s District Attorney Seth Williams has now outlawed JWLOP on a retroactive basis for any of them.

“It’s my goal to give all of these individuals some light at the end of the tunnel,” he told the Philadelphia Inquirer. “As long as I’m the D.A., we will not be asking for cases going forward for life without the possibility of parole for people under the age of 18 because of the same exact reasons articulated by the Supreme Court in Miller.

Miller-Retroactivity-MapInstead, he said he will seek sentences between 20 and 35 years to life, depending on the age and nature of the crime. Two juvenile lifers, Tyrone Jones, now 59, and Henry Smolarski, now 53, both convicted in 1975, have now been re-sentenced accordingly and are eligible for parole, having served the maximum time.

Jones has been claiming his innocence in a gang-related execution for years, according to the Inquirer. 

Jones’ situation mirrors that of Michigan juvenile lifer Charles Lewis, whose mother Rosie Lewis attended the July 28 hearing. Lewis, who has served 41 years since 1975 at the age of 17, has long contended that he is innocent. His claim was backed up at trial by the partner of the police officer killed in a drive-by shooting, who identified another killer not connected to Lewis. His alibi witnesses who said he was elsewhere at the time of the killing, but were never allowed to testify.

On the ride back to Mt. Clemens, where Mrs. Lewis lives, she gave a heartbreaking account of her 41 years of struggle for her son’s freedom. She has attended virtually every court hearing in his case, even traveling to Cincinnati for his Sixth Circuit appeals hearings.

“Everyone knows how fiercely I have fought for all my children,” Mrs. Lewis said.

"Second Chance" families, as well as victims of juvenile lifers, gathered at Michigan State Capitol in 2007 to fight to abolish JLWOP. Photo: Diane Bukowski

“Second Chance” families, as well as victims of juvenile lifers, gathered at Michigan State Capitol in 2007 to fight to abolish JLWOP. They were later sold out by Legislature, which passed restrictive MCL 769.25a in 2014.
Photo: Diane Bukowski

She and her daughter Wendy were active for many years with the Second Chance group prior to the Miller and Montgomery rulings. That alliance fought to get state laws changed to abolish juvenile life without parole. Instead, substitute legislation was enacted by the Legislature that gutted Second Chance’s original intent. Wendy Lewis recalled that during hearings on the legislation, families of juvenile lifers were cut off from testifying due to time limits. However, prosecutors like Kym Worthy and Jessica Cooper were given ample time to present their side supporting JLWOP.

Philadelphia juvenile lifer Tyrone Jones, with family, was re-sentenced to parolable term after city's DA banned all JLWOP sentences.

Philadelphia juvenile lifer Tyrone Jones, with family, is now immediately eligible for parole, after city’s DA banned all JLWOP sentences.

Worthy even had a video of a Coney Island robbery and killing by several Detroit youth played, as if that typified the majority of Black youth in the city. 

Restucci and Nelson argued that Judge Corbett O’Meara has no jurisdiction to overturn state legislation. Restucci recited a list of particularly heinous crimes, including one decapitation and one individual who raped and killed a nine-year-old, that are not typical of most crimes committed by the state’s juvenile lifers.

On the eve of the federal court hearing July 28, most mainstream media concentrated on similar statements released by county prosecutors, which focused on isolated cases, not the entire population. There was no mention of the pending hearing in front of Corbett O’Meara.

“There are approximately 350 juvenile lifers in Michigan,” Restucci said. “Prosecutorsare recommending renewed life without parole for 250, leaving 100 who can get a sentence up to 60 years. Eighty percent of offenders are released within one year of their earliest release date, so a substantial number will receive parole. We don’t know how many will actually get which sentences, which are up to the judges.”

Michigan Asst. AG Eric Restucci speaking at rally against the Affordable Care Act. He said it violates “religious liberty.

Judge Corbett O’Meara said he will issue his ruling shortly, after reviewing transcripts of the hearing. He said he is considering a grave issue, “taking freedom away from people for life.”

“It’s puzzling and painful to know where it’s going from here,” Judge O’Meara said. “I don’t know exactly what I can do, although I have a much better idea of what should happen in terms of juvenile life without parole, but it’s what I have to do and should do under the law.”

Three hundred sixty-four juvenile lifers are awaiting his ruling. Since there is yet no injunction in place, prosecutors and defenders, mainly from the State Appellate Defenders’ Office (SADO) are going forward with hearings.

Related:

http://fairsentencingofyouth.org/

Facebook page for Fair Sentencing of Youth at https://www.facebook.com/theCFSY/

http://www.progressive.org/news/2016/07/188882/%E2%80%98juvenile-lifers%E2%80%99-deserve-second-chance

http://radio.wpsu.org/post/shes-still-fighting-her-brother-sentenced-life-16-years-old

http://adobeairstream.com/film/juvenile-life-without-parole-captured-in-natural-life/

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/01/disturbing-data-behind-juvenile-life-without-parole

http://www.naturallifefilm.org/

http://hyperallergic.com/189356/the-stories-of-minors-sentenced-to-life-in-prison/

http://www.vice.com/read/ricky-olds-prison-juvenile-justice-sentencing-reform-america

http://fairsentencingofyouth.org/2016/05/27/iowa-supreme-court-bans-life-without-parole-sentences-for-children/

http://articles.philly.com/2016-06-06/news/73580600_1_parole-lifers-new-sentences

http://fairsentencingofyouth.org/our-trial-defense-guidelines-for-children-facing-life-are-released/

Related documents:

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Miller-v-Alabama-decision.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/USSC-Montgomery-v-LA-1.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/OMeara-final-ruling-on-Hill-v-Snyder-2.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Sixth-Circuit-decision-Hill-v-Snyder-May-11-2016-1.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Hill-V-Snyder-Plaintiffs-brief-7-25-16.pdf

Related stories:

WORTHY, OTHERS WANT LARGE PORTION OF ‘JUVENILE LIFERS’ TO DIE IN PRISON, DESPITE USSC RULINGS

 

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/06/02/stop-torturing-michigans-juvenile-lifers-with-state-delays-freedom-now/

http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/3/9/un-expert-slams-us-as-only-nation-to-sentence-kids-to-life-without-parole.html

http://www.detroitnews.com/story/opinion/2016/06/02/prisoner-re-entry-detroit-comeback/85268614/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/05/24/free-charles-lewis-innocent-juvenile-lifer-who-has-spent-41-years-in-state-prisons/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/05/18/michigan-juvenile-lifers-score-6th-circuit-appeals-court-victory-in-hill-v-snyder/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/04/30/why-is-juvenile-lifer-charles-lewis-still-in-prison-16-yrs-after-his-case-was-dismissed/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/04/12/dying-in-prison-michigan-juvenile-lifers-get-new-hope-under-montgomery-still-face-obstacles/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2014/03/06/mich-supreme-court-hears-3-key-cases-today-re-ussc-ruling-barring-mandatory-juvenile-life-without-parole/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/02/12/u-s-judge-rules-all-michigan-juvenile-lifers-eligible-for-parole/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/02/12/juvenile-lifer-reflects-on-hill-ruling-by-judge-omeara/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/01/10/michigan-juvenile-lifers-justice-delayed-is-justice-denied-re-sentencing-in-key-detroit-case-cortez-davis-jan-25/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/10/28/michigans-juvenile-lifers-want-state-to-comply-with-u-s-supreme-court-ruling/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/10/28/michigans-juvenile-lifers/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/08/16/michigan-challenges-u-s-supreme-court-ruling-on-juvenile-life-without-parole/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/07/02/us-supreme-courts-juvenile-lifer-decision-brings-hope-to-thousands/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/07/02/nations-high-court-ends-mandatory-life-without-parole-sentences-for-youth/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/03/18/us-supreme-court-to-hear-key-juvenile-lifer-homicide-cases-march-20-2012/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/03/04/juvenile-lifer-anthony-jones-wins-new-sentence-battle-for-justice-for-all-juvenile-and-parolable-lifers-still-needed/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/11/12/us-supreme-court-agrees-to-hear-juvenile-lifer-cases-could-have-major-impact-in-michigan/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/11/11/why-michigan-has-more-juvenile-life-sentences-than-almost-any-other-state/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/09/06/battle-for-juvenile-lifers-picks-up-steam-in-michigan-california/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/03/06/voice-of-juvenile-defendants/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2010/11/24/aclu-lawsuit-challenges-life-without-parole-for-michigan-juveniles/

#FreeMichiganJuvenileLifersNOW, #SaveOurChildren, #PrisonNation, #ENDMassIncarceration, #SchooltoPrisonPipeline, #Breakdownthewalls, #Beatbackthebullies, #Blacklivesmatter, #BlacklivesmatterDetroit, #Blackkidslivesmatter#StandUpNow, #StopWaronBlackAmerica, #StopWaronourYouth, #Michissippigoddam

 

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CHICAGO COPS KILL PAUL O’NEAL, 18, FIRING INTO CAR AGAINST POLICY

Neighborhood vigil for Paul O'Neal, killed by Chicago cops July 29, 2016.

Neighborhood vigil for Paul O’Neal, killed by Chicago cops July 29, 2016.

Paull O’Neal unarmed

Chicago police policy: do not shoot at people in vehicles

Neighborhood vigil held, organizing continues

From Everipedia.com

http://www.everipedia.com/paull-oneal/

Paul O'Neal vigil poser Abolish the PolicePaul O’Neal aka Paull Oneal is a resident of Chicago, Illinois. He is originally from São Domingos, Santa Catarina in southern Brazil. Paul was outspoken against Donald Trump and shared a photo saying “Fuck Donald Trump” from a performance by rapper YG of his hit song “Fuck Donald Trump”. [5]

Death

On July 28, 2016 Paul O’Neal was fatally shot by Chicago Police Department officers after trying to flee a traffic stop in a stolen Jaguar convertible in the South Shore neighborhood in South Side, Chicago[2]

The Chicago Police Department spokesman, Anthony Gugliemi, said that “departmental policies may have been violated by the officers (since shooting at moving vehicles is banned by the department).” The two of the officers involved in the shooting have been relieved from their police powers and been suspended. [2][3]

Three officers fired their weapons in an incident that left Paul O’Neal dead after police say he was in a stolen Jaguar that sideswiped a squad car and hit a parked car, injuring some officers about 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the 7400 block of South Merrill Avenue. [2]

Paul O’Neal, photo from Everipedia.com

As the officers got out of their car, Paul “put the vehicle in drive and literally forced his way out,” First Deputy Superintendent John Escalante said at the scene. The car sideswiped a squad car and also hit a car parked on the street, he said. [2]

Officers then fired their service weapons, according to police. One of the officers “continued to follow the fleeing offender” and he was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead, according to a statement later released by the department. [2]

A 17-year-old boy who was also in the car was taken into police custody. [2]

Some officers suffered “injuries during the vehicle apprehension” and were taken to a hospital with  injuries not considered life-threatening, the statement said. [2]

Police found that Paul O’Neal was unarmed and did not find any guns at the scene. [2]

The officers involved in the shooting, as well as assisting officers on scene, were wearing body cameras, Escalante said.  In-car video is also available, he said. [2]

“This is going to be a very active investigation,” Escalante said. “It’s going to take a while to be able to view after downloading all the body camera footage as well as the in-car camera footage and whatever other video may be found during the canvass.” [2]

Controversy

Pedro VillanuevaMany are criticizing the Chicago Police Department officers, for firing shots into a moving vehicle. The practice was also criticized in the police shooting of Pedro Villanueva who was fatally shot fleeing a traffic stop by the California Highway Patrol on July 3, 2016. [4]

In Febuary 2015, the Chicago Police Department changed its rules on use of deadly force, banning officers from shooting at moving vehicles if no other weapons were being used against police. The change came after the police involved shooting of Antwon Golatte, a man who was alleged to be involved in a illegal drug transaction. [3]

The practice is seen as dangerous in addition to being banned by Chicago Police Department it is also banned by the NYPDLos Angeles Police Department (LAPD)San Francisco Police Department, and the Denver Police Department.  [4]

Law enforcement experts say that many agencies ban officers from shooting at moving cars, even if drivers appear to be attempting to ram them because police service weapons are unlikely to stop a speeding vehicle. Also firing a barrage of rounds might only serve to increase the danger faced by officers and bystanders if the driver is shot and unable to control the car.  [4]

The U.S Department of Justice has also advised police departments not to shoot at moving vehicles, even when a suspect is driving toward an officer. [4]

Police at scene

Police at scene of Paul O’Neal’s killing.

#AbolishthePolice, #JUSTICE4PAULO’NEAL, #Justice4PedroVillanueva, #JailKillerKops, #SaveourChildren, #Beatbackthebullies, #PoliceState, #PrisonNation, #StopthewaronBlackAmerica, #StopWaronOurYouth 

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NEW AFRIKAN FAMILY DAY SUN. JULY 31–NEIGHBORHOOD FUN FEST AT THE SHED AT MARTZ PARK

Family Day FunFest

thumbnail_New%20Afrikan%20Family%20Day%20vendors


  • Fundraiser Tees

    Fundraiser Tees

    Please forward widely. If you would like to donate/volunteer, contact Timothy Greer, 313-384-3805  email: tdgreer714@gmail.com and/or

  • Kwasi Akwamu, (313) 285-8450 UNIQUE BANNERS & SIGNS 269 Walker Street #227 Detroit, MI 48207

On Facebook: THE SHED AT MARTZ PARK

https://www.facebook.com/The-Shed-at-Martz-Park-1427796047496216/

11530 Flanders, Detroit

11530 Flanders, Detroit

 

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WORTHY, OTHERS WANT LARGE PORTION OF ‘JUVENILE LIFERS’ TO DIE IN PRISON, DESPITE USSC RULINGS

Some of Michigan’s juvenile lifers: (l to r, top through bottom row), Cortez Davis, Raymond Carp, Dakotah Eliason, Henry Hill, Keith Maxey, Dontez Tillman, Charles Lewis, Jemal Tipton, Nicole Dupure, Giovanni Casper, Jean Cintron, Matthew Bentley, Bosie Smith, Kevin Boyd, Damion Todd, Jennifer Pruitt, Edward Sanders, David Walton (photos show some lifers at current age, others at age they went to prison).

Some of Michigan’s juvenile lifers: (l to r, top through bottom row), Cortez Davis, Raymond Carp, Dakotah Eliason, Henry Hill, Keith Maxey, Dontez Tillman, Charles Lewis, Jemal Tipton, Nicole Dupure, Giovanni Casper, Jean Cintron, Matthew Bentley, Bosie Smith, Kevin Boyd, Damion Todd, Jennifer Pruitt, Edward Sanders, David Walton (photos show some lifers at current age, others at age they went to prison).

Worthy seeks renewed LWOP for 40% in Wayne County, where 98% of juvenile lifers are Black, under likely unconstitutional state statute

“Lifetime in prison is a disproportionate sentence for all but the rarest of children,” — U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy

U.S. the only country in the world to sentence children to die in prison

“They created new laws to resentence a JLWOP’er to a term that may be equal to their natural life or close to the end of life.”– 41-yr. juvenile lifer

U.S. District Court Judge John Corbett O’Meara to hear motion for an injunction to stop prosecutors ,Thurs. July 28, 10:30 a.m., Ann Arbor

By Diane Bukowski 

July 26, 2016 

Kuntrell Jackson and Evan Miller, plaintiffs in Miller v. Alabama ruling against JLWOP. They were both 14 when they went to prison.

Kuntrell Jackson and Evan Miller, plaintiffs in Miller v. Alabama ruling against JLWOP. They were both 14 when they went to prison.

DETROIT – The State of Michigan and Wayne County in particular are battling to keep the largest possible number of juvenile lifers in prison until they die, in flagrant violation of two U.S. Supreme Court decisions, Miller v. Alabama (2012) and Montgomery v. Louisiana (2016). The high court found juvenile life without parole for over 2,500 prisoners in the U.S. to be unconstitutional, “cruel and unusual punishment.”

The U.S. is the only country in the world that sentences children to die in prison.

“Although Miller did not foreclose a sentencer’s ability to impose life without parole on a juvenile, the Court explained that a lifetime in prison is a disproportionate sentence for all but the rarest of children, those whose crimes reflect ‘irreparable corruption,’” U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy said in the Montgomery decision.

Top states with JLWOPMichigan has the second highest number of juvenile lifers in the nation, and was one of only four states, in addition to Louisiana, New York, and Pennsylvania, to hold out until the Montgomery ruling, claiming that Miller was not retroactive.

U.S. District Court Judge John Corbett O’Meara additionally ruled in Hill v. Snyder in 2013 that ALL of the state’s juvenile lifers are eligible for parole after serving 10 years, and was essentially upheld by the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals May 11.

On Thursday, July 28 at 10:30 a.m., he will hear arguments on a motion for an injunction to stop Michigan’s county prosecutors from going forward with current resentencing schemes under questionably constitutional state statutes passed in 2014. The hearing will be held at the Federal Building in Ann Arbor, 200 E. Liberty Street, Room 628.

Attorney Deborah LaBelle

Attorney Deborah LaBelle

“To date, prosecutors have sought to impose life-without-parole sentences under M.C.L. § 769.25a for the vast majority, instead of what the Supreme Court has unequivocally held must be only the “rarest” and “uncommon” youth for whom such a sentence would be constitutional,” Attorney Deborah LaBelle wrote in the motion.

“This prosecutorial misconduct demonstrates why this Court should grant Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. . . .M.C.L. § 769.25a subjects Plaintiffs to ongoing unconstitutional punishment. Absent a preliminary injunction, Plaintiffs—who are still serving unconstitutional mandatory life sentences without a meaningful opportunity for release—will continue to face cruel and unusual punishment from state officials who are intent on thumbing their nose at the Supreme Court, doing everything in their power to delay the implementation of a fair process that would provide Plaintiffs and similarly situated individuals a meaningful opportunity for release, and seeking unconstitutional life-without-parole sentences for hundreds of youth for whom such a sentence would be unconstitutional. The Court should therefore enjoin Defendants from proceeding with these life-without-parole resentencings pending a final determination as to the constitutionality of the statute.”

LaBelle notes in her motion particularly egregious conduct by Oakland County Prosecutor Jessica Cooper and Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy.

Oakland Co. Pros. Jessica Cooper

Wayne Co. Pros. Kym Worthy

“In fact, the Oakland County prosecutor explicitly asserted in her motion seeking life without parole for a named Hill Plaintiff, Kevin Boyd, that pursuant to M.C.L. § 769.25a she need not specify any grounds or basis for seeking a life-without- parole sentence and that a defendant is not even entitled to file a response prior to a hearing. Similarly, the prosecutor for Wayne County, in seeking life without parole for over 60 youth, set forth no individualized bases for seeking such a sentence in any of the cases.”

Miller requires that each juvenile lifer case be considered on an individual basis, and take into account numerous factors in that individual’s life. (See box.) Worthy’s chief of communications, Maria Miller, told VOD that the Prosecutor Worthy had looked at all the factors from the Miller case before recommending that 60 juvenile lifers die in prison.  “This procedure was established by the Michigan Legislature by statute.  ‎Each defendant in all the categories will have a resentencing hearing and a judge will make the decision regarding the sentence,” Miller said.

Miller boxJudge Corbett O’Meara earlier granted an immediate temporary restraining order (TRO) against state prosecutors. Michigan appealed, and the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Judge Corbett O’Meara did not have the power to issue a TRO in this situation but could move forward with proceedings on the motion for an injunction.

Worthy announced July 21 that her office has filed motions under M.C.L. § 769.25a to keep 41 percent of the County’s 144 juvenile lifers in prison until they die, 60 individuals plus three on “conditional” terms, and seek terms of years for 81  others. For full statute, see:  http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Juvenile-lifers-mcl-769-25a-1.pdf.

“In many of the 81 cases where there is a term of years, we will be seeking more time than the minimum sentence of 25 years,” Worthy said in a statement. “The public should rest assured that we will aggressively pursue life without possibility of parole in 60 other cases.”

Wayne County has by far the highest number of juvenile lifers in Michigan, 144, with Oakland County running second at 50. Of the Wayne County juvenile lifers, 98 percent are Black, while the County’s population is only 40.5 percent Black. There are 136 Black men, two Black women, and six white men, according to a list released earlier by the Michigan Department of Corrections. One hundred thirty-one Wayne County juvenile lifers have served more than the 10 years before parole consideration set by Judge Corbett O’Meara. Seventy-one have served more than 25 years, while nine have served over 40 years.

See list of Wayne County juvenile lifers at

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Wayne-County-Juvenile-Lifers.pdf.

Worthy has refused to release the names of the prisoners indicating what category each is in, saying her office is still trying to contact the victims’ families. The Miller decision did not address the issue of the victims at all, except in one judge’s dissenting opinion.

Edward Sanders in earlier years.

“[T]he state of Michigan has disregarded the U.S. Supreme Court’s holding in Miller by so-called new laws enacted since the court rulings including the U.S. District Court,” said Edward Sanders who has served over 41 years for a 1975 “first-degree murder” conviction in which he was not the shooter.

“They created new laws to resentence a JLWOP’er to a new term that may be equal to their natural life or close to the end of life. They took good time that has been earned that may in some cases equals more than 20 years, and added provisions to the murder statute eliminating it only for juvenile lifers. It is sad that SADO [State Appellate Defenders Office] is willing to proceed under these so called new laws.”

A little-publicized portion of M.C.L. § 769.25a says, “A defendant who is resentenced under subsection (4) shall be given credit for time already served, but shall not receive any good time credits, special good time credits, disciplinary credits, or any other credits thatreduce the defendant’s minimum or maximum sentence.”

Although all the juvenile lifers in Wayne County were convicted of “first-degree murder,” there are variations on that crime explicit in the circumstances of each conviction, including “aiding and abetting,” and “felony murder,” which means that the individual was convicted of participating in a crime during which a murder took place. Many juvenile lifers were used as participants by older individuals. Many could not afford reputable attorneys. Many had no idea how the legal system works, and pled guilty even if they were not, under pressure. It is now generally understood scientifically that the human brain does not fully mature, leaving factors such as impulse control unfinished, until the age of 25.

Davontae Sanford

Davontae Sanford

Charles Lewis MDOC

Charles Lewis

There are also grounds to believe that some juvenile lifers are innocent, railroaded in 2008 just as 14-year-old Davontae Sanford was by Worthy and Detroit police for four murders he did not commit. He was recently exonerated.

VOD has done several stories in particular on Charles Lewis, sent to prison in 1975 at the age of 17 for killing an off-duty Detroit police officer whose partner identified another man entirely as the killer. Lewis’ alibi witnesses were never called by a defense attorney who deliberately sabotaged his case.

Post-conviction hearings on Lewis’ case were ongoing but have been suspended because the County now claims it lost all his files prior to 2000. Lewis is therefore seeking dismissal of his case pursuant to a 1990 Michigan Supreme Court ruling in People v. Earl Dwayne Adkins, 436 Mich. 878. Adkins appealed his guilty plea, as did Sanford, but the state admitted that the record of the the plea was lost.

Right to appeal

Right to appeal

The Michigan Supreme Court ruled in Adkins, ” . . . .we VACATE the defendant’s convictions and REMAND this matter to the trial court for further proceedings. The transcript of the hearing at which the defendant’s guilty pleas were accepted is not able to be produced because the notes of the stenographer have been lost . . . .the record is inadequate for meaningful appellate review and so impedes the enjoyment of the defendant’s constitutional right to an appeal.”

Lewis has so far unsuccessfully requested that his current attorney, Valerie Newman, appointed through the State Appellate Defenders’ Office, file a motion to dismiss his case since there are no records of even his two trials and one conviction remaining.

The state has assigned and is paying SADO to defend most juvenile lifers in the re-hearings, although it was Attorney LaBelle and the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan who first set up an independent system of pro bono attorneys after the Miller decision in 2012, to cover every juvenile lifer in Michigan.

SADO attorney Valerie Newman

SADO attorney Valerie Newman

Attorney Peter Van Hoek of SADO’s Detroit office earlier told VOD after SADO’s assignment that SADO would not attempt to challenge the state statutes.

SADO attorney Valerie Newman told VOD she is in charge of SADO’s juvenile lifer unit for the whole state. Newman said they are in the process of notifying juvenile lifers they represent about what prosecutors have recommended in their cases. She declined to give a copy of the list to VOD pending completion of that notification.

“The decision is in the hands of the prosecution, which has filed motions under a state statute,” Newman said. “No one has said the statute is not legitimate, no ruling has been made. In the meantime to do nothing means that people who are going to get a term of years will not get a chance to get in front of the parole board right now. We have plenty of people who have done more than the minimum. If my client is immediately eligible for parole, why wouldn’t I want to proceed? Even if (s)he gets a term of 40 to 60 years (s)he will be immediately eligible for parole. It remains to be determined how the parole board will handle it. A lot of these folks are very well positioned to go see the parole board and would have a good chance at parole. Until I see otherwise, I am going under the presumption that parole board will do its job, evaluate people and release those who deserve to be released.”

Meanwhile, Michigan’s juvenile lifers, who were jubilant after the Miller decision was handed down in 2012, must endure more excruciating “cruel and unusual punishment” in the coming months as state prosecutors, who have practically without exception supported juvenile life without parole for years, continue to fight to ensure that they die in prison.

Related documents:

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Miller-v-Alabama-decision.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/USSC-Montgomery-v-LA-1.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/OMeara-final-ruling-on-Hill-v-Snyder-2.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Sixth-Circuit-decision-Hill-v-Snyder-May-11-2016-1.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Worthy-2016_July_22_-_-JLWOP_press_release.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Hill-v-Snyder-plaintiff-response-to-defendant-motion-to-dissolve-or-stay-TRO-6-20-16.pdf

Related stories:

STOP TORTURING MICHIGAN’S JUVENILE LIFERS WITH STATE DELAYS! FREEDOM NOW!

http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/3/9/un-expert-slams-us-as-only-nation-to-sentence-kids-to-life-without-parole.html

http://www.detroitnews.com/story/opinion/2016/06/02/prisoner-re-entry-detroit-comeback/85268614/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/05/24/free-charles-lewis-innocent-juvenile-lifer-who-has-spent-41-years-in-state-prisons/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/05/18/michigan-juvenile-lifers-score-6th-circuit-appeals-court-victory-in-hill-v-snyder/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/04/30/why-is-juvenile-lifer-charles-lewis-still-in-prison-16-yrs-after-his-case-was-dismissed/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/04/12/dying-in-prison-michigan-juvenile-lifers-get-new-hope-under-montgomery-still-face-obstacles/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2014/03/06/mich-supreme-court-hears-3-key-cases-today-re-ussc-ruling-barring-mandatory-juvenile-life-without-parole/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/02/12/u-s-judge-rules-all-michigan-juvenile-lifers-eligible-for-parole/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/02/12/juvenile-lifer-reflects-on-hill-ruling-by-judge-omeara/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/01/10/michigan-juvenile-lifers-justice-delayed-is-justice-denied-re-sentencing-in-key-detroit-case-cortez-davis-jan-25/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/10/28/michigans-juvenile-lifers-want-state-to-comply-with-u-s-supreme-court-ruling/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/10/28/michigans-juvenile-lifers/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/08/16/michigan-challenges-u-s-supreme-court-ruling-on-juvenile-life-without-parole/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/07/02/us-supreme-courts-juvenile-lifer-decision-brings-hope-to-thousands/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/07/02/nations-high-court-ends-mandatory-life-without-parole-sentences-for-youth/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/03/18/us-supreme-court-to-hear-key-juvenile-lifer-homicide-cases-march-20-2012/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2012/03/04/juvenile-lifer-anthony-jones-wins-new-sentence-battle-for-justice-for-all-juvenile-and-parolable-lifers-still-needed/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/11/12/us-supreme-court-agrees-to-hear-juvenile-lifer-cases-could-have-major-impact-in-michigan/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/11/11/why-michigan-has-more-juvenile-life-sentences-than-almost-any-other-state/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/09/06/battle-for-juvenile-lifers-picks-up-steam-in-michigan-california/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/03/06/voice-of-juvenile-defendants/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2010/11/24/aclu-lawsuit-challenges-life-without-parole-for-michigan-juveniles/

#FreeMichiganJuvenileLifersNOW, #SaveOurChildren, #PrisonNation, #ENDMassIncarceration, #SchooltoPrisonPipeline, #Breakdownthewalls, #Beatbackthebullies, #Blacklivesmatter, #BlacklivesmatterDetroit, #Blackkidslivesmatter#StandUpNow, #StopWaronBlackAmerica, #StopWaronourYouth, #Michissippigoddam

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“JIM CROW! GENOCIDE!” STATE LOAN BOARD APPROVES THEFT OF $1.5 B IN DPS ASSETS, $385 M IN LOANS

Dozens traveled to Lansing to oppose state dismantling of DPS district, and further debt of $385 million

Board files whistleblower complaint with SEC alleging that loan rates of up to 18% have cost DPS over $400 million under previous EM’s

EM Rhodes’ advisors told him plan would be “enormously costly”

 Parthenon Group involved: “All students are not equal; SOME ARE MORE PROFITABLE THAN OTHERS”

By Diane Bukowski 

July 23, 2016 

Detroit school board members (l to r) Lamar Lemmons, Tawanna Simpson and Elena Herrada with sign showing what 16 years of state control has done to DPS, after loan board vote.

Detroit school board members (l to r) Lamar Lemmons, Tawanna Simpson and Elena Herrada with sign showing how 16 years of state control has devastated DPS finances, after loan board vote.

LANSING – “You just voted for Jim Crow,” Detroit’s elected school board members and supporters shouted at the Michigan Local Emergency Financial Assistance Loan Board July 18, after it approved the transfer of over $1.5 billion in Detroit Public Schools (DPS) assets to a state-operated “community district,” and $385 million in initial loans, some at an 18 percent interest rate.

Speakers at the meeting called the plan “genocide,” and said it makes Detroit’s children second-class citizens.

“You are taking money from Detroit school kids to pay off a debt the state created,” Board of Education President Lamar Lemmons said.

A state-controlled “community district” was created July 1 under Public Acts 192-197.  DPS itself will remain only to pay off about $3 billion in outstanding debt to the banks, left behind by 16 years of state control. That will come from funds meant to educate Detroit’s children, 59 percent of whom live below the poverty level. The district will be the only one in the state allowed to hire non-certified teachers. Many more of the 104 schools left in the district, down from 261 in 1992, will be required to close.

Elder Helen Moore speaks during loan board meeting July 18, as others crowd behind her waiting their turn to oppose destruction of DPS, loans.

Elder Helen Moore speaks during loan board meeting July 18, as others crowd behind her waiting their turn to oppose destruction of DPS, loans.

Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, the state legislature, and Emergency Manager Steven Rhodes launched the plan July 1. Rhodes presided over the City of Detroit’s bankruptcy. He has hired many of the same costly consulting firms to effectuate the DPS plan.

They include Ernst & Young, which incorporated the notorious Parthenon Group in 2014, currently under investigation by the federal government for committing fraud at Corinthian College in California.

These typical Parthenon Group associates will decide the future of Detroit’s school district, where students are at least 95 percent Black.

Parthenon specializes in converting public education systems into private investment opportunities, by increasing class sizes, cutting teachers’ pay, and laying off staff like counselors and librarians, according to an article on New York education professor Diane Ravitch’s blog.

Parthenon’s motto is “All students are not equal; SOME ARE MORE PROFITABLE THAN OTHERS,” Knox County Special Education teacher Rob Taylor, who researched Parthenon, says in the article.

“The long-term goal presented here is not to keep the public school system –it’s to grow for-profit schools to be much larger than the public system, then reduce public schools enrollment to those ‘less profitable’ students,” another teacher says.

DPS EM Steven Rhodes, in honorary grad outfit, thinks he has expertise to run school district.

DPS EM Steven Rhodes, in honorary grad outfit, thinks he has expertise to run school district.

In an email provided to the loan board, Rhodes’ advisor Al Koch of Alix Partners strongly advised against splitting the District, saying it would be a “frustrating and enormously costly exercise.” He added that it would be better to exclude Parthenon from the plan.

But in a subsequent email, he said of the plan, “It’s certainly not perfect but in the restructuring business you leam to work with what you have and this is probably as good as you’re going to get. Unfortunately, there is always the possibility of an unpleasant surprise of some magnitude.”

See full email exchange at http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/Rhodes-email-exchange.pdf.

Ernst & Young, whose Gustav Mulhatra is handling much of the restructuring, got such an unpleasant surprise in 2008, when the global stock market collapsed largely due to unbridled predatory mortgage lending. Ernst & Young kept the books for Lehman Brothers, whose dissolution set off the crisis. They have been sued by the states of New York and New Jersey for falsely advising them on the stability of Lehman Brothers.

ernst-young-hit-with-civil-fraud-suit“Your message is loud and clear that the children of Detroit are second class citizens,” school board President Lamar Lemmons told the loan board.

“The State Constitution requires the hiring of certified teachers for Michigan’s 548 public school districts, as well as its charter schools,” Lemmons went on. “More than half of Detroit’s children now attend charter schools. But the new school district will be the only one free to hire unqualified, uncertified teachers.”

Lemmons added, “It will take 25-30 years to pay the district debt off. You are taking money from our school kids to eliminate a debt the state has created. The Headlee Amendment says that if the state creates the debt, it must provide the funds to pay it off.”

DPS’ certified teachers march May 2, 2016, to “save Detroit’s kids.”

Lemmons and the board have demanded a forensic audit of DPS finances to find out how billions of dollars was siphoned off from the DPS budget under state control, since 1999 when the district had a surplus.

They filed a whistleblower complaint with the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) July 14, alleging that fraud has been committed by the District’s Emergency Managers. The complaint objects to usurious securities loan rates of up to 18%.

The complaint says the board estimates the excessive fees have cost the district over $400 million in recent years alone. Of the loans just approved, $235 million are allegedly set at that rate.

SECcomplaint

 


A class action lawsuit was filed July 7 by Helen Moore, founder of Keep the Vote No Takeover, and other plaintiffs alleging that the state’s actions against DPS violate both the Michigan and U.S. Constitutions. Despite the fact that the lawsuit asks for an emergency Temporary Restraining Order, Court of Claims Chief Judge Michael Talbot has not scheduled a review of the case until October 10, 2016, long after the school year starts, according to the case’s register of actions.

The lawsuit says that Public Acts 192-197 are “local acts,” meaning a two-thirds vote from the State House and from the Senate, along with the approval of Detroit electors, were required to pass them. It also says they violate the 14th Amendment by depriving Detroit children of equal protection and due process under the law.

Dr. Thomas Pedroni speaks at special City Council meeting attended by Peter Cunningham of U.S. Department of Education, with former Councilwoman JoAnn Watson at his side.

Dr. Thomas Pedroni speaks at special City Council meeting in 2012, attended by Peter Cunningham of U.S. Department of Education, with former Councilwoman JoAnn Watson at his side.

Dr. Thomas Pedroni, an Associate Professor of Curriculum Studies and Critical Education Policy Sociology at Wayne State University, debunked allegations by Rhodes and others that they have to hire uncertified teachers because they cannot find enough certified teachers for Detroit.

“Dr. Maria Ferreira, of the national Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Foundation, has provided a pipeline for some of the teachers best trained for urban districts to come into DPS,” Pedroni said. “But none of the applications from the candidates she put forward have even been considered. Many applications submitted under Emergency Managers Jack Martin and Darnell Earley were left untouched. EM Rhodes has acknowledged that he knows this.”

A DPS teacher told the board that she has many certified teacher friends who have applied over and over to DPS, only to be turned away. She said non-certified teachers from “Teach for America,” who had been teaching in the Educational Achievement Authority schools, often “went out for lunch in the middle of the school year and never came back.”

Muqurrabah

Muqurrabah Miyzaan/Facebook

Tahira Ahmad, president of the Community Task Force for Education, said, “This is nothing but genocide. Crime is soaring, people have become hopeless. One person miseducated means a whole society miseducated.”

Board member Wanda Akilah Redmond agreed.

“When we miseducate our children, you will see our children with guns in hand, robbing people,” she said. “Next time you see a child with a gun, know that you helped make that decision.”

Elder Helen Moore said, “I don’t do second-class citizenship. The U.S. is in deep trouble today because of discriminatory practices everywhere and now they are being perpetuated here in Detroit.”

Board member Elena Herrada told the loan board, “I don’t support this racist and unequal plan for DPS. Just as the children of Flint were lead poisoned because of Public Act 436, the children of Detroit are being forced into an inferior education.”

Muqarrabah Miyzaan, who worked at DPS for over 30 years, said conditions are already so bad that children frequently don’t have teachers in their classes. 

Emergency Financial Loan Board Members

Emergency Financial Loan Board Members (l to r) John Roberts, Nick Khouri, Shelley Edgerton

“Our children were ahead in school before the 1999 state takeover,” she said. “Now they are suffering. The district’s debt is up, and our assets are being absorbed, putting us in the negative.”

The Loan Board, whose members are State Treasurer Nick Khouri, Budget Director John Roberts, and Licensing and Regulatory Affairs Director Shelley Edgerton, conducted hardly any discussion before voting unanimously for the loans and for the transfer of DPS assets to the “community district.”

Khouri alleged that the interest rate on the debt could fluctuate with the market and might end up as “low” as 4 to 5 percent.

Detroit school board and community members who packed Emergency Loan Board meeting July 18, 2016 to oppose death of DPS.

Detroit school board and community members who packed Emergency Loan Board meeting July 18, 2016 to oppose death of DPS.

Related documents:

Board of Education document opposing Rhodes’ proposals

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/DPSboardquestions.pdf

Lawsuit against DPS dissolution:

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/DPS-BE-lawsuit-Court-of-Claims.pdf

State Financial Review Committee package on DPS dissolution bills, etc.

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/FRC-Meeting-Packet-6-24-16_1-Special-Meeting-for-DPS-Oversight.pdf

Related stories:

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/The-Parthenon-Group.pdf

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/07/07/wall-street-greed-death-of-detroit-public-schools-fight-back-in-court-on-streets/

http://www.globalresearch.ca/detroit-public-schools-a-case-study-in-american-apartheid/5534407

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/04/24/state-war-on-detroit-public-schools-continues-selling-black-children-to-the-highest-bidder/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/05/06/genocidal-snyderrhodes-plan-harms-detroit-public-school-children-workers-residents/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2016/03/29/detroit-kids-in-danger-bills-end-dps-pay-off-banks-with-state-control-tax-levies-closings-charters/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2014/11/15/detroit-bankruptcy-plan-genocide-in-usas-largest-black-majority-city-rich-get-95-9-poor-get-13-5/

http://voiceofdetroit.net/2013/12/04/detroit-bankruptcy-eligibility-decision-unprecedented-worst-in-the-country/

#SaveOurKids, #SaveOurChildren, #SaveDPS, #StopSchoolClosings, #MoneyforEducationnotforBanks, #MoneyforEducationnotforwar, #BlackLivesMatter, #BlackLivesMatterDetroit, #BlackEducationMatters, #Beatbackthebullies, #StandUpNow, #StoptheWaronBlackAmerica, #DefendPublicEducation

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DAVONTAE SANFORD FORMALLY FREED; TIME FOR CHARGES VS. KYM WORTHY, COPS IN FRAME-UP

Davontae Sanford at press conference after his release (center); his mother Taminko Sanford-Timon is at left, his stepfather the late Jeremaine Timon, who supported Davontae strongly throughout the 9-year battle to free him, is at right. Timon was found shot to death under questionable circumstances several years after Davontae’s release.

“Truth” has been told, now investigate and charge those responsible for the wrongful incarceration of a 14-year-old child 

Prosecutor Kym Worthy and Judge Brian Sullivan created false doubt about Sanford’s innocence in press conference, court order

Two cop veterans of “The First 48,” Michael Russell and Dale Collins, were involved in Runyon Street investigation. Russell conducted most of it.

Gary Webb also paid the ultimate price, dying from an alleged suicide involving shooting himself TWICE in the head.

Gary Webb also paid the ultimate price, dying in an alleged suicide involving shooting himself TWICE in the head.

VOD advisory: information about alleged drug dealers in this story should be taken in context with the fact that the CIA, the DEA, and U.S. banks have been thoroughly exposed as responsible for bringing drugs across the borders for decades to decimate Black and poor cities.

Read “Dark Alliance” by Gary Webb, an extremely detailed history of the introduction of crack cocaine into the U.S. His dedication in the book: “It is undeniable that a wildly successful conspiracy existed to  import cocaine existed for many years, and that innumerable American citizens, most of them poor and black, paid an enormous price as a result. This book was written for them, so that they may know on what altars their communities were sacrificed.”

By Diane Bukowski 

July 20, 2016 

August 12, 2016: A CRUCIAL CORRECTION ON VOD’S EARLIER DESCRIPTION OF JUDGE BRIAN SULLIVAN’S ORDER WHICH RESULTED IN DAVONTAE SANFORD’S RELEASE:

JUDGE SULLIVAN DISMISSED THIS CASE ‘WITHOUT PREJUDICE’ MEANING IT CAN BE BROUGHT BACK AT ANY TIME THE POLICE, PROSECUTOR AND JUDGE WANT. THIS ORDER DID NOT EXONERATE DAVONTAE SANFORD; ONLY THE JUDGE’S GRANTING OF THE MOTION FILED BY THE INNOCENCE CLINICS FOR SANFORD’S EXONERATION WOULD HAVE DONE THAT (their motion is also linked below the story.) PROS. WORTHY AND ATTORNEY VALERIE NEWMAN AGREED TO THIS DISMISSAL WITHOUT PREJUDICE, CONTRADICTING WHAT THE INNOCENCE CLINICS ASKED FOR.

Diane Bukowski, Editor, Voice of Detroit

Davontae Sanford

Judge Brian Sullivan

DETROIT – Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Brian Sullivan finally signed a formal order dismissing quadruple homicide charges against Davontae Sanford July 19. The young man’s record is now cleared so he can “move on with his life,” his fondest wish on coming home June 8, after nine years in prison for crimes he did not commit.

A Detroit Free Press headline trumpeted that Sullivan’s order urges a “probe for truth” in the 2007 “Runyon Street killings,” implying that Davontae may not have been justifiably exonerated. The order comes on the heels of Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy’s refusal to charge former Detroit Police Commander James Tolbert with perjury in a capital case, and a press conference she focused primarily on evidence AGAINST Davontae.

In a 114-page report, the Michigan State Police had recommended warrants against Tolbert for lying about a sketch drawn of the murder scene, Vincent Smothers, who repeatedly confessed to the killings, and his named accomplice Ernest Davis. Worthy has issued none of these warrants.

Like Worthy’s press conference, Sullivan’s order is mean-spirited. It ignores and even contradicts facts revealed in the MSP report, as well as evidence compiled by two innocence clinics from Northwestern University and the University of Michigan, which leave no room for doubt about Sanford’s innocence.

Sullivan’s order questions why Smothers did not testify in court and face cross-examination. It fails to note that Worthy refused to give Smothers “use immunity” to testify during post-conviction hearings, although he was already serving 50-100 years for the murders of eight other people. Judge Sullivan also refused to allow Smothers’ attorneys to testify to what he told them. He ruled against the allowing the testimony of an expert on false confessions by children.

In his order, Sullivan cites numerous factors that he still believes have not been resolved, casting doubt on Davontae’s innocence and subjecting him and his family to all manner of possible repercussions. Sanford’s mother Taminko Sanford-Tilmon told VOD that the family is distressed by reports that have surfaced about Sullivan’s order.

Neither Sullivan’s full order nor the full MSP report have ever been included in articles in Detroit’s mainstream media. They are linked below this story, along with other pertinent documents.

“This case is thick with speculation, conjecture, confusion and unanswered questions; far thinner on evidence,” Judge Sullivan wrote in his seven-page order. “The MSP investigation does not appear to answer or resolve the outstanding questions in this case . . . The facts need to be discovered through professional unbiased investigation to substantive conclusions, legal and factual, to wherever they lead, and to whoever may be implicated.”

Kym Worthy at press conference with (l to r) MSP trooper,

Kym Worthy with staff who prosecuted Sanford, including Timothy Chambers,  Jason Williams

Many, even the editorial board of the Detroit News, have agreed that an investigation does indeed need to happen—into the roles of Worthy, the Detroit police, and other players in this gross miscarriage of justice.

The News asked for investigations by Michigan State Attorney General Bill Schuette and by the U.S. Department of Justice.

 “[T]he Sanford case lends credence to other allegations of bungled justice against the prosecutor’s office,” its editorial said in part. “The University of Michigan’s Innocence Clinic has a fat file of cases in which it believes Wayne County and Detroit cops either ignored evidence of innocence or distorted evidence to prove guilt. Schuette should review all those cases as well.”Finally, if Sanford’s wrongful conviction is an indicator of wider problems in the Detroit Police Department and Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office, this is fertile ground for a civil rights investigation by the federal Justice Department.”

Sullivan vacated Sanford’s conviction and sentence June 7, but had not yet finalized the dismissal requested in a joint stipulation by Worthy and Sanford’s attorneys June 8.  Sanford was convicted of the four Runyon Street killings in 2008,  after a confession evidently coerced by numerous police officers and by his trial lawyer when he was 14.

Worthy cited contradictory testimony by then Detroit Police Commander James Tolbert about a sketch of the house on Runyon Street as the chief reason she agreed to stipulate to dismissal of charges in the case, but refused to issue a perjury warrant against Tolbert. One reason: she said Sgt. Michael Russell, who was also present when the sketch was drawn, backed Tolbert’s original testimony that Davontae himself sketched the house in both his original testimony and his interview with the MSP. Russell signed the sketch, and apparently played THE major role in the investigation of the case.

In a blistering critique, the Michigan Court of Appeals overturned Sullivan’s decision on post-conviction proceedings. Although the Michigan Supreme Court overturned the appeals court ruling, it did so “without prejudice” to Sanford’s bringing his contentions of innocence back in a motion for relief from judgment.

jUDGE SULLIVAN’S ALLEGATIONS

Michael Robinson house on Runyon street where four people were murdered Sept. 7, 2007.

Michael Robinson house on Runyon street where four people were murdered Sept. 7, 2007.

SULLIVAN ALLEGATION 1:

“Glover, the surviving eyewitness, testified one of the perpetrators entered and remained in the bedroom during the search of the house. He was dressed in black pants, was a “younger person” whose voice was ‘not deep.’”

FACT:  Glover gave a written statement to Detroit police Sept. 18, 2007, according to the MSP report. “Glover described the subject as a black male, no more than thirty to thirty-thirty five years old with a soft voice. Glover further described the subject as approximately 6’ to 6’1” tall with a slim build,” says the report.

FACT: According to the MSP, neighbor Jesse King gave a written statement to the DPS Sept. 18, 2007 in which he “described the first subject as being 5’11”-6,’ brown-skinned, slim medium build, dark clothes . . . He advised the initial subject was carrying a long gun. King described the second subject as slightly shorter than the first with the same build and complexion. He advised that the subject was carrying a handgun.”The MSP investigator noted, “Both subjects are substantially shorter in comparison to the description of the suspects provided by Jesse King and Valerie Glover. The MSP later interviewed King themselves. He told them categorically that the killer was NOT Sanford, because he knew him from the neighborhood.

Murdered at 19741 Runyon Street Sept. 17, 2007:

Murdered at 19741 Runyon Street Sept. 17, 2007: (l to r), Michael Robinson, Brian Dixon, Nicole Chapman, Angelo McNoriell.

SULLIVAN ALLEGATION 2:

“Sanford’s black dickies (pants) were seized. These pants tested positive for gunshot residue on both thighs.”

FACT: The MSP report says, “According to the relevant Detroit Police Department “Gunshot Residue Test Information Sheet”, a gunshot residue test was conducted on Davontae Sanford on September 18, 2007, at 03: 13 by William Niarhos at 19741 Runyon. The subsequent laboratory analysis . . . states the following: GSR Kit #5038 was submitted, consisting of three aluminum SEM sampling stubs labeled Right Web, Left Webb, and Forehead/face. Significant amounts of Lead, Barium, and Antimony were not detected on any of the sampling stubs from Davontae Sanford.”

Later, it says:gunshot-residue“A Detroit Police Department Laboratory Analysis report (No. B0?-0631) shows that “A black T-shirt (Basic Wears brand, size 6XL)” “Taken from the B/R Closet at [address blanked out]. “Shirt was sampled for the presence of Gunshot Residue on the chest and abdomen. Significant amounts of Lead, Barium, and Antimony were not detected in either area.” The report also indicates that “A pair of black twill pants (Dickies brand, size 32 x 34) was submitted. Rustred stains on the left leg were tested for the presence of blood. Preliminary Testing: BLOOD Negative”

Further, the “Pants were sampled for the presence of Gunshot Residue on the right thigh and left thigh. Gunshot Residue was detected on both thighs.

The Detroit police did not say in this report who the pants belonged to. Additionally, the first GSR test on Sanford was performed at 19741 Runyon, where the killings occurred, on Sept. 18, 2007, the day after the event.  Any GSR on Sanford’s clothes clearly could have been picked up at this time.”

SULLIVAN ALLEGATION 3:

“Sanford told the police he washed his gym shoes . . .the reason he washed them was he wanted to wear clean shoes to school, although he told the police he was not attending school at the time.”

FACT: Although Rice pled guilty to perjury charges about his testimony in Davontae’s post-conviction hearings, the MSP report says that in separate testimony, Rice “explained that he wanted to make sure Davontae was in school the next day so at 11 :30pm he told Davontae to get dressed because he was going to personally take him to school the next day.”

Additionally, the MSP interviewed witness Jesse King in 2015, and reported, “King indicated he did not believe that either subject [running from the Runyon Street house] was Davontae Sanford. He explained that he knew Sanford because he (King) used to volunteer at the local school where Sanford was a student. He advised Sanford was also well known in the neighborhood.”

A 40 caliber Glock. Smothers said he carried this type of gun and another gun into Glover bedroom.

A 40 caliber Glock. Smothers said he carried this type of gun and another gun into Glover bedroom.

SULLIVAN ALLEGATION 4: 

“The account of the only surviving witness of the multiple murders conflicts substantially with the multiple statements offered by Smothers. . . .Smothers’ account of the encounter with Glover doesn’t match that given by Glover. The words spoken to her were markedly different. Glover heard rummaging in the a bedroom next to the one in which she hid and in the basement at the same time the person was in the room with her with a “big gun” and stayed in the room the whole time, as others ransacked the house. There is evidence of several persons in the house.” (VOD note: a “big gun” is not the same as a “long gun.” Glover was clearly terrified and her memories may not have coincided completely with what happened. Smothers was an experienced killer who carefully planned out every detail and was more likely to remember actual facts.)

FACT:  SMOTHERS AFFIDAVIT 8/16/2012: “After we stopped firing in the living room, I told Nemo [Ernest Davis] that I had seen someone go to another room and wanted to clear the house. I gave him my AK-47 so that I could move more easily and quickly through the house and around corners . . . As I passed by Robinson on my way out of the living room, I took the .40 caliber pistol that was sitting on the cocktail table next to Robinson and put it in my waistband. I had my own .40 caliber Glock in my hands . . .”

The bed under which Valerie Glover hid. (Photos from Worthy press conference.)

The bed under which Valerie Glover hid. (Photos from Worthy press conference.)

Smothers said he went down the hallway to a bedroom where there was a child on a bed. His statement continues, “There was also a woman hiding under the bed. I assumed this was the woman I had seen run from the living room. She was also lying with her head towards Teppert and her feet towards Runyon, but she had turned her face away from the south wall. When I walked into the room, she said something like, ‘Don’t kill me.’ I told her that I was not going to kill her and told her just to stay in the room until we left. The entire interaction lasted only a few seconds before I left the room and went back into the hallway.”

The MSP questioned why DPD had not further investigated Smothers’ confession. An MSP investigator says in the report, “I reviewed all of the above referenced reports relating to the investigation of Vincent Smothers and the investigation of the homicides that occurred at 19741 Runyon. During that review I could not locate any documented interviews or attempts of an interview of Ernest Davis AKA “Nemo”, Leroy Payne or the resident of [blocked out] Tamika Davis. Further, there does not appear to be any follow up or additional investigation conducted by the Detroit Police Department in relation to the statements made by Vincent Smothers concerning the homicides that occurred at 19741 Runyon.”

Ernest Davis.

Leroy Payne allegedly hired Smothers.

Smothers told police Ernest “Nemo” Davis was his accomplice in the Runyon Street killing, and that Leroy Payne, employed by drug kingpin Delano Thomas, hired him for the job.

The MSP report says it requested warrants for Tolbert, Smothers and Davis. But Worthy said at her press conference that she wanted further investigation by the MSP before issuing the warrants. She later refused to issue a perjury warrant for Tolbert, although Worthy said Tolbert’s differing testimony about a sketch drawn of the house on Runyon Street was key to her agreeing to dismiss charges against Sanford.  Her office did not respond to a VOD inquiry about whether she plans to issue murder warrants for Smothers and Davis. There is no statute of limitations involved there.

SULLIVAN ALLEGATION #3:

“Other conflicts exist. These include a gun matching the one Smothers later had; statement of other witnesses (Payne and Davis) that are not explained or accounted for; residue of gunpower on a pants of a participant named by Sanford.”

Rose Cobb; Smothers gave up contract hits after he killed her, remorseful over that act.

Rose Cobb; Smothers gave up contract hits after he killed her, remorseful over that act.

FACTS: 1) It is unclear what gun Sullivan refers to. The gun Smothers said he picked up in Robinson’s living room was later identified as the one he used to kill Rose Cobb, wife of Detroit cop David Cobb. This if one of the eight homicides for which he is serving 50-100 years (although he confessed at the same time to the Runyon Street homicides, but was not charged.) He has since said he will cancel his plea agreement for second-degree murder to testify on behalf of Sanders in open court.

2) Residue of gunpowder on another participant named by Sanford: who? Sanford named two sets of accomplices in his statements typed by the DPS, according to DPD reports in the MSP report. Worthy never charged any of those witnesses; the second set was never identified or located. Guns are frequently handled in Black and poor communities.

The MSP report says “On September 20, 2007, the Detroit Police Department submitted a warrant request for Davontae Sanford, Antonio Langston, Deangelo Gardner, and Santo Green. Only Davontae Sanford was charged by the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office, charges were denied for the other three suspects. Sanford was charged with four counts of first degree premeditated murder, one count of assault with intent to murder, one count of robbery armed and one count of felony firearm arising out of the robbery and murders that occurred at [Runyon] street. Angelo Gardner, Antonio Langston, Cary Dailey and Santo Green were not charged by the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office.” 

Delano Thomas, now deceased.

WHY? That is the question Sullivan does not ask.

3) Statements of Payne and Davis? What statements? None are included in the MSP report or in DPD reports. Worthy has never charged either in relation to the Runyon Street killings, despite Smothers’ statements that Leroy Payne, working for now deceased drug kingpin Delano Thomas,  hired him and Ernest Davis was his accomplice.

SULLIVAN ALLEGATION #4:

Then there is the uninvestigated perjury of William Rice. The defendant presented Rice—the former head of Detroit Police Homicide—as a witness for defendant. Rice subsequently pled guilty of perjury for presenting this false testimony on behalf of Sanford and is serving a prison sentence for that (and other) offenses. . . .No investigation into that deliberate presentation of false testimony appears to have been made as it relates to this case and no explanation of it has been presented to the court.”

William Rice after sentencing to 2 to 20 years in prison, after he testified on behalf of Davontae Sanford.

William Rice after sentencing to 2 to 20 years in prison, after he testified on behalf of Davontae Sanford.

FACT: According to the MSP report, they began investigating Rice and his girlfriend Cheryl Sanford (Taminko Sanford’s aunt) earlier on HUD fraud allegations. Worthy then asked them to investigate Rice’s testimony at Sanford’s trial as well (the only time she initiated an MSP investigation of the case.)

After Worthy charged Rice, he did plead guilty to two counts of perjury in the Sanford case and is serving 2-20 years in state prison. It IS unclear why he did so, considering that other witnesses corroborated his testimony.

The MSP report says Sanford’s mother and uncle Taminko and Nathaniel Sanford told police Rice had driven them, Sanford, and Sanford’s two sisters to Cheryl Sanford’s house for dinner around 9:30 p.m. and did not return until early the next morning. Sanford also told officers who encountered him outside his house late that night that his “uncle” Bill Rice had just dropped him off. Sanford’s grandmother Pamela Sanford later told the MSP the same version of events.

SULLIVAN ALLEGATION #5:

“Moreover, on the night of the initial investigation while Sanford was in contact with the police, eight phone calls were made by Detroit police Homicide Investigator Dale Collins to Rice [ranging until 8:30 the next morning). . . Rice denied on the record that he received those calls. The big question still looms as to why the calls were made and whether information about the case was conveyed all during the night. The MSP never interviewed Collins.”

Map of dog track in which Sgt. Russell and others were involved.

Map of dog track in which Sgt. Russell and others were involved.

FACT: The MSP report devotes many paragraphs to testimony given by Collins, from a transcript taken by DPD on July 13, 2010 with regard to the Sanford case, and an Oct. 30, 2012 interview with regard to People v. William Rice 3rd Circuit Court Case 13003607-01-FH.

It summarizes, “Investigator Collins advised that he was working on September 17, 2007 and responded to the scene on Runyon Street. He followed the K-9 track along with Sergeant Russell and while conducting a canvass of the area on Beland, he observed Sergeant Russell speaking with Davontae Sanford. Collins stated that he then made contact with Sanford who informed him that he had been dropped off earlier that day by his Uncle Bill. Collins advised that he asked “Bill who?” and Sanford responded that it was Bill Rice. Collins informed Sanford that he knew Bill Rice and that he (Sanford) needed to help the police. 

Dale Collins, photo from "First 48" website. Russell was also a star on that show.

Dale Collins, photo from “First 48” website. Russell was also a star on that show.

“Collins stated that Sanford told him that William Rice had picked him up from school and dropped him off. Collins assumed at his (Sanford’s) house. Upon questioning, Collins indicated that at the time of the incident he had worked with and known William Rice for over twenty years. William Rice had previously been the Inspector for the Detroit Police Department Homicide Section. Collins indicated that after discovering that Sanford was referring to William Rice he called Rice via his cellular telephone. Collins stated that he spoke with Rice and informed him that he was with a subject that claimed that he was his nephew and that he (William Rice) had dropped him off.”

Rice informed Collins that Sanford was not his nephew “but he’s a young guy that know (sic) a lot of things that happens (sic) in that neighborhood”. Upon questioning, Collins indicated that the number of the cellular telephone that he called William Rice on that evening was ‘(blanked out).

“Investigator Collins was also interviewed reference People v William Rice on October 30, 2012. Upon questioning he clarified his telephone call to William Rice. He stated “I called Bill Rice, and I asked him–or I told him that we were working on a triple homicide and that we were talking to a young fellow. And this guy said that he had been dropped off by Bill. And I asked Bill, I said well–Bill asked me well, what’s his name? And I told Bill his name is Davontae. He said, well, yes, that’s Cheryl’s nephew; that he had dropped him off over there. He also said that he was a young–he’s about 14 or 15 years old, and he’s a street guy. Anything out in the street he knew about. So if he tells you something, you can believe it.”

Collins was questioned if Rice said anything else concerning Sanford. Collins stated “No. Basically whatever he told me, I could like believe what he said because he knew the streets. He also said that it was Cheryl’s nephew, not his nephew. Bill mentioned to me that he was trying to get him in school because he was in the street, and he had supposedly dropped him off from the west side, took him to the east side where he lived at. He lived on (blank). “Only thing happened next was I told Bill we’re going to be talking to him. Well, he knew that. So the conversation basically ended.”

WHO ENGINEERED SANFORD’S FRAME-UP, AND SMOTHERS COVER-UP?

Detroit police Sgt. Michael Russell; photo is taken from "First 48" reality show website, the same site which boasted Joseph Weekley as a star. The shows main purpose was to show that homicides needed to be wrapped up in 48 hours.

Detroit police Sgt. Michael Russell; photo is taken from “First 48” reality show website, the same site which boasted Aiyana Jones’ killer Joseph Weekley as a star, as well as Dale Collins. The show’s main purpose was to show that homicides needed to be wrapped up in 48 hours.

It is clear from the MSP report that Sgt. Russell played THE major role in the frame-up of 14-year-old Davontae Sanford.

Both Russell and Collins are shown as stars on the website for A&E’s “The First 48.”

That show stresses the importance of the police finding the guilty party within the “First 48” hours. (It also filmed the horrific DPD Special Response Team attack on the home of Mertilla Jones in 2010, which resulted in the death of 7-year-old Aiyana Jones.)

Was Russell, aided by Collins, seeking to get the case resolved by tricking a 14-year-old child into a false confession? What did Russell, Collins, and others know about Smothers, hired by DPD officer David Cobb to kill his wife Rose Cobb later? Did Smothers perform other hits for the police?

The MSP report says, “Email sent to Wayne Co PA investigator Cory Williams on 12/15/15 requesting either IS or Grand Jury for Ira Todd, Mike Russell, and James Tolbert. I was contacted via phone by Williams on 12-16-15 at approximately 1315 hrs regarding this issue. He advised that he would speak with APA Moran and get back with me. At approximately 1415 hrs Williams called back to advise that APA Moran wanted to have a meeting after the first of the year to discuss what specific questions we wanted to ask each of these individuals.”No such meeting was ever held.

The MSP reported later “Investigative team met with WCPA on 1/11/16 at 1500 hrs to discuss Investigative Subpoenas in regards to Tolbert, Russell, and Todd. PA reluctant to issue IS’s. Inspector Menna and D/F/Lt. Powell in attendance w/ D/Sgt Corriveau.”

The MSP reported that they interviewed Detroit Police Detective Barbara Simon, who was assigned to be the Officer in Charge in the case. But she informed them that Sgt. Russell handled most of the case, and that he and other cops kept her out of the loop.

“Simon stated she was assigned the Runyon St case the day after the actual incident and was subsequently listed as the officer in charge (OIC),” says the MSP report. “She explained she did not respond to the initial crime scene. Simon acknowledged that even though she was the OIC, Sgt Mike Russell handled a majority of the information in this case.

“Simon said she remembers conducting a search warrant at Sanford’s residence where they recovered a pair of gym shoes. She also remembers a drawing, however she was not present when the drawing was made. Simon further explained she was the one who completed the investigators report for this case. We asked if she ever became aware of Vincent Smothers to which she stated she only heard of him after the Rose Cobb homicide. It was then asked if she recalled anyone ever bringing information to her regarding Vincent Smothers admitting or confessing to the Runyon St homicides.

Who was in charge of Runyon Street investigation--the DPD or the First 48?

Who was in charge of Runyon Street investigation–the DPD or the First 48?

“Simon stated she does not remember anyone coming to her with information about Vincent Smothers. Simon explained she would have taken further steps/ actions if she would have been made aware of Vincent Smothers being involved in the Runyon St homicides. She also stated that she would have remembered if someone informed her of such information.”

According to the MSP report, officers present when the sketch of the house was drawn included not only Tolbert, who Worthy recently refused to charge with perjury, but Russell and others who drove Davontae around the neighborhood for several hours after Russell found him outside his house, around the corner from Runyon, in his pajamas. Russell signed the sketch. Russell also conducted the interrogations which led to Davontae’s confession, and signed those related documents.

The MSP reported regarding Russell, “Sgt. Michael Russell testified on four occasions in reference to his involvement in the investigation of the homicides that occurred at 19741 Runyon on September 17, 2007. Sgt Russell testified at 36th District Court on October 01, 2007, for a preliminary hearing in People v Sanford. He again testified at trial in 3rd Circuit Court on People v Sanford on March 18, 2008. Finally, Sgt Russell testified in evidentiary hearings on People v Sanford in 3rd Circuit Court on July 21, 2009, and July 13, 2010. Note, there is no report authored by Sgt Russell reflecting his actions or involvement in the investigation.”

WHO FRAMED DAVONTAE SANFORD AND WHY DID THEY COVER UP FOR VINCENT SMOTHERS IN THE RUNYON STREET MURDERS? WHO SHOULD BE CHARGED FOR FORCING A 14-YEAR-OLD CHILD TO ENDURE ALMOST NINE HORRENDOUS YEARS IN AN ADULT PRISON SYSTEM?

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