Outside a Women’s Prison in New York for Mother’s Day

By Natasha Lennard via truth-out.org

The West Side Highway in New York, which traces Manhattan’s westerly edge, is dotted with luxury condo buildings and office blocks with views onto the Hudson River. Around 20th Street, an eleven-story modernist mural of geometric shapes, “Venus,” decorates the south face of a vast concrete block, but the famous painting by Knox Martin is now almost entirely obscured by a recently completed condo complex.

Just as “Venus” now goes largely unnoticed by the cars whizzing up and down the highway, so, too, does the building it decorates: Bayview Correctional Facility, a medium-security women’s prison and rare example of a state penitentiary in the middle of a major metropolis. I had never noticed Bayview myself, having passed that stretch of Manhattan hundreds of times. On Saturday evening, however, to mark the eve of Mother’s Day, I stood outside the prison with around 50 people making as much noise as possible.

Prison noise demonstrations – during which crowds stand outside correctional facilities chanting, whistling, banging drums and generally ruckus rousing – are intended to connect with inmates; a small gesture to remind prisoners that they are not forgotten. The demonstrations are pitched by anarchist solidarity networks across the world as actions in support of political prisoners, underpinned by the view that anyone imprisoned is, in a sense, a political prisoner (as the function of prisons and who gets deemed “criminal” are deeply political issues). Anarchist Black Cross – a network of collectives which have organized prisoner solidarity actions since the early twentieth century – regularly set up letter writing to individuals seemingly imprisoned because of their political positions and organize noise demonstrations worldwide.

The call out for Saturday’s demonstration from NYC Anarchist Black Cross spoke specifically to the issue of imprisoned mothers: “[O]n the eve of Mother’s Day NYC Anarchist Black Cross calls for a world without cages for all. We call for it during this time, because 2/3 of all women in prison are mothers and we recognize the forced separation of a child from their caregiver by the state as an act of violence,” it read. A recent Reuter’s article noted that women who give birth in prison have to hand their children over to a relative or put them up for adoption within 48 hours of giving birth. Most state penitentiaries are also remotely positioned, making visitation between incarcerated mothers and their children a challenge, especially for poor families without access to a car.

Noise demonstrations are often organized on calendar days set aside for celebration – celebration for the non-incarcerated, that is. Notably on New Year’s Eve, crowds gather yearly outside prisons in almost every state in the country. Indeed, a noise demonstration in New York last December 31, which garnered support from Occupy Wall Street participants, drew a crowd of 200 outside the federal Metropolitan Correctional Center in downtown Manhattan and sparked a rowdy scene later that night in Zuccotti Park. On Saturday evening, the chants directed toward the women inside Bayview made clear the point of the demonstration:

“Happy Mother’s Day! Happy Mother’s Day! We will abolish the prisons one day!” the crowd shouted and more vociferously still, “You are not alone.”

I had never previously attended a noise demonstration and beforehand could not imagine what response a small group with noise-makers could possibly elicit from within the concrete edifice – whether inmates would hear or care. But as soon as the noise began, the small square windows of light began to flicker on and off – some at strobe-like speed – along the prison’s North side. Inmates, as regularly happens during noise demonstrations, were turning their cell lights on and off in recognition as we stared and shouted up at their windows. Gradually, too, indistinguishable figures came forward, visible in their cell windows only as waving silhouettes; they made heart signals with their arms and danced in-time to the inconsistent drum beats from the demonstration below.

Anarchist Black Cross want to see an end to all prisons. Many who do not share their fervor, however, still understand the controversial nature of the US prison system, which incarcerates more people than any other country in the world (well over two million). It has long been criticized as an industrial complex, in which increasing the numbers of prisons (and so prisoners) is seen as a means to create jobs and cheap labor from inmates. Noise demonstrations in and of themselves do not manifest fleshed-out critiques or attacks on the carceral system – rather, they are a small way to reach out to, and assert solidarity with, those trapped within in it.

For over two hours on Saturday, scores of women inside Bayview stayed glued to their windows, waving; lights continued to flicker on and off and the crowd below continued to chant and bang any noise-making object available, including plastic street barricades caked in New York grime. All the while, prison guards and a handful of New York Police Department officers walked in front of the demonstrators, one officer constantly filming. When the demonstration finally came to a slow, drawn-out close, shouts of “thank you” and “we love you” could be heard from the cells above. Some prisoners held up sheets of paper to their windows, but to the crowd standing far below, their messages were illegible.

The gesture of the demonstration, although seemingly greatly appreciated by women inside Bayview, felt very small indeed as the inmates retreated from their windows and the prison building once again was silent and dark. We turned back onto the roaring West Side Highway, passed the gleaming new build which obscures the “Venus” mural which would never have been visible from any of the prison’s cells anyway.

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Captain Reggie Schell: Black Panther, 1941-2012

Black Panther Veterans Barbara Cox Easley and Reggie Schell
in Schell’s home, in Philadelphia Photo Courtesy of Its About Time BPP

Reggie Schell was Mumia’s early mentor in the Black Panther Party, when Mumia was still in his teens.  When Mumia was arrested Reggie was a key and very strong supporter, attending the trial, and helping to build support.  Reggie and Mumia continued their friendship and comradeship over many years.  We mourn the loss of this fighter and teacher, but celebrate the leadership role he played and the mentoring he provided to someone like Mumia.

Long live Reggie Schell!

The Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition

To hear Mumia’s tribute go HERE

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Occupy the Dept of Justice & Mumia Abu-Jamal’s Birthday Party

Occupy DC, Occupy the Hood, Chuck D, M1 from Dead Prez, Rebel Diaz, Ramona Africa and a bunch a rowdy Justice seekers rally at the Department of Justice and March on The White House for Mumia Abu-Jamal’s birthday. 20 some arrests are made.

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Palestinian Hunger Strikers Near Death

The Last Weapon

by Abby Zimet from Common Dreams

It’s hard to tell from the lack of western media coverage – the N.Y. Times being a rare exception – but protests are mounting as two Palestinian hunger strikers near death. UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged Israel to charge and try, or release, the prisoners, held under the open-ended “administrative detention,” after protesters waving “UNjust” and “UNfair” banners closed down UN offices in Ramallah. Both Amnesty International and Physicians for Human Rights issued urgent appeals for help. And thousands took to the streets.

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Jury Foreman in McKinney Case: “Justice Was Perverted”

Anthony McKinney has spent three decades locked up for a crime he likely did not commit. The foreman of the jury that handed down his guilty sentence speaks out in favor of a new trial for McKinney. The foreman talks about forced confessions, racial bias in the jury, and faulty eyewitness testimony.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-protess/anthony-mckinney-case_b_1501337.html?utm_source=Alert-blogger&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Email+Notifications

By David Protess, President of the Chicago Innocence Project

It is a saga of murder and injustice that spans three decades, and even now a surprising new chapter is being written.

Anthony McKinney, a black teenager, was convicted of the 1978 shotgun slaying of white security guard Donald Lundahl in South Suburban Harvey. Prosecutors sought the death penalty, but McKinney had no history of violence and the judge sentenced him to life without parole.

A quarter century later, my journalism students re-investigated the case, unearthing evidence that pointed to McKinney’s innocence: a confession coerced by a brutal cop, witnesses who admitted they had lied at the trial, viable alternative suspects and an alibi nailed down by the TV log of a Muhammad Ali championship fight. Based on this evidence, lawyers at the Center on Wrongful Convictions filed an innocence petition in 2008 seeking a new trial for McKinney and the Chicago Sun-Times ran a front-page story that exposed the injustice.

But Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez turned the tables in 2009 by subpoenaing the students’ grades, notes and memos about the case. McKinney’s plight was lost in the media uproar that followed.

One man, however, remained intently focused on the evidence. Meet Donald Gemmell, Ph.D., a retired physicist at Argonne National Laboratory — and the foreman of the jury that decided McKinney’s fate.

Gemmell, now 77-years-old, has been haunted by the verdict for most of his adult life. Last month, he called me to confess: The jury that he led had made a tragic mistake. “We convicted an innocent man,” he said in a voice filled with pain.

Gemmell’s doubts about McKinney’s guilt first surfaced during the trial, he said. He was skeptical about the credibility of the lead detective in the case and the testimony of a supposed eyewitness. And, he wondered why the state was unable to produce the murder weapon since police had apprehended McKinney near the scene. But mostly he was confused by the state’s time-line of events. “It was hard to figure out where the witnesses were in relation to the shooting,” he said.

Nevertheless, after he was elected foreman. the initial vote was 8-4 to convict, and two days later. the verdict was unanimous: Guilty. “We figured McKinney probably did it because he confessed,” Gemmell explained. “Why would an innocent person admit to murder? And we saw pictures of that poor man’s brains splattered all over his car. It was troubling that [McKinney] didn’t seem remorseful about that.”

Gemmell said he “didn’t sleep for weeks” following the verdict and began methodically reviewing the evidence in his head, as a scientist would. Logic gradually replaced the emotion of the trial. As time passed, his doubts became “more nagging.” He followed the recent controversies about the case on the Internet and was not surprised to read about the new evidence of McKinney’s innocence. He also became “not as naive” about the problem of false confessions. Finally, consumed by remorse and having moved from the Chicago area, he called to repudiate the verdict.

Reflecting on the case, an interracial crime, Gemmell chides two white jurors for showing “racial bias.” A female juror, he says, made overtly racist comments about McKinney. He says their votes for conviction were predictable — and not based on the evidence.

He similarly recounts a black juror’s pronouncement that “Hell is gonna freeze over before I’ll cast a vote against my black brother.” When he switched his vote to guilty at the end of deliberations, Gemmell asked for an explanation. “‘I have a job on the overnight train to Seattle and if I’m not on board… it’ll cost me two days’ pay!’” he told Gemmell.

“So [the black juror] caught his train to Seattle without losing any pay. And Anthony McKinney went to prison for life.”

Gemmell has “come to the conclusion that Mr. McKinney has indeed been wrongfully imprisoned and that the case against him was flawed.” How flawed? “[T]he course of justice was perverted…,” he believes.

“It’s really a shame that a blameless young fellow who liked to go out with his friends was found guilty of murder,” he continues. “I feel terrible that I didn’t question it more.”

Legal experts downplay the significance of juror recantations, considering them to be buyer’s remorse. Famously, a juror in the Troy Davis case led the charge to spare his life when new evidence of innocence emerged, but that didn’t stop the authorities from putting him to death last year.

Still, Gemmell hopes his voice will be heard in the decision whether to grant McKinney a new trial. That decision will be made by criminal courts Judge Diane Cannon following the impending hearing on the innocence petition.

“I’m willing to come to Chicago, if necessary,” Gemmell says. “I want him to go free someday soon.”

Anthony McKinney was 18 years old at the time of his arrest. He will turn 50 next Monday.

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Lynne Stewart: Some Thoughts for May 1, 2012

May Day, a celebration of the Worker and May Day, a commemoration of the Immigrant migration has now become a single holiday—and how appropriate that is !! The massive immigrant influx of the late 19 century was primarily  a new supply of workers for the unending appetite of capitalism. Cheap Labor.  Europe had become a dead end — wars, a class and land system that allowed no upward mobility and less and less opportunity for their children to learn or be somebody.  My own Swedish great grandparents came over as indentured workers–having to pay for their passage by the sweat of their (yes, women too) brows doing farm labor for two years.  This is a story that had been repeated through all the waves of immigrants–Italian, Greek, Slavic, Eastern European, Asian (Chinese, Filipino), Caribbean and now Latin American and African.  What has shifted is the structure that now has the United States as the Great Imperialist, first ravaging their homes militarily and economically and then casting large numbers of newly created displaced people adrift on the economic seas.  As one Jamaican friend and immigrant once said to me “Why shouldn’t we come here?  You have everything stolen from us !!”

Before I go further, I have a word for two special groups of workers and their paths and current status in America.  Blacks were kidnapped and brought here 400 years ago because it was “difficult “to enslave native Americans on their own lands.  Africans were readily identifiable-and thus if you were  Black you were a Slave.  That has not changed much in 400 years.  Just Ask Travon Martin and the other “targets”. Through all the years and all the continued resistance and struggle, that simple fact has always been determinative.  Today, it is also being used as a wedge to separate natural allies into enemies.  In the days preceding the Civil War,  Workers and Abolitionists fought side by side to achieve equality for both.  And that of course continues to be the goal–to demonstrate convincingly that all the media and all the tricks cannot divide the 99%.  Black people can rightfully claim their fair share of all the wealth, they slaved for no pay, but that does not mean that others are not entitled as well.  Mexicans, whose land was stolen from them, the other special group that must be mentioned, have this year almost stopped coming to the US.  Does that mean more jobs for those already here?—NO NO NO that is a cruel and cheap hoax.  Mexican immigrants do not take jobs that Blacks and other Americans want. Like all newcomers they do the grunt and dirty work — no-one in New York City could have a meal in a restaurant if it were not for the immigrants–mostly Latino, who provide the infrastructure. This is not a competition for jobs except so far as those who control the dollars make it so.

Two warnings to all from my own experience.  First, as immigrants anxious to be part of the American dream DO NOT join the part of it that says I can get past on skin color and I can advance myself by being racist and exploiting “those” people just as every preceding immigrant group has done.  My other alert is to People of Color—Do not blame the immigrants for your plight in white America, they came to work and made themselves indispensable. It is the same old white power structure that exploits both labor and race and racial differences for their own advancement that is responsible. Don’t adopt convenient scapegoats when the battle is there to be fought with the courage to do so against the true enemy.

The only PROGRESS to be sought on May DAY 2012 by all of us is a unity of purpose, by truly believing that an injury to one is an injury to all and acting in self defense against the powerful, unscrupulous forces who seek to destroy our movement.  This year we are once again confronted with a Presidential Election that for many is choosing the “lesser of two evils”.  Let me remind you that as James Baldwin, the Black author, once said–evil is always evil and the politicians including Mr. Obama have demonstrated their total untrustworthiness over and over and over.  Promises ?– a hollow joke; and Programs?– on paper or words of the air — never put into practice.  This is not to be Tolerated!!!
May Day is for the beginning of new offensives and we certainly have a vast choice — there is so much wrong, so much that needs fixing.  We must band together until they are more afraid of OUR power than their greedy fear of losing their vast fortunes.  This we Must do — our children and grandchildren assure us there is no choice, if there is to be a world for them to live and work and raise the next generations in.

http://lynnestewart.org/

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Elaine Brown speaks to the Occupy 4 Prisoners rally

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