Daily Times (Primos, PA)

A political prisoner’s plea: Keep Abu-Jamal in jail

- By Maureen Faulkner Times Guest Columnist Maureen Faulkner is the widow of slain Philadelph­ia police Officer Daniel Faulkner, who was killed in 1981. Mumia AbuJamal was convicted of the murder.

Like thousands of others in America, my family and I are political prisoners trapped by our legal system. We committed no crime, yet we received life sentences with no possibilit­y of parole or reprieve.

Thirty seven years ago, Mumia Abu-Jamal murdered my husband, Officer Daniel Faulkner, by shooting him point blank in the forehead as he lay unarmed and wounded on the sidewalk. Today we hear so many stories about innocent cops being murdered; they seem as common as reports of bad traffic accidents. Most law enforcemen­t officers killed in the line of duty receive the tears, concern, honor and thanks they deserve, only to fade away in the public’s consciousn­ess to become sociology statistics.

On Monday, April 30 Philadelph­ia District Attorney Larry Krasner will have to fight to keep Danny’s guilty killer in prison. Mumia Abu-Jamal’s attorneys will argue that past Philadelph­ia District Attorney Ron Castille violated Jamal’s Constituti­onal rights when, as a State Supreme Court Justice, Castille chose not to recuse himself from involvemen­t in the state Supreme Court’s reviews of Jamal’s many appeals in the 1990s. Because the appeals process is heavily skewed in favor of convicted killers, Jamal and dozens of other guilty criminals have been given a new tool with which to retroactiv­ely attempt to pick the lock on the courtroom door that leads to freedom.

Gov. Tom Wolf and Mr. Krasner have politicize­d the use of capital punishment and life sentences in Pennsylvan­ia, so for all practical purposes, each of us who has lost a loved one to murder is a political prisoner. Politician­s have taken away the hope we once had, that our suffering might finally end when the person who murdered our loved one was put to death. Today, thousands of survivors in Pennsylvan­ia endure endless cruel and unusual punishment in silence. Many haven’t eaten or slept properly for decades and some become physically or mentally ill due to the psychologi­cal suffering we endure. All of us must suffer frequent bag-over-the head punches to the face that come in the form of unexpected and unending legal appeals and we survive in a state of constant darkness, not unlike that experience­d in solitary confinemen­t; never knowing if the person who murdered our loved one will someday find a sympatheti­c district attorney or judge who will set them free due to a legal technicali­ty.

Despite the have endured, suffering I I still absolutely and unwavering­ly support the death penalty in Pennsylvan­ia and throughout the country – as do nearly 70 percent of all Americans. There are many ugly secrets people against Capital punishment don’t want you to hear about, among them the fact that every time an appellate judge uses a legal technicali­ty to overturn or reduce a death sentence to life in prison, they also impose an emotional life sentence on the family and friends of the victim.

Now my family and I must stop our lives to attend a hearing at which a Philadelph­ia judge will decide if, back in the in the mid-1990s, Justice Castille should have had the foresight to see the possibilit­y the U.S. Supreme Court might make a decision more than 20 years later, that suggests he should have considered recusing himself from a single case in which he had no significan­t involvemen­t. If he prevails, Mumia Abu-Jamal will be permitted to set the legal clock back to 1995 and have his appeals re-reviewed by the current State Supreme Court.

Given the current political environmen­t, my family and I have grave concerns about how the judge might rule. We are asking Mr. Krasner to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the Faulkner family, as so many district attorneys have before, and oppose any efforts by Jamal and his attorneys to free a clearly guilty and properly convicted cop killer.

We ask Mr. Krasner to set aside his desire for social and legal reconstruc­tion and aggressive­ly perform the duties of the job he swore to perform and fight for all victims of murder and violent crime. If you agree, please call Mr. Krasner and respectful­ly advise him you expect the same thing.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Maureen Faulkner, widow of slain Philadelph­ia police officer Daniel Faulkner, speaks beneath a new mural of him in this November 2014 file photo. She continues to fight to keep his convicted killer behind bars.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Maureen Faulkner, widow of slain Philadelph­ia police officer Daniel Faulkner, speaks beneath a new mural of him in this November 2014 file photo. She continues to fight to keep his convicted killer behind bars.

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