[image: User Picture] <http://my.firedoglake.com/members/angola3news/> Herman
Wallace, The “Muhammad Ali of the Criminal Justice System,” Passes
On<http://my.firedoglake.com/angola3news/2013/10/04/the-muhammad-ali-of-the-criminal-justice-system-passes-on/>
By: Angola 3 News <http://my.firedoglake.com/members/angola3news/> Friday
October 4, 2013 7:29 am

This morning we lost without a doubt the biggest, bravest, and brashest
personality in the political prisoner world. It is with great sadness that
we write with the news of Herman Wallace’s passing.
[image: Herman Wallace on a stretcher after his release.]

Herman Wallace after his release.

He never did anything half way. He embraced his many quests and adventures
in life with a tenacious gusto and fearless determination that will
absolutely never be rivaled. He was exceptionally loyal and loving to those
he considered friends, and always went out of his way to stand up for those
causes and individuals in need of a strong voice or fierce advocate, no
matter the consequences.

Anyone lucky enough to have spent any time with Herman knows that his
indomitable spirit will live on through his work and the example he left
behind. May each of us aspire to be as dedicated to something as Herman was
to life, and to justice.

Below is a short obituary/press statement for those who didn’t know him
well in case you wish to circulate something. Tributes from those who were
closest to Herman and more information on how to help preserve his legacy
by keeping his struggle alive will soon follow.

*In Memoriam: Herman Wallace*

On October 4th, 2013, Herman Wallace, an icon of the modern prison reform
movement and an innocent man, died a free man after spending an
unimaginable 41 years in solitary confinement.

Herman spent the last four decades of his life fighting against all that is
unjust in the criminal justice system, making international the inhuman
plight that is long term solitary confinement, and struggling to prove that
he was an innocent man. Just 3 days before his passing, he succeeded, his
conviction was overturned, and *he was
released*<http://angola3news.blogspot.com/2013/10/free-at-last-herman-wallace-has-finally.html>
to
spend his final hours surrounded by loved ones. Despite his brief moments
of freedom, his case will now forever serve as a tragic example that
justice delayed is justice denied.

Herman Wallace’s early life in New Orleans during the heyday of an
unforgiving and unjust Jim Crow south often found him on the wrong side of
the law and eventually he was sent to the Louisiana State Penitentiary at
Angola for armed robbery.  While there, he was introduced to the Black
Panther’s powerful message of self determination and collective community
action and quickly became one of its most persuasive and ardent
practitioners.

Not long after he began to organize hunger and work strikes to protest the
continued segregation, endemic corruption, and horrific abuse rampant at
the prison, he and his fellow panther comrades Albert Woodfox and Robert
King were charged with murders they did not commit and thrown in solitary.
Robert was released in 2001 after 29 years in solitary but Herman remained
there for an unprecedented 41 years, and Albert is still in a 6×9 solitary
cell.

Herman’s criminal case ended with his passing, but his legacy will live on
through a civil lawsuit he filed jointly with Robert and Albert that seeks
to define and abolish long term solitary confinement as cruel and unusual
punishment, and through his comrade *Albert Woodfox’s still active and
promising bid for
freedom*<http://tv.msnbc.com/2013/03/30/buddy-caldwell-lay-off-the-angola-3-already/>
from
the wrongful conviction they both shared.

Herman was only 9 days shy of 72 years old.

Services will be held in New Orleans. The date and location will be
forthcoming.

*For more information visit www.angola3.org and
http://angola3news.blogspot.com/*

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