September 3, 200718 yr July 3, 2007 Injustice in Jena Black Nooses Hanging from the "White" Tree By BILL QUIGLEY In a small still mostly segregated section of rural Louisiana, an all white jury heard a series of white witnesses called by a white prosecutor testify in a courtroom overseen by a white judge in a trial of a fight at the local high school where a white student who had been making racial taunts was hit by black students. The fight was the culmination of a series of racial incidents starting when whites responded to black students sitting under the "white tree" at their school by hanging three nooses from the tree. The white jury and white prosecutor and all white supporters of the white victim were all on one side of the courtroom. The black defendant, 17 year old Mychal Bell, and his supporters were on the other. The jury quickly convicted Mychal Bell of two felonies - aggravated battery and conspiracy to commit aggravated battery. Bell, who was a 16 year old sophomore football star at the time he was arrested, faces up to 22 years in prison. Five other black youths await similar trials on attempted second degree murder and conspiracy charges. Yes, you read that correctly. The rest of the story, which is being reported across the world in papers in China, France and England, is just as chilling. The trouble started under "the white tree" in front of Jena High School. The "white tree" is where the white students, 80% of the student body, would always sit during school breaks. In September 2006, a black student at Jena high school asked permission from school administrators to sit under the "white tree." School officials advised them to sit wherever they wanted. They did. The next day, three nooses, in the school colors, were hanging from the "white tree." The message was clear. "Those nooses meant the KKK, they meant **** we're going to kill you, we're going to hang you till you die,'" Casteptla Bailey, mom of one of the students, told the London Observer. The Jena high school principal found that three white students were responsible and recommended expulsion. The white superintendent of schools over-ruled the principal and gave the students a three day suspension saying that the nooses were just a youthful stunt. "Adolescents play pranks," the superintendent told the Chicago Tribune, "I don't think it was a threat against anybody." The African-American community was hurt and upset. "Hanging those nooses was a hate crime, plain and simple," according to Tracy Bowens, mother of students at Jena High. But blacks in this area of Louisiana have little political power. The ten person all-male government of the parish has one African-American member. The nine member all-male school board has one African American member. (A phone caller to the local school board trying to find out the racial makeup of the school board was told there was one "colored" member of the board). There is one black police officer in Jena and two black public school teachers. Jena, with a population of less than 3000, is the largest town in and parish (county) seat of LaSalle Parish, Louisiana. There are about 350 African Americans in the town. LaSalle has a population of just over 14,000 people - 12% African-American. This is solid Bush and David Duke Country - GWB won LaSalle Parish 4 to 1 in the last two elections; Duke carried a majority of the white vote when he ran for Governor of Louisiana. Families earn about 60% of the national average. The Census Bureau reports that less than 10% of the businesses in LaSalle Parish are black owned. Jena is the site of the infamous Juvenile Correctional Center for Youth that was forced to close its doors in 2000, only two years after opening, due to widespread brutality and racism including the choking of juveniles by guards after the youth met with a lawyer. The U.S. Department of Justice sued the private prison amid complaints that guards paid inmates to fight each other and laughed when teens tried to commit suicide. Black students decided to resist and organized a sit-in under the "white tree" at the school to protest the light suspensions given to the noose-hanging white students. The white District Attorney then came to Jena High with law enforcement officers to address a school assembly. According to testimony in a later motion in court, the DA reportedly threatened the black protesting students saying that if they didn't stop making a fuss about this "innocent prank I can be your best friend or your worst enemy. I can take away your lives with a stroke of my pen." The school was put on lockdown for the rest of the week. Racial tensions remained high throughout the fall. On the night of Thursday November 30, 2006, a still unsolved fire burned down the main academic building of Jena High School. On Friday night, December 1, a black student who showed up at a white party was beaten by whites. On Saturday, December 2, a young white man pulled out a shotgun in a confrontation with young black men at the Gotta Go convenience store outside Jena before the men wrestled it away from him. The black men who took the shotgun away were later arrested, no charges were filed against the white man. On Monday, December 4, at Jena High, a white student--who allegedly had been making racial taunts, including calling African American students **** while supporting the students who hung the nooses and who beat up the black student at the off-campus party--was knocked down, punched and kicked by black students. The white victim was taken to the hospital treated and released. He attended a social function that evening. Six black Jena students were arrested and charged with attempted second degree murder. All six were expelled from school. The six charged were: 17-year-old Robert Bailey Junior whose bail was set at $138,000; 17-year-old Theo Shaw - bail $130,000; 18-year-old Carwin Jones--bail $100,000; 17-year-old Bryant Purvis--bail $70,000; 16 year old Mychal Bell, a sophomore in high school who was charged as an adult and for whom bail was set at $90,000; and a still unidentified minor. Many of the young men, who came to be known as the Jena 6, stayed in jail for months. Few families could afford bond or private attorneys. Mychal Bell remained in jail from December 2006 until his trial because his family was unable to post the $90,000 bond. Theo Shaw has also remained in jail. Several of the other defendants remained in jail for months until their families could raise sufficient money to put up bonds. The Chicago Tribune wrote a powerful story headlined "Racial Demons Rear Heads." The London Observer wrote: "Jena is gaining national notoriety as an example of the new 'stealth' racism, showing how lightly sleep the demons of racial prejudice in America's Deep South, even in the year that a black man, Barak Obama, is a serious candidate for the White House." The British Broadcasting Company aired a TV special report "Race Hate in Louisiana 2007." The Jena 6 and their families were put under substantial pressure to plead guilty. Mychal Bell was reported to have been leaning towards pleading guilty right up until his trial when he decided he would not plead guilty to a felony. When it finally came, the trial of Mychal Bell was swift. Bell was represented by an appointed public defender. On the morning of the trial, the DA reduced the charges from attempted second degree murder to second degree aggravated battery and conspiracy. Aggravated battery in Louisiana law demands the attack be with a dangerous weapon. The dangerous weapon? The prosecutor was allowed to argue to the jury that the tennis shoes worn by Bell could be considered a dangerous weapon used by "the gang of black boys" who beat the white victim. Most shocking of all, when the pool of potential jurors was summoned, fifty people appeared--every single one white. The LaSalle Parish clerk defended the all white group to the Alexandria Louisiana Town Talk newspaper saying that the jury pool was selected by computer. "The venire [panel of prospective jurors] is color blind. The idea is for the list to truly reflect the racial makeup of the community, but the system does not take race into factor." Officials said they had summoned 150 people, but these were the only people who showed up. The all-white jury which was finally chosen included two people friendly with the District Attorney, a relative of one of the witnesses and several others who were friends of prosecution witnesses. Bell's parents, Melissa Bell and Marcus Jones, were not even allowed to attend the trial despite their objections, because they were listed as potential witnesses. The white victim, though a witness, was allowed to stay in the courtroom. The parents, who had been widely quoted in the media as critics of the process, were also told they could no longer speak to the media as long as the trial was in session. Marcus Jones had told the media "It's all about those nooses" and declared the charges racially motivated. Other supporters who planned a demonstration in support of Bell were ordered by the court not to do so near the courthouse or anywhere the judge would see them. The prosecutor called 17 witnesses - eleven white students, three white teachers, and two white nurses. Some said they saw Bell kick the victim, others said they did not see him do anything. The white victim testified that he did not know if Bell hit him or not. The Chicago Tribune reported the public defender did not challenge the all-white jury pool, put on no evidence and called no witnesses. The public defender told the Alexandria Town talk after resting his case without calling any witnesses that he knew he would be second-guessed by many but was confident that the jury would return a verdict of not guilty. "I don't believe race is an issue in this trial I think I have a fair and impartial jury" The jury deliberated for less than three hours and found Mychal Bell guilty on the maximum possible charges of aggravated second degree battery and conspiracy. He faces up to a maximum of 22 years in prison. The public defender told the press afterwards, "I feel I put on the best defense that I could." Responding to criticism of not putting on any witnesses, the attorney said "why open the door for further accusations? I did the best I could for my client, Mychal Bell." At a rally in front of the courthouse the next day, Alan Bean, a Texas minister and leader of the Friends of Justice, said "I have seen a lot of trials in my time. And I have never seen a more distressing miscarriage of justice than what happened in LaSalle Parish yesterday." Khadijah Rashad of Lafayette Louisiana described the trial as a "modern day lynching." Tory Pegram with the Louisiana ACLU has been working with the parents for months. "People know if they don't demand equal treatment now, they will never get it. People's jobs and livelihoods have been threatened for attending Jena 6 Defense meetings, but people are willing to risk that. One person told me: 'We have to convince more people to come rally with us.....What's the worst that could happen? They fire us from our jobs? We have the worst jobs in the town anyway. They burn a cross on our lawns or burn down my house? All of that has happened to us before. We have to keep speaking out to make sure it doesn't happen to us again, or our children will never be safe.'" Whites in the community were adamant that there is no racism. "We don't have a problem," according to one. Other locals told the media "We all get along," and "most blacks are happy with the way things are." One person even said "We don't have many problems with our blacks." Melvin Worthington, the lone African American school board member in LaSalle Parish said it all could have been avoided. "There's no doubt about it," he told the Chicago Tribune, "whites and blacks are treated differently here. The white kids should have gotten more punishment for hanging those nooses. If they had, all the stuff that followed could have been avoided." Hebert McCoy, a relative of one of the youths who has been trying to raise money for bail and lawyers, challenged people everywhere at the end of the rally when he said "You better get out of your houses. You better come out and defend your children because they are incarcerating them by the thousands. Jena's not the beginning, but Jena has crossed the line. Justice is not right when you put on the wrong charges and then convict. I believe in justice. I believe in the point of law. I believe in accepting the punishment if I'm guilty. If I'm guilty, convict me and punishment, but if I'm innocent, no justice" and the crowd joined with him and shouted "no peace!" What happened to the white guys? The white victim of the beating was later arrested for bringing a hunting rifle loaded with 13 bullets onto the high school campus and released on $5000 bond. The white man who beat up the black youth at the off-campus party was arrested and charged with simple battery. The white students who hung up the nooses in the "white tree" were never charged. The people in Jena are fighting for justice and they need legal and financial help. Since the arrests, a group of family members have been holding well-attended meetings, and have created a defense fund--the Jena 6 Defense Committee. They have received support from the NAACP, the Louisiana ACLU and Friends of Justice. People interested in supporting can contact: the Jena 6 Defense Committee, PO Box 2798, Jena, LA 71342 [email protected]; Friends of Justice, 507 North Donley Avenue, Tulia, TX 79088 www. fojtulia.org; or the ACLU of Louisiana, PO Box 56157, New Orleans, LA 70156 www. laaclu.org or 417.350.0536. What is next? The rest of the Jena 6 await similar trials. Theodore Shaw is due to go on trial shortly. Mychal Bell is scheduled to be sentenced July 31. If he gets the maximum sentence he will not be out of prison until he is nearly 40. Meanwhile, the "white tree" outside Jena High sits quietly in the hot sun. Bill Quigley is a human rights lawyer and law professor at Loyola University New Orleans. You can reach him at Quigley @loyno.edu Audrey Stewart contributed to this article. Source: http://www.netscape.com/viewstory/2007/ ... frame=true What's Obama saying about this? Is CNN still covering Britney Spears drama? I'm disgusted! To make matters worse, other sites (ahem: Wikipedia) are giving different accounts. Some say claim one of the black kids had prior records, while others say he had no record at all. Look it up on Yahoo. There's a petition going here: http://www.colorofchange.org/jena/ CNN just did a skimpy story on this, early this morning. These people were more upset over that silly BET cartoon video parody than they were over this. Anyway, the white tree was shown, which has since been cut down. They're trying to erase the problem, but we will not forgive and forget. CNN mentioned that 98.7 Kiss FM talk radio host Michael Baisden (michaelbaisden.com) is organizing a protest in Jena with the listeners of his show. Over 15,000 people are expected. More details here: http://www.minglecity.com/forum/forumdi ... 9fa0&f=155
September 3, 200718 yr They face 22 years for a battery case, a little extreme isn't it. I've seen murderers serve less - alot less. He who learns must suffer, and, even in our sleep, pain that cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the heart,and in our own despair, against our will, comes wisdom to us by the awful grace of God. - Aeschylus (525 BC - 456 BC)
September 3, 200718 yr So, to condense this down. group of black people sit under "white tree" ----> group of white people hang nooses from tree (racist obviously, but a serious death threat or a childish prank? who knows) ----> a black person retaliates physically beating another person fairly badly (at least I assume this from the charges brought against him). Right? If so I don't see this as a massive miscarriage of justice, I see it as a person committing a crime and being punished for it. In my opinion taunts, racist or otherwise are no excuse whatsoever to beat another human being to a pulp. The school screwed up definitely; failing to punish the kids who did this properly and letting it get way out of proportion and failing to nip it in the bud but is that racism? Or just negligence? I'm hesitant to judge. As for the after events? Fall out from the blast, I don't want to comment here either as I don't know why but I sense we are getting a very biased or shock piece of journalism.
September 3, 200718 yr That seems to me to be justifiable, they're making racial remarks. Still alive, still alive.
September 3, 200718 yr That seems to me to be justifiable, they're making racial remarks. Racial remarks justify physical assault?
September 3, 200718 yr That seems to me to be justifiable, they're making racial remarks. Racial remarks justify physical assault? To me, yeah. This is a place where people have to deal with segregation, taunting, through their entire life. One day, they'd just snap. Still alive, still alive.
September 3, 200718 yr The black guys should not of reacted by physically beating the whit guy, however 22 years is wayy over the top. People usually don't even press charges from fight and if they did the punishment is community service but 22 years in prison??!!??! How can there be such backwards places in the richest and most powerful country in the world?
September 3, 200718 yr 22 years is completely excessive and it very likely won't happen. Beating anyone that badly can't really go unpunished though. I place a large amount of blame on the school for taking no actions against the kids who did the prank. It's not a "harmless joke" and it's not funny. I doubt that they'll actually get a 22 year sentence or serve anywhere near 22 years in prison. It's sad that things like this still happen and it's sad that the administration of the school was too ignorant to see that this was a serious issue.
September 4, 200718 yr Urgh reading that made me feel sick. Yes under certain circumstances I would say that the battery the white boy received was probably justified. That doesn't mean they shouldn't get charged for it but jesus not like that!
September 4, 200718 yr He should have killed him, then he would have been able to plead provocation and diminished responsibility. At least in English law that would have been better if he did not want to go to jail. With so many trees in the city you could see the spring coming each day until a night of warm wind would bring it suddenly in one morning. Sometimes the heavy cold rains would beat it back so that it would seem that it would never come and that you were losing a season out of your life. But you knew that there would always be the spring as you knew the river would flow again after it was frozen. When the cold rains kept on and killed the spring, it was as though a young person had died for no reason. In those days though the spring always came finally but it was frightening that it had nearly failed.
September 4, 200718 yr Its astonishing that he faces up to 22 years. He probably wouldn't get it either way, but still, it's astonishing to hear it. It's a wake-up call for me personally...When I was 16 I beat the hell out of a guy for almost no reason and I didn't think I could've gone ot prison for most of my life for it...I was very lucky and he didn't press charges, which is pretty amazing considering he was put in the hospital. It's just like, "Wow, that coulda' been me facing 22 years..." because I'm sure what this black student did was just as bad or probably less than what I was involved in. Minors should never go to prison for fighting. They don't know any better. I sure didn't. I thought it was just a fight and that was the end of it... The popularity of any given religion today depends on the victories of the wars they fought in the past. - Me!
September 4, 200718 yr It makes me sick that people still behave like that, let alone an entire town. They know it's wrong, too, otherwise they wouldn't have lied to the reporters and said that they liked the blacks and that they get along. From where I'm standing, the white kid who was "assaulted" got off lucky. A black eye and a few bruises for death threats and verbal abuse? What I'm wondering is how is Mychal Bell's verdict still standing when the jury couldn't have been impartial. Two friends of the DA, a relative of the witness, and others who were friends with the prosecutors. Bell was guilty before the trial even started.
September 4, 200718 yr It makes me sick that people still behave like that, let alone an entire town. They know it's wrong, too, otherwise they wouldn't have lied to the reporters and said that they liked the blacks and that they get along. I don't think they lied. You can like a dog to... that's how it seems they are treated. If i were black i would get the hell out of such a province.
September 4, 200718 yr Thats the racist, bias piece of [cabbage] you Americans call your legal system for you...
September 4, 200718 yr Thats the racist, bias piece of [cabbage] you Americans call your legal system for you... It's not like that everywhere, so why don't you take a step off of that horse. :roll:
September 4, 200718 yr Well heres the thing, maybe they're white seperatists, they have a "white tree" because they don't want to hang around near black people. I dont think the black people should say "hey we have the right to sit there so we're going to start an argument by demanding we barge in on your place". If the black people weren't craving a fight and a reason to feel suppressed they'd have gone to the many places that black people segregate against white people, or they just would have left the white people alone. As far as i can see the white people weren't harrassing the black people in the first place, they just wanted a place where they could be without black people. Whether you think thats right is up to you but these people obviously don't understand the Ku Klux Klan, its also funny that this is white against black crime which is ALWAYS highlighted over black on white crime.
September 4, 200718 yr What does this have to do with Runescape? Nothing. As long as these type of discussions are allowed here in the off-topic forum, where's the author's or your outrage about this. African Slavery and Its Denial by Blacks by Salim Muwakkil Does slavery still exist in Africa? That question was rudely inserted into the national conversation last month when a ship from the West African nation of Benin reportedly was lost while ferrying child slaves. Although that story turned out to be overblown, it helped pull the cover off one of Africa's dirtiest secrets: slavery persists. According to UNICEF estimates, there are 200,000 child slaves in West and Central Africa. Most of those forced into involuntary servitude are in economic bondage, with the boys being sold to cotton and cocoa plantations and the girls ending up as domestic workers and vulnerable to sexual exploitation...
September 4, 200718 yr Its astonishing that he faces up to 22 years. He probably wouldn't get it either way, but still, it's astonishing to hear it. It's a wake-up call for me personally...When I was 16 I beat the hell out of a guy for almost no reason and I didn't think I could've gone ot prison for most of my life for it...I was very lucky and he didn't press charges, which is pretty amazing considering he was put in the hospital. It's just like, "Wow, that coulda' been me facing 22 years..." because I'm sure what this black student did was just as bad or probably less than what I was involved in. Minors should never go to prison for fighting. They don't know any better. I sure didn't. I thought it was just a fight and that was the end of it... Ignorance the the law is no excuse, i mean here they're not stupid. You can't press chanrges for play fighting in school and things like that. The legal age a person becomes prosecutable is 9 in England i think, you're supposed to know right from wrong. You were ignorant to the law, just like all those buisness men who constantly go to jail for tax evasion when they think they can pay their way out. With so many trees in the city you could see the spring coming each day until a night of warm wind would bring it suddenly in one morning. Sometimes the heavy cold rains would beat it back so that it would seem that it would never come and that you were losing a season out of your life. But you knew that there would always be the spring as you knew the river would flow again after it was frozen. When the cold rains kept on and killed the spring, it was as though a young person had died for no reason. In those days though the spring always came finally but it was frightening that it had nearly failed.
September 4, 200718 yr That seems to me to be justifiable, they're making racial remarks. Racial remarks justify physical assault? Martin Luther King Jr. abhorred physical violence. The kid should have just walked away and let the racist punk know that he couldn't get a rise out of him. Now, I can agree that a little bit of the sentencing may be biased, but beating a kid to near-death certainly classifies as major assault. And yes, I agree that this is a sensationalist article. The fact that it has "nicknames" for the case justifies a link from a source that is not biased. My heart is broken by the terrible loss I have sustained in my old friends and companions and my poor soldiers. Believe me, nothing except a battle lost can be half so melancholy as a battle won. -Sir Arthur Wellesley
September 4, 200718 yr If so I don't see this as a massive miscarriage of justice, I see it as a person committing a crime and being punished for it. In my opinion taunts, racist or otherwise are no excuse whatsoever to beat another human being to a pulp. The school screwed up definitely; failing to punish the kids who did this properly and letting it get way out of proportion and failing to nip it in the bud but is that racism? Or just negligence? I'm hesitant to judge. The white kid who was "beaten to a pulp" (note that the article says that the kid attended a social event that same evening - so I don't think "beaten to a pulp" seems like an apt description) was the same kid who beat up a black student who dared to attend a "white party" earlier. This white kid assaulted / beat up another (black) kid, and NO charges were brought against him, not to mention the threat of a 22 year sentence. Everybody hug and spread the love :D
September 4, 200718 yr I saw a documentary on BBC World about this while i was on holiday. I could see when they spoke to a barber about it, that he was a racist because he was all agitated when then asked him about it. He thought it was a joke :( Quit Runescape 30th May 2006.Thanks to Hawkxs for my signature :)
September 4, 200718 yr I live near Jena, Louisiana. 50 white citizens were called for jury duty that day and 100 black citizens. I don't remember the exact numbers, but I think 30 white citizens showed up and 0 black citizens showed up. So, don't blame the white jury for the charges.
September 5, 200718 yr Author What does this have to do with Runescape? Nothing. As long as these type of discussions are allowed here in the off-topic forum, where's the author's or your outrage about this. African Slavery and Its Denial by Blacks by Salim Muwakkil Does slavery still exist in Africa? That question was rudely inserted into the national conversation last month when a ship from the West African nation of Benin reportedly was lost while ferrying child slaves. Although that story turned out to be overblown, it helped pull the cover off one of Africa's dirtiest secrets: slavery persists. According to UNICEF estimates, there are 200,000 child slaves in West and Central Africa. Most of those forced into involuntary servitude are in economic bondage, with the boys being sold to cotton and cocoa plantations and the girls ending up as domestic workers and vulnerable to sexual exploitation... I don't see what your point is. Is there something wrong with the article I posted? Just because I chose to post this particular article doesn't mean I'm ignorant or don't have opinions on other worse things going on in other parts of the world. And why did you feel the need to mention Runescape? This is the Off-Topic board, so of course I'm not going to post something Runescape related. If I did, you would probably just move it anyway. Am I totally missing the point of your post?
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