I am forwarding information to invite you all to a great and very  
unique event in Chicago - Live from Death Row, which includes a  
former Burge torture victim speaking out, and a live call in from  
well-known death row prisoner and journalist Mumia Abu Jamal.  This  
is only the second time Mumia Abu Jamal has spoken from death row.   
Please see more details in the article further below.


Stop on the Campaign to End the Death Penalty's NATIONAL TOUR: Live  
 From Death Row
Part of the CEDP's national convention: Working to End the Death Penalty

November 8, 2008 - 7:30 PM
University Church, 5655 S. University (at 57th Street, 1 block west  
of Woodlawn)
Chicago, IL
Speakers include:

*Mumia Abu-Jamal, calling in live from his Pennsylvania prison cell
* Martina Correia, sister of Georgia death row prisoner Troy Davis
*Darby Tillis, exonerated death row prisoner from Illinois
*Darrell Cannon, police torture victim under former Commander Jon Burge
*Sandra Reed, mother of Texas death row prisoner Rodney Reed
*Poetry by Delbert Tibbs, exonerated Florida death row prisoner
*Moderated by Alice Kim, Campaign to End the Death Penalty



A New CEDP Tour: Live From Death Row!
Fall 2008/Spring 2009


  "These are America's condemned, who bear a stigma far worse than  
'prisoner.' These are America's death row
residents: men and women who walk the razor's edge between half-life  
and certain death."—Mumia Abu-Jamal, Live
 From Death Row

This fall the CEDP is launching a national tour, "Live From Death  
Row," featuring the voices of death row prisoners,
live from their prison cell. Death sentences de-humanize the  
condemned, justifying the state-sponsored murder of the
poor, the innocent and people of color. Death rows isolate those  
sentenced to die, denying them human contact and
hope for justice. In our "Live From Death Row" tour, the voices of  
death row prisoners will reach from behind the
walls to share their stories of loss, injustice, struggle, and hope  
for an end to the death penalty. At a time when the
national chorus against the death penalty continues to grow, these  
voices are critical for the movement on the
outside.

The tour features death row prisoners speaking live over speaker-phone.

$5 suggested donation for admission (free of charge for CEDP  
convention attendees). No one will be turned away for
lack of funds.

For more information, or to register for the convention, visit http:// 
www.nodeathpenalty.org, email
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or call 773-955-4841.


For those who are interested I am also attaching a story about  
Mumia's case for those who are not familiar.

How Mumia was railroaded
Ben Davis reviews a book that provides a detailed account of how  
political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal was framed for murder.
September 11, 2008
THOUSANDS OF pages have been written about the case of Mumia Abu- 
Jamal. Still, journalist J. Patrick O'Connor's recently published The  
Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal stands out.
It is a well-researched, scrupulously detailed, blow-by-blow account  
of the railroading of Mumia, written with a brio that makes it as  
gripping as any murder mystery novel. If it reads like a murder  
mystery, however, the mystery is unraveled at the beginning.
O'Connor starts his book with a detailed reconstruction of what  
happened on December 8, 1981, the night that policeman Daniel  
Faulkner was killed after having stopped a VW belonging to Billy  
Cook, Abu-Jamal's brother, at the corner of 13th and Locust in  
Philadelphia. Found shot at the scene, Mumia was beaten by police and  
later charged with killing Faulkner.
O'Connor not only details the inconsistencies in the case against  
Mumia but systematically shows how, when you discount the witnesses  
we now know to have been coerced by the prosecution, the remaining  
accounts all point not just to Mumia's innocence, but to another  
culprit.
That person, O'Connor suggests, is Kenneth Freeman, an Army vet who  
worked with Mumia's brother, had a gun and was in the VW with Cook  
when Faulkner stopped it.
The scenario that O'Connor lays out is that Cook and Faulkner got  
into a heated altercation in front of the VW after the stop, leading  
the police officer to strike Cook with his flashlight. Cook fled back  
into his car, on the driver's side. It was seeing his brother being  
hit that caused Mumia, parked in a cab across the street, to run  
toward the scene, at which point Faulkner turned and shot him.  
Meanwhile, Freeman exited the passenger door of the VW and shot  
Faulkner, then fled the scene.
This scenario fits the actual evidence in a way that the prosecution  
case does not. Freeman was subsequently killed under mysterious  
circumstances in 1985, his body bound, gagged, stripped naked and  
dumped in a vacant lot.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
AFTER LAYING this out, O'Connor recalls the context of the trial,  
including Philadelphia's notorious police corruption and the city's  
campaign of repression against MOVE, a commune led by John Africa.  
This was a news story Mumia covered as a journalist--earning him the  
lasting animus of law enforcement.
It is O'Connor's account of the trial itself, however, that is  
invaluable--in no small part because he makes heavy use of actual  
transcripts. The biases of Judge Albert Sabo and prosecutor Joseph  
McGill are well known and have served as basis for appeals. Still,  
reading their words gives a dramatic sense of the choreography of the  
frame-up.
To list a single example, as Mumia's lawyer Anthony Jackson attempts  
to establish police misconduct, given the Philadelphia Police  
Department's failure to do even routine tests on the crime scene that  
might have vindicated Mumia, Sabo summons him to a sidebar conference  
to block him from highlighting this for the jury:
SABO: It is strictly conjecture as to what the outcome [of the tests]  
would be.
JACKSON: That may be conjecture--
SABO: There is so much other evidence in the case.
JACKSON: I understand that, and it is the evidence that is not here  
which seems to be beneficial to the defendant, and that is what I am  
pursuing.
SABO: There isn't any...
As O'Connor notes of this exchange, "Prior to even hearing the  
defense portion of the trial, Sabo rendered his own opinion about the  
case." O'Connor goes through the case, witness by witness, line by  
line, showing how thin the prosecution's case was, and how much it  
depended on suppressing evidence of likely innocence.
O'Connor is ultimately very sympathetic to Mumia. At the same time,  
he does lay great stress on how Mumia undermined his own case,  
calling him "petulant" for his refusal to cooperate with his court- 
appointed attorney. He wanted to represent himself, but was denied  
this basic right by Sabo. At times, O'Connor seems to suggest that  
Mumia might have been found innocent had he just behaved.
It would seem more productive to emphasize that Mumia's courtroom  
behavior was motivated by a desperate and justified sense that  
everything--an admittedly incompetent attorney, a hostile judge, a  
death-penalty-bent DA--was against him.
Perhaps this emphasis on O'Connor's part comes from an overestimation  
of the potential for fairness within the American justice system.  
Noting the overwhelming evidence now available, the author ends the  
book on a hopeful note, stating that Mumia may get a new day in  
court, given that the Third Circuit Court agreed to hear the  
constitutional issues in 2007. Those hopes were dashed when the  
appeals court definitively rejected Mumia's petition this July.
Still, the book is an indisputable tool for the movement that still  
has to be built, if Mumia is ever to be free. It destroys the case  
against Mumia Abu-Jamal as few others have.
Opponents of Abu-Jamal always say that his supporters should just  
"read the transcripts" of the trial for evidence of his guilt.  
Supporters can now reply: ReadThe Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal.








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