27 years and never willing to be interviewed by investigating police.
A police officer was murdered, he was there, and he won't answer questions from the investigators.
He didn't even have the courage to explain himself and stand up in court to answer questions about what he did and what he saw.
Face up to questions, Mumia. Have the courage before you died. A policeman was murdered before your eyes and you act like you're too important to sit across a table from investigators and answer
As a point of honour, when you see a policeman murdered you let his loved ones and those who cared about him know what you saw and what you did to try and save him and bring to account who was responsible. You don't be gutless and heartless and refuse to give them the answer and show your remorse for 27 years.
His problem is that none of the other people who saw what he did and how he bragged about it feel the same need to avoid being questioned about it.
"As a point of honour" perhaps Mumia should have been given a fair trial, and not been framed by crooked cops (ie a fabricated "hospital confession," coercion of witnesses like Veronica Jones, and manipulation of ballistics). Wouldn't that be the best way to honor Faulkner? To actually try and find the truth of what happened that night?
--Unfortunately, authorities didn't honor Mumia or Faulkner..and this is undeniable.
Haha. As she testified as a prosecution witness at the trial, I'd say that would be a yes. And that still leaves two very guilty perps as the only ones without the manliness (for more than half their lives) to face up to questions in the same way about what they did and saw.
Such bad luck for them that there have been so many others not so craven.
Jones was a defense witness. On the stand she contradicted her first report to police that she'd seen someone run away. On the stand, she began to explain that she had been pressured by police, but Judge Sabo actually blocked that line of testimony and ordered the jury to disregard what they'd heard. Later at the 1996 PCRA she stated that police pressured her, and after her court testimony she was actually arrested in court for writing a bad check. This intimidation is astounding!
i hope not
PacManMega 2 years ago
do people deserve fair trials?
journalists4mumia 2 years ago
no this one
PacManMega 2 years ago
Free Mumia Now !
ZwolennikMLK 3 years ago
ON A MOVE !!
Le 19, nous serons là !
Pam, Ramona, thank you so much !
LiberonsMumia 3 years ago
This is an injustice that only we can change, ONLY WE CAN FREE MUMIA, and we're not doing that, it's going to take the masses
ladygc419 3 years ago
27 years and never willing to be interviewed by investigating police.
A police officer was murdered, he was there, and he won't answer questions from the investigators.
He didn't even have the courage to explain himself and stand up in court to answer questions about what he did and what he saw.
Face up to questions, Mumia. Have the courage before you died. A policeman was murdered before your eyes and you act like you're too important to sit across a table from investigators and answer
daveyork0 3 years ago
ever heard that phrase "you have the right to remain silent"? or for that matter, that everyone has a right to a fair trial?
journalists4mumia 3 years ago
As a point of honour, when you see a policeman murdered you let his loved ones and those who cared about him know what you saw and what you did to try and save him and bring to account who was responsible. You don't be gutless and heartless and refuse to give them the answer and show your remorse for 27 years.
His problem is that none of the other people who saw what he did and how he bragged about it feel the same need to avoid being questioned about it.
daveyork0 3 years ago
"As a point of honour" perhaps Mumia should have been given a fair trial, and not been framed by crooked cops (ie a fabricated "hospital confession," coercion of witnesses like Veronica Jones, and manipulation of ballistics). Wouldn't that be the best way to honor Faulkner? To actually try and find the truth of what happened that night?
--Unfortunately, authorities didn't honor Mumia or Faulkner..and this is undeniable.
journalists4mumia 3 years ago
Everyone who was there has been open to telling their story and being interrogated about it. Everyone except the killer and his brother.
daveyork0 3 years ago
Were the police open to hearing what Veronica Jones had to say?
journalists4mumia 3 years ago
Haha. As she testified as a prosecution witness at the trial, I'd say that would be a yes. And that still leaves two very guilty perps as the only ones without the manliness (for more than half their lives) to face up to questions in the same way about what they did and saw.
Such bad luck for them that there have been so many others not so craven.
daveyork0 3 years ago
Jones was a defense witness. On the stand she contradicted her first report to police that she'd seen someone run away. On the stand, she began to explain that she had been pressured by police, but Judge Sabo actually blocked that line of testimony and ordered the jury to disregard what they'd heard. Later at the 1996 PCRA she stated that police pressured her, and after her court testimony she was actually arrested in court for writing a bad check. This intimidation is astounding!
journalists4mumia 3 years ago
She was even already arrested for that blank check in the past so the arrest at the PCRA hearing was a false arrest.
JShr1234 3 years ago
everyone get in the streets on April 19th!!!
WE GOTTA FREE MUMIA ABU-JAMAL
BRICK BY BRICK, WALL BY WALL!!!
idemandmydreams 3 years ago
i'll be there!
deliciousmorton 3 years ago