Category: Jena

Update from Jena

Friends:

Three hundred people from across the nation descended on little Jena, Louisiana on July 31st. They came to pledge their support to the Jena 6 defendants and their families. At the end of a two-hour rally, a dozen volunteers hand-delivered over 43,000 petitions demanding that District Attorney Reed Walters back away from the worst prosecutorial decision of his life.

I must apologize for my recent silence. Friends of Justice has just completed a major (and momentous) move from Tulia, Texas to Arlington, Texas, and it has been impossible for me to send out updates or even remember my middle name. So much has happened in recent days and the media coverage has been remarkably intense and varied.

Most of you will have heard that Mychal Bell’s sentencing hearing has been postponed until September. Mychal’s attorneys have filed a motion for a new trial, arguing that Mychal should not have been tried as an adult and that his trial was hopelessly flawed. The judge appears willing to hear arguments in support of these assertions—very good news for Mychal and his parents.

Some amazing legal talent is being recruited to the defense effort. The details are still falling into place so I can’t give a great deal of detail, but rest assured that the Jena 6 defendants will be effectively represented.

The response to the appeal for support of the Jena 6 Defense Fund has been phenomenal, outstripping our most optimistic projections. Thanks to everyone who has contributed.

Yesterday’s rally was a tremendous success: (http://www.nola.com/newsflash/louisiana/index.ssf?/base/news-33/1185888575136460.xml&storylist=louisiana).

The numbers were very impressive and there will be more opportunities for supporters of the Jena 6 to come to Jena (and probably also to the state capitol in Baton Rouge) in the next few months. Stay tuned for updates.

The highlight yesterday (for me, at least) was a barbecue held at a ball park on the black side of town. An enormous tent had been erected to protect everyone from the sun and rain (we had a plenty of both) and people from across the nation were given a wonderful opportunity to interact. I moved from table to table, gathering contact information and listening to stories. People traveled to Jena from Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, New York, Boston, Houston, Dallas, New Orleans, Baton Rouge, and from dozens of little towns in Texas and Louisiana. The gathering was exceptionally diverse, about two-thirds black and one-third white, with large numbers of college students and retirees in attendance. Not surprisingly, most of the people who traveled to Jena are actively fighting for justice in their own communities.

Many of you will also have heard that the infamous “white tree” in the square at the Jena High School has been sawed down and chopped into fire wood: (http://www.shreveporttimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070731/NEWS01/707310334/1060/NEWS01). School officials hope this move will reduce tensions between black and white students. Perhaps. But the tree in Jena was never the problem; the problem was using a tree as a segregating line in the air.

The media coverage of the Jena story remains strong. Wade Goodwyn did an excellent feature for NPR’s All Things Considered on Monday; two days later it remains the most emailed piece on the NPR site: (http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=12353776). NBC Nightly News did a little “town divided” story last night (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032619/). Unfortunately, the only white guy in town willing to talk to the media is school board member, Billy Fowler. Fowler resents the repeated suggestion that Jena is a uniquely racist community; but he agrees that the entire situation, from the noose incident to the school fight, has been handled badly.

I don’t have time at the moment to give adequate attention to each of the major articles that have appeared recently, but a few brief observations are in order. Several articles in the regional media focus on a DOJ-sponsored town hall meeting held in Jena last Thursday (http://www.thetowntalk.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2007707260329 and http://www.thetowntalk.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070727/NEWS01/707270319/1002). United States Attorney, Don Washington was on hand along with Carmelita Freeman, a DOJ official from Dallas, and a representative from the FBI. They expected a crowd of about 20 people and got ten times that number—virtually every African American adult in Jena and a handful of white residents. That gives you a good feel for how things presently stand: white folks are on the defensive. There is a growing realization that Mr. Walters dropped the ball. On the other hand, the carpetbaggers and scalawags from the North telling Jena how to amend its wicked ways are deeply resented.

I have had dealings with US Attorney Don Washington in the past. He is the man who was forced to drop charges against Ann Colomb and three of her sons last year. Even though evidence emerged that the convicted drug dealer snitches who testified at trial were participating in a tightly organized perjury ring, Mr. Washington couldn’t admit that he and his assistants had screwed up.

So it goes in Jena. Washington admits that the nooses constituted a hate crime, but he says his hands are tied. Unless he can prove that Reed Walters intended to discriminate against the Jena 6, Washington says, he can’t take action.

Governor Blanco is also passing the buck. Some of the 43,000 people who have emailed their concern to the governor’s office have received “thanks for sharing, but I can’t help” responses from a staffer. This means that we need to turn up the heat another notch.

Finally, it appears that the national NAACP has joined the fight with a vengeance. Go to their website (http://www.naacp.org/) and Jena jumps out at you. (They feature a picture of the wrong tree—but I guess that’s a moot criticism now.) We welcome the support of America’s most prestigious civil rights organization. We are currently taking steps to enhance coordination and communication within the rapidly expanding coalition of civil rights and civil liberties organizations gathering around the Jena 6.

I will be writing more when I get back to Arlington. If you appreciate the work of Friends of Justice in Jena, please consider making a donation to support our organizing across Texas and Louisiana. You can donate online here, or send a check to the address below. You can also designate donations to the Jena 6 Organizing Fund to support our work for the Jena 6: https://friendsofjustice.wordpress.com/jena-6/

 

Do justice, love mercy, walk humbly.

Alan Bean

Friends of Justice
3415 Ainsworth Court
Arlington, TX 76016
806-729-7889 or 817-457-0025

Other coverage worth checking out:

http://www.aspendailynews.com/article_20958

A recent column from Amy Goodman of Democracy Now.

http://www.blackamericaweb.com/site.aspx/bawnews/jenasix731

A helpful Blackwebamerica update.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=11756302

Jordan Flaherty and Caseptla Bailey interview from NPR, July 5

Jena 6 Rally in Harvard Square

For all of you in the Boston area…

grace and peace,
Lydia Bean

Please come today July 31, to Harvard square to rally for Justice for the Jena Six!
We are meeting in front of the Harvard bookstore at 4:45pm. We will be handing out fliers, gathering petition signatures, and asking people to be on the mailing list…
It’s a first step, and we will be rallying in solidarity with our friends in Jena who are also gathering today!

Please contact me through my personal e-mail– keurdiarra@gmail.com

Jena 6 Protest in Jena

 Protest info:

Thanks for your interest in coming to Jena, LA to support the Jena 6!

It’s short notice, but on Tuesday, July 31st–the date Mychal Bell was originally scheduled to be sentenced–there will be a program and rally at the courthouse in Jena, organized by the families and their supporters. Having a sizable number of outsiders there will help focus media attention on the situation and communicate to the officials in Jena that the rest of us are watching. It will also be meaningful for the families of the Jena 6 to know that others support them, from near and far. It would be great if you could come.

As we help locals plan for this event, we want to get a sense of how many people are coming. Below, are some details on getting to Jena, so you can figure out if you’ll be able to get there on the 31st.

Details

If you’re flying to Louisiana, the closest airport to Jena is in Alexandria, a 45 minute drive away. There are also airports in Shreveport (about a 3 hour drive from Jena), New Orleans (about a 4 hr drive from Jena) and Baton Rouge (about 3 hrs from Jena). The closest hotels are in Alexandria (there is only one motel in Jena, which will fill up quickly).

Organizers will meet you when you arrive at a central location in Jena and get you situated for the day. We will be providing maps, organizers’ cell phone numbers, and other information closer to the day-of; you will be able to reach someone in case you have any problems, need directions, or have questions along the way. In addition to the rally, we hope to have a few other activities planned so you can get to know the town a bit before you leave.

RSVP

Once you’re confident you can come (or if you have unanswered questions), please send an email to jena@colorofchange.org , and provide us with the following information:

1. Your name
2. How many people you think will come with you, if any (we encourage you to organize a group, if you can)
3. A cell phone number where we can reach you (and whether or not it’s ok to send you text messages)
4. The area from which you’re traveling
5. How you are planning on getting to Jena (and if by air, into which airport)
6. And any other questions you might have

If you’ve decided you can’t come, there’s no need to email us. Either way, thanks for taking action in support of the Jena 6, and for considering coming to Jena. We hope to see you soon.

Thanks and Peace,

– James Rucker
Executive Director, ColorOfChange.org
July 26th, 2007

NYC for the Jena 6

Greetings,

Attention all folks in the Big Apple! NYC-area people are looking to organize a protest in your city related to the Jena 6! (I, Lydia Bean from FOJ, will be in the area on August 15th and 16th, so if you have it then, I’d love to join y’all!)

If you’re NYC and want to take action for the Jena 6, please contact Shannon Reid, whose message is posted below:

grace and peace,
Lydia Bean

I just found out about this today, and feel compelled to take some action. I’m in Brooklyn, NY and would love to connect with anybody in the area that’s interested in organizing some action here in NYC.

Please e-mail me at sreid03@gmail.com if this applies to you.

Thanks, and to everybody – keep fighting the good fight!

Shannon Reid
sreid03@gmail.com

Action Update: Jena 6 Protest in the Boston area

Friends of Justice is based in the great states of Texas and Louisiana, but we know that  not everyone is lucky enough to live in our part of the country.  😉  If you live far away, but you still want to get involved in a Jena 6 protest, take heart!  We’ve been getting word from other activists across the country who are organizing protests in their own cities.  If you are organizing a protest about the Jena 6, please post a comment about it.  We’ll post it to the blog, so it will go out to our subscribers as an Action Update.  (If you’ve already posted an upcoming protest and I neglected to post it to the blog, my apologies: send us another comment and I’ll get it out there.)

The first of these protests will be in Boston in the next couple of weeks, pending a permit.  If you live around Boston and you want to help organize this protest, please get in touch with Gretchen Segars  at <keurdiarra@gmail.com>  This protest is currently looking for an established sponsoring organization who can send out a press release to get Boston-area media involved in the Jena story.  Also, if you attend a Boston-area church that might want to send people, please consider putting together a church-based group or putting them in touch with Gretchen.

peace,

Lydia Bean

The Perpetrator becomes the Prosecutor

Here’s the latest from Jena. Hours after a community meeting at Jena’s tiny Antioch Baptist Church ended two men from Monroe, Louisiana destroyed a sign in front of the church building. According to eyewitness reports, they also did a “wheelie” on the rain-sodden lawn before driving off. The meeting was attended by 150 people; approximately 60 of whom were from neighboring communities.

I have pasted some of the comments from the Alexandria Town Talk after this brief AP article. The comments are typical: white folks think the boys from Monroe were “stupid”. This is also the term many white Jena and Alexandria residents used to describe the hanging of nooses in the “white tree” at the Jena High School.

Black people see the destruction of the sign as intimidation–a hate crime.

The Jena story is rapidly capturing the American imagination. As of yet, the story hasn’t been featured on the national news, but a couple of weeks should take care of that. The major civil rights groups have yet to weigh in publicly–but behind the scenes the action in the reform community is frantic and unrelenting. This story is about to explode.

I don’t know John Sanderson and Jerry Bufkin, the young white men from Monroe who decided to mow down the church sign in Jena, but the true name of the perpetrators is Legion. The Jena story fascinates and horrifies because it uncovers the dynamics of New Jim Crow racism.

According to most white people in Central Louisiana, there is no association between the nooses hanging from the tree in the High School square and the assault at the school three months later. To hear their story, Justin Barker was the random victim of black thugs eager to beat up a defenseless white kid. In this telling, the incident is stripped of all context. The crime is considered horrifying precisely because it is arbitrary and senseless.

Black people (and a growing cadre of justice-loving white people) are beginning to grasp the broader picture.

People are learning that the LaSalle Parish School Superintendent, Roy Breithaupt, called the noose hanging a childish prank and recommended the mildest of consequences–three days of in-school suspension.

People are learning that black students responded to Mr. Breithaupt’s announcement by staging a spontaneous lunch hour protest in the school square. Black students, led by a group of male athlestes, physically occupied the tree–claiming it as their own. (Thus far, no one in Jena has denied that the tree from which the nooses dangled provided shade for white shoulders only).

People are learning that high school officials responded to this legitimate and honorable protest by calling an emergency assembly in the school auditorium. Every police officer in town was asked to appear in full uniform. District Attorney, Reed Walters, looking cross and distracted, addressed the students.

Imagine a school auditorium in which the white students (in accordance with tradition) sit on one side of the aisle while the black students sit on the other side. Imagine the District Attorney directing his full attention to the black side of the room. Imagine Reed Walters zeroing in on the black male athletes who sparked the lunch hour protest. Now you’ve got a feel for the atmosphere.

Now, imagine Reed Walters waving a pen in the air with a dramatic flourish. “I can be your best friend or your worst enemy,” he tells the black students. The protests at the school have got to stop, he insists, and if they don’t, “With a stroke of my pen I can make your lives disappear.”

I am not repeating hearsay–Mr. Walters admitted to issuing this threat in the course of a mid-July hearing in the LaSalle Parish courtroom. He was angry with the black student protesters, he explained, because they were making a big fuss over nothing. He wanted the white and black students to “work things out on their own” without wasting his valuable time.

People are beginning to understand that Superintendent Roy Breithaupt could have foreclosed on months of outrage and protest simply by calling the noose incident a serious hate crime. That’s all the man had to do. He couldn’t do it.

People are beginning to understand that District Attorney Reed Walters could have defused the tense situation Mr. Breithaupt had created if he had told the student assembly that hate crimes would not be tolerated in LaSalle Parish. Had Walters waved his pen at the white side of the auditorium and issued a warning to the racist element within the student population, nothing would have remained for the kids to “work out on their own.”

But that’s just the problem: Mr. Breithaupt and Mr. Walters didn’t see the noose incident as a hate crime. They didn’t see the hate behind the nooses because they couldn’t. As representatives of Jena’s power people, these men had to see the nooses as a silly prank; there was no no practical alternative.

People are beginning to understand that the official response to the noose hanging (symbolized by the public comments of Mssrs. Breithaupt and Walters) validated the color line the noose hangers were desperate to preserve.

People are beginning to understand that in the wake of Mr. Breithaupt’s “silly prank” comment and Mr. Walters’ “stroke of my pen” threat, the black male athletes who staged the protest under the “white tree” had two choices: they could surrender their pride and manhood by accepting a reassertion of the racial status quo; or they could continue their protest by other means.

Unfortunately, thanks to Mr. Breithaupt and Mr. Walters, all forms of legitimate protest had been taken off the table. If the white noose hangers and the black protesters were going to “work things out on their own” there was going to be trouble–and Breithaupt and Walters knew it.

People are beginning to realize the true significance of Mr. Walters’ threat. He was setting up a situation that was bound to end in racially-tinged violence. Sooner or later some white kid was going to take his lumps at the hands of black kids–and when that day arrived, Mr. Walters planned to be waiting at the courthouse, pen at the ready.

And so, a day after the Jena High School went up in flames, Robert Bailey was brutally attacked by a mob of white students (and young adults) as he entered a Friday night dance. Robert was kicked, punched and whacked with a beer bottle. This was precisely what Mr. Walters was looking for . . . only the violence flowed in the wrong direction.

No matter, everyone knew the assault on Robert Bailey would not go unanswered. Although teachers begged the administration to give the students a few days before returning to class, the administration called for the resumption of classes Monday morning. This decision guaranteed that the demons unleashed on Friday evening would still be dancing–a backlash was inevitable.

Eyewitness student accounts make it clear that the attack on Justin Barker was preceded by a heated encounter between white students taunting Robert Bailey for having had his “butt kicked” on Friday night and black student athletes who were powerless to respond . . . unless, that is, they wanted Mr. Walters to make good on his threat to make their lives disappear.

There is no sense debating the relative demerits of hanging nooses in a tree vs. punching and kicking a defenseless student. Both actions are deplorable. What has been missed in the noose-fight debate is the intimate association between the two events. If Mr. Breithaupt and Mr. Walters responded to the noose incident in a spirit of justice, fairness and simple common sense in early September, there would have been nothing to fight about in early December.

People are beginning to grasp the appalling irony of this case: the man who stripped black male athletes of their constitutional right to protest in September pulled out his pen in December and made their lives disappear. The perpetrator has become the prosecutor.

And now Mr. Walters is being asked to respond to the young men who mowed down the sign in front of Antioch Baptist Church. Since the perpetrators are white and the victims are black, the outcome is pre-ordained–a “silly prank” will spark a mild fine and life will go on.

But not for long. Nothing will ever be the same in Jena, Louisiana. The racial status quo will change. The white tree at the High School must be reconsecrated as a unity tree or it must be leveled. There is no middle ground.

Alan Bean

Friends of Justice

https://friendsofjustice.wordpress.com

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Sign up for Action Updates by clicking the link to the right of this post, and entering your email.  You’ll get an email when we post to the blog and when we have opportunities to take action!

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Supporting the Jena cause

I’ve had some people ask about what Friends of Justice is doing in Jena, and where the money goes if you donate.  Friends of Justice organizes in communities across Texas and Louisiana to generate media scandals around cases of abusive prosecution and civil rights violations in the criminal justice system.  We’ve been working for a long time to get the Jena case in the media.  Now that we’ve gotten international attention, Friends of Justice is working with the Jena 6 to find them pro bono lawyers (like the pro bono lawyers that did so much good in the Tulia, TX drug sting scandal.)  We’re also working nonstop with reporters and editors to get more news outlets to cover the Jena story so the word gets out about what’s happening in Louisiana (and the nation) for poor, black communities.  We were present covering Mychal Bell’s trial and setting up interviews with the family of the Jena 6, and we’ll be back doing the same thing for the next trial.

When you donate to Friends of Justice, we’ll pump your money straight into the costs of doing this organizing in Jena, recruiting high-powered, pro bono lawyers for the Jena 6,  and getting maximum media attention to this case as it unfolds.

You can donate securely on Paypal by following this link. Thanks to all those who have already given!

Sign up for Action Updates by clicking the link to the right of this post, and entering your email.  You’ll get an email when we post to the blog and when we have opportunities to take action!

Pre-empting high school violence: punish hate crimes

Friends:

This story was cobbled together from stories written by Mary Foster of the Associated Press. It is a kind of “town divided” story, similar in many ways to the kind of cautious coverage the Tulia story received early on.

The most significant comment comes from the father of Justin Barker’s girlfriend. He notes (correctly, I assume) that there haven’t been any school fights at Jena High School since the Jena 6 were arrested. I have heard this argument from the editors of the Jena Times as well. I suspect the entire string of violence leading up to the assault at the high school could have been avoided if local authorities had simply lynched one of the young black men who initially protested the hanging of the nooses. That would have nipped things in the bud.

Alternatively, the district attorney and the school superintendent could have avoided this mess by responding to the “noose incident” like the hate crime it was. If the white students who hung the nooses (and their numerous supporters) had been informed that overt acts of racial terror were not acceptable at Jena High or anywhere else in LaSalle Parish, a new day of racial harmony might have ensued.

Unfortanately, the DA and the Superintendent weren’t at liberty to take that kind of stand because it would have put them at odds with too many prominent white residents. So Reed Walters was brought in to wave his pen at the student protesters and issue his now infamous threat: “With a stroke of my pen I can make your lives disappear.”

These public servants could have provided some principled leadership; instead they chose to respond with craven cowardice and backwoods bigotry. In the process, Reed Walters surrended the moral authority to prosecute the Jena 6.

Alan Bean

Friends of Justice

(806)729-7889

Please consider supporting the work of Friends of Justice, and keep us organizing across Texas and Louisiana! You can donate securely on Paypal by following this link. Thanks to all those who have already given!

You can sign up for Action Updates from Friends of Justice by clicking the link on the right side of the website and entering your email.

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/texassouthwest/stories/DN-schoolfight_08tex.ART.State.Edition1.43a798f.html

Questions of racism arise in Louisiana

Black teens’ trials in beating of white classmate have small town on edge

07:29 AM CDT on Sunday, July 8, 2007

From Wire Reports Mary Foster, The Associated Press

JENA, La. – It’s not yet 8 a.m. but there’s a line of men waiting for a $10 haircut at Doughty’s Westside Barber Shop.

BILL HABER/The Associated Press

 

BILL HABER/The Associated Press

Marcus Jenkins (left) and Melissa Bell (right) discuss the trial of their son, Mychal Bell, with Felicia Howard. Mychal is one of six black teens accused of beating a white classmate.

The conversation usually runs to hunting and fishing.

Not lately.

At the end of June, the first trial took place for one of six black teenagers accused of attempted murder, aggravated second-degree battery and conspiracy after a white classmate was attacked.

“I don’t think we’re racist here,” barber shop owner Billy Doughty, 70, said. “People work together, go to school together. We never talk about race.”

But Mr. Doughty does not cut black men’s hair.

“That’s the thing about working for yourself,” he said. “I don’t do shaves. I don’t do shampoos. I don’t cut black hair. I don’t think it’s racist. I just don’t do it.”

And that, many black people say, is the key to race relations here – you’ll get along as long as you don’t want much.

“This is a good town to live in for things like no crime, it being peaceful,” said Caseptla Bailey, whose son is facing attempted murder charges. “But it’s very racist, and they don’t even try to hide it. ”

Last fall, racial tension built at Jena High School.

Tempers rose after a black student sat under a tree on campus where white students traditionally met. The next morning, three nooses – symbols of lynching in the old South – were hung in the tree.

“That was just a prank,” Mr. Doughty said. “They had those nooses from a football rally. They had used them to hang the mascot from the other team. There wasn’t anything racist in that.”

School officials suspended for three days the students who hung the nooses.

Black residents saw the incident differently.

“When a black person sees a noose, he doesn’t laugh,” Ms. Bailey said. “They don’t stand for anything funny for us.”

The outcry

On Dec. 4, six black students allegedly jumped Justin Barker, 18, who is white, beating and kicking him.

A motive for the attack was never established, but two witnesses during Mychal Bell’s trial said they heard one of the attackers shout that Mr. Barker had been “running his mouth.”

Mr. Barker was treated at a hospital emergency room, and pictures shown during Mr. Bell’s trial showed him with cuts on a swollen face. He was released after three hours, he said, and that same evening went to a school function. But he said he took pain medicine for about a week and a half.

Mr. Bell, a star athlete, was tried on reduced charges of aggravated second-degree battery and conspiracy. He was found guilty and could face as much as 22 years in prison. Sentencing is set for July 31.

Trials for Robert Bailey Jr., Bryant Purvis, Carwin Jones and Theodore Shaw, all 18, who still face attempted murder and conspiracy charges, and an unidentified juvenile have not been set.

There was immediate outcry by black residents when the attempted murder charges were filed. The group was charged for what was essentially another school fight in which the victim was not even hospitalized, Ms. Bailey and others said.

“I’ll tell you one thing, when the DA filed attempted murder charges against them, the fights at school stopped,” said Tommy Randall, whose daughter, Kari, is Mr. Barker’s girlfriend.

Such charges are a “vast overreach,” said David Utter, director of the Juvenile Justice Program of Louisiana. He felt the bond set for the youths – $138,000 for Mr. Bailey, later reduced, and $90,000 for the other defendants, was likewise out of line.

The American Civil Liberties Union has been in town since March monitoring the case. The group is also trying to obtain records from District Attorney Reed Walters to see if black and white suspects are charged differently in similar cases.

“We want to see what charges have been filed so we can look and see if there is a pattern of charging blacks differently from whites,” said Tory Pegram with ACLU of Louisiana.

The ACLU has also helped residents form an NAACP chapter.

Life in Jena

Jena has about 3,000 residents, and only about 350 are black. Many residents know each other by name, and outside the courthouse, black and white citizens exchanged friendly greetings, hugged each other and chatted.

It’s a great place to live in many ways, said John Jenkins, father of Carwin Jones.

“I work with white people, play baseball with them, coach their kids,” Mr. Jenkins said. “Before this happened, I can’t say I really had a problem. Not that we really hang out together. Whites and blacks don’t really socialize.”

Cleveland Riser, 74, a former assistant superintendent of schools, believes an underlying tension pervades Jena High School.

Of more than 100 teachers in the parish schools, only five are black, Mr. Riser said. That, and what he calls a sense that the school belongs to white residents, has left black students feeling alienated.

“People have not bought into their having to educate their kids at home, at school and in the community to respect each other,” he said. “White people here feel the way things have always been is the way they’ll always be.”

Mary Foster, The Associated Press