Round
Two: Third Circuit Court Panel Re-Hears Issue of Abu-Jamal's
Death Penalty on Orders of Supreme Court
This Can't Be Happening, 10 November 2010
by: Dave Lindorff,
The three-decades-long murder case of Philadelphia journalist
Mumia Abu-Jamal, who has sat in solitary in a cramped cell on
Pennsylvania’s death row for 28 years fighting his conviction
and a concerted campaign by the national police union, the
Fraternal Order of Police, to execute him, was back in court
Tuesday, with a three-judge federal Appeals Court panel
reconsidering its 2008 decision backing the vacating of his
death sentence, on orders of the US Supreme Court.
The three judges,
Reagan-nominated Anthony Sirica, Bush Sr.-nominated Robert
Cowen, and Clinton-nominee Thomas Ambro, two years ago agreed
with a lower court judge, Federal District Judge William Yohn,
that the jury in Abu-Jamal’s 1982 trial had been provided with a
poorly-worded and confusing jury ballot form and flawed
instructions from the trial judge during the penalty phase. The
confusion, they decided, could have misled jurors into thinking,
incorrectly, that in order to consider a mitigating factor
against voting for the death penalty, all 12 of the jurors would
have had to agree to it. In fact, under the law, any individual
juror can decide that there is a mitigating factor against a
death sentence. Only aggravating factors that would argue for a
death sentence have to be found by all members of the jury to be
applicable.
Though the Third Circuit denied
Abu-Jamal's efforts to overturn his conviction, the 2008 ruling
on the death penalty was nonetheless widely seen as a victory
for Ahim and his attorney Robert R. Bryan, as it meant either
that he would avoid execution, instead serving a life sentence
without possibility of parole, or that the Philadelphia district
attorney would have to request a new penalty phase trial, with a
new jury hearing arguments for and against imposition of a new
death sentence.
Last January, however, the US
Supreme Court threw a new wrench into the case, ruling in an
Ohio murder case involving Frank Spizak, a neo-Nazi (he sported
a Hitler mustache at his trial) once sentenced to death for
random killings of Jews and blacks, that a lower court order
vacating his death sentence had been in error. That case had
also focussed on the confusing language of a jury ballot form,
and of the judge’s instructions to the jury.
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The high court, which also
had pending before it at the time an appeal by the
Philadelphia DA of the Third Circuit decision in
Abu-Jamal’s case, sent that case back down to the Third
Circuit, asking Judges Sirica, Cowen and Ambro to review
their decision in light of its decision in the Spizak
case.
At Tuesday’s hour-long
hearing, Assistant DA Huge Burns tried to argue that the
issues in the Abu-Jamal jury instructions and ballot
form were “almost identical” to those in the Spizak
case. Abu-Jamal’s attorney, Widener University law
professor Judith Ritter, who had argued the same issue
of a confusing jury instruction and ballot form
successfully before the same judges as an assistant
counsel in the 2007 hearing, made the counter-argument
that the problems with the judge’s instructions and the
jury form in the Abu-Jamal case were “fundamentally
different” from those in the Spizak case. |
The three judges seemed, in their
initial remarks and in their questions, to be leaning towards
the defense view.
As Judge Cowen asked, following
DA Burns’ argument, “Doesn’t the jury form in Spizak
significantly differ from our form? I found six differences.” At
another point in the hearing, he said, “Aren’t the cases
different in more than degree, but in kind?”
Judge Ambro noted that in the
Abu-Jamal case, Judge Albert Sabo had told the jurors, “Remember
again, your verdict must be unanimous.” Ambro observed, “That’s
sort of a general over-arching instruction.” He and Cowen both
noted that the Spizak jury had never been told their decision
had to be unanimous, while the word “unanimous” was used
repeatedly in the Abu-Jamal case, both in the judge’s verbal
instructions and on the jury form.
Burns tried to counter that while
“unanimous” may not have been used in the Spizak case, the jury
was addressed as a single entity, at least implying unanimity
might be required for the finding of a mitigating factor.
Attorney Ritter homed in on the
differences between the Spizak and Abu-Jamal cases, saying, “In
Spizak, you had an absence of instructions regarding mitigation
that could have confused the jury. Here (in the Abu-Jamal case),
it’s not silent. Look at number 2 (in the jury ballot form). It
starts, 'We the jury have found unanimously...'”
Ritter argued for Abu-Jamal alone
at this hearing following the surprise departure of Abu-Jamal’s
lead attorney Robert R. Bryan only days before the hearing.
Abu-Jamal reportedly asked Bryan last week to simply attend the
hearing, but to not address the court, leaving that job to
Ritter. Bryan says Abu-Jamal apparently felt that since Ritter
had won the argument in 2008, she was a better choice than Bryan
himself, who many Abu-Jamal supporters felt was somewhat
disorganized and less than incisive at the 2008 hearing. Bryan
says his proposal that he make introductory remarks and respond
to any questions from the judges at the conclusion of the
hearing was rejected by Ritter and Abu-Jamal, so he submitted a
brief to the court asking to be removed from the case. The
judges agreed to his request last Friday. It is the second time
Abu-Jamal has dumped his lead attorney on the eve of a critical
hearing. In 2001, just as Judge Yohn was discussing dates for a
hearing on his habeas appeal, Abu-Jamal fired lead attorney
Leonard Weinglass and assisting attorney Dan Williams, angry
over a book on the case that Williams had just published. He
replaced them with two attorneys, Eliot Grossman and Marlene
Kamish, who had little or no death penalty law experience,
dropping them later in favor of Bryan.
In the end, while Presiding Judge
Sirica was harder to read, Judges Cowen and Ambro, at least,
didn’t seem to have been convinced by Burns. “You haven’t met
Miss Ritter’s argument,” Cowen said. “She pointed out some
differences between the (Spizak and Abu-Jamal) forms that are
significant.”
After which Judge Ambro said,
“For example, the word ‘unanimous’ was not used in Spizak.”
Judge Cowen added, “In our case,
‘unanimity’ was used time and time again, and in quite close
proximity to where you find things about mitigating
circumstances.”
Of course, even if the
three-judge panel decides to reaffirm its 2008 decision, the
DA’s office will almost certainly appeal again to the Supreme
Court, where the same five judges who ruled against Spizak and
referred the Abu-Jamal case back to the Third Circuit panel
could vote to reverse the Third Circuit. In that event Abu-Jamal
would have his death penalty reinstated.
If the high court agreed with the
Third Circuit, or if it chose not to take the case and let the
ruling stand, then the DA would have to decide whether to leave
Abu-Jamal with a life sentence, or to ask for a new penalty
phase trial, which would take place back in state court.
The defense is hoping for a
retrial of the penalty, since that would at least offer
Abu-Jamal the chance to introduce new evidence regarding the
shooting of Police Officer Daniel Faulkner. For example, the
prosecution made a big point of highlighting the testimony of
two witnesses, prostitute Cynthia White and taxi driver Robert
Chobert, who both described the shooting of Faulkner by
Abu-Jamal as an “execution,” with Abu-Jamal standing astride the
fallen cop and firing repeatedly at him at nearly point-blank
range. The problem with that story is that only one bullet--the
one that struck Faulkner in the middle of his forehead--hit the
officer, yet no bullet impacts can be seen in crime scene photos
of the area on the sidewalk where Faulkner lay, and police
investigators reported finding no such marks either.
A test of a gun similar to Abu-Jamal’s, firing similar
metal-clad, high-velocity Plus-P ammunition at a section of old
sidewalk concrete, proves that such impact marks should have
been clearly visible. While a rehearing of the penalty phase of
the trial would not be able to directly raise the issue of
guilt, in a penalty phase re-hearing, the defense could be
expected to present evidence that the “execution” scenario
presented to the jury by the prosecution simply couldn’t have
happened, and witnesses would likely be called to challenge the
story. That in turn would raise the risk, for the prosecution,
that evidence -- or a witness recantation -- could open the door
to a new challenge to Abu-Jamal’s conviction.
Even if the Third Circuit or the
US Supreme Court rules against Abu-Jamal, and his original death
sentence is reinstated, it is not the end of the road in this
long-running case, however.
Back on December 18, 2001, when
Federal District Judge Yohn tossed out Abu-Jamal’s death
penalty, he noted in his ruling that he had “mooted” four other
defense claims of unconstitutional flaws in his death penalty
hearing, on the grounds that there was no need to examine these,
since he had already decided to vacate the penalty. As Abu-Jamal
defense team attorney Christina Swarns notes, “We have an
absolute right to have those claims considered.”
In other words, if the death
penalty is reaffirmed, Abu-Jamal will be back before Judge Yohn
again, where other powerful and compelling objections to the way
his initial trial was conducted will have to be reviewed. Among
the complaints:
* Prosecutor Joseph McGill’s use
of a statement made by Abu-Jamal when he was only 15, quoting
Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Tse-tung that “Power flows
from the barrel of a gun,” in an effort to sway jurors towards
imposing a death penalty.
* The rushing of the case and the
inadequacy of Abu-Jamal’s legal counsel, attorney Anthony
Jackson, with Judge Sabo ordering the penalty phase hearing to
begin the day following the jury’s guilty verdict, and Jackson
not requesting a delay to allow him to prepare. As a result,
Jackson called not one character witness to allow Abu-Jamal to
develop a case for mitigating factors.
* Prosecutor McGill improperly
advised jurors, with the approval of the judge, that they were
“not asked to kill anybody,” because there would be “appeal
after appeal after appeal.” The Supreme Court and the Third
Circuit, as well as the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, have all
repeatedly overturned death sentences because of prosecutors
making similar statements to juries, on the grounds that it
tends to remove from jurors any sense of the moral consequences
of their profound decision. (McGill himself had a death penalty
he had won overturned for this exact reason.)
* Finally the defense made the
claim that the prosecution withheld form the defense information
it had that local police and the FBI had called off years of
surveillance of Abu-Jamal after concluding that, as the FBI put
it in a note calling off monitoring of Abu-Jamal, “”In March
1973, per bureau instructions, captioned subject (Abu-Jamal) was
deleted from ADEX and no additional investigation conducted
concerning his activities. Sources, however, have continued to
report periodically on COOK (Abu-Jamal’s family name) and,
although he has not displayed a propensity for violence, he has
continued to associate himself with individuals and
organizations engaged in Extremist activities.”
As Asst. DA Burns has said, “This
case will go on for years.”
http://www.thiscantbehappening.net/node/300
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