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Tampilkan postingan dengan label judicial system. Tampilkan semua postingan

Kamis, 22 September 2011

Ben Jealous: "The World Will Remember Troy's Name"

Dear friend,

Tonight the State of Georgia has killed an innocent man.

In recent weeks, we fought hard for the commutation of Troy Davis' sentence. More than one million of your petitions were delivered. Protests, rallies and vigils were organized around the globe. Tonight, we fasted and prayed together as a community.

I have spent the past week with Troy's family. He wanted the world to know that he understood that this struggle goes beyond just one man. Troy was prepared to die tonight. As he said again and again, the state of Georgia only held the power to take his physical body. They could not take his spirit, because he gave his life to God.

Let's remember and heed Troy's words: We must not let them kill our spirit, either.

Troy's execution, the exceptional unfairness of it, will only hasten the end of the death penalty in the United States. The world will remember the name of Troy Anthony Davis. In death he will live on as a symbol of a broken justice system that kills an innocent man while a murderer walks free.

The world will remember Troy's name, as the death penalty supporters who expressed doubt in this case begin to doubt an entire system that can execute a man amidst so many unanswered questions.

The world will remember Troy's name, as death penalty opponents who remained silent in the past realize that their silence is no longer an option.

The world will remember Troy's name because we will commemorate September 21st each year as both a solemn anniversary and a call to action. The night they put Troy Davis to death will become an annual reminder that justice will not be achieved until we end this brutal practice of capital punishment.

"This movement," Troy said, "started before I was born." After tonight, our movement will grow stronger until we succeed in destroying the death penalty in the United States once and for all.

I know you will join me. Together we will secure his legacy, and the world will remember the name Troy Anthony Davis.

In solidarity,

Ben Jealous

Rabu, 05 Januari 2011

Quiet Lockdown: The Scott Sisters, Black Women and Miscarriage of Justice in the South



Mississippi case is a current example of a historical bias in the judicial process.

Quiet Lockdown:
The Scott Sisters, Black Women and Miscarriage of Justice in the South
by Stephane Dunn | TheLoop21

After serving sixteen years and their young adult lives behind bars, the Scott sisters are finally good headline news; Governor Barbour’s pardon of the Mississippi sisters and the stipulation – the gift of one sister’s kidney to the other is the feel good story of the moment; in truth it remains a tragic commentary about unjust justice.

Jamie and Gladys Scott, now 36 and 38, committed a crime, armed robbery which netted them 11 bucks, but then they were victimized by the system. The three black men involved pointed to the sisters for orchestrating the crime and served little time, while the Scotts were given an absurdly severe penalty: a life sentence. More than just another example of how the legal system has been unjust to black folk and women, the Scott case also speaks specifically to black women's historical experience with the judicial process. While black male persecution under the law has generated more publicity, ( for example the newsmaking 1931 Scottsboro Boys case) black females have shared a similar reality.

In the South, from slavery through the present, black women have had a long history of brutal mistreatment by racist criminal legal systems. Time and time again courts have famously denied black women their humanity and ignored the underlining racial politics that determined their fates.

Read the Full Essay @ theLoop21