Saturday, May 21, 2016

Article on our March

On our march for justice through New York

David Bliven reports from New York on the 150-mile "March 4 Justice," which brought attention to the fight for compensation for those wrongfully convicted.  First published at http://socialistworker.org/2016/05/19/our-march-for-justice-through-new-york.
Activists reach the end of a 150-mile March 4 Justice for the wrongfully convicted (Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated)Activists reach the end of a 150-mile March 4 Justice for the wrongfully convicted (Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated)
I'M VERY proud to have taken part in the "March 4 Justice," a 150-mile walk organized by the grassroots group Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated.
Marchers set off on May 8 from Harlem in New York City and walked 20 miles a day through the Hudson Valley, with their final destination being the New York state Capitol building in Albany. Marchers arrived on May 15--tired, but with a renewed sense of justice.
The main aim of the March 4 Justice was to push for radical reforms of the criminal injustice system. The March drew explicit connections to Michelle Alexander's book The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. The March sought to build on Alexander's suggestions in her last chapter regarding forming new movements challenging the prison-industrial complex.
Among the march's explicit calls for action was the introduction of legislation to offer automatic, minimum compensation and benefits to the exonerated. Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated is headed by Sharonne Salaam, mother of Yusef Salaam, who was wrongfully convicted in the Central Park Five case.
Yusef had to wait over 13 years to get just compensation after his exoneration from his conviction for the rape and near-murder of a jogger in Central Park. He spent seven years in jail for a crime he didn't commit, yet the city of New York fought tooth and nail to deny him just compensation.
WHAT YOU CAN DO
Visit the Facebook page of Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated to find out how to get involved.
Many people are unaware that New York doesn't provide automatic, minimum-level compensation to persons who are exonerated after spending years--or even decades--in prison. That was the experience of Shabaka Shakur, a march participant who spent 27 years in jail for a crime he didn't commit. This puts New York behind states like Texas, which provides an automatic minimum of $80,000 per year of wrongful incarceration, and Mississippi, which provides a minimum of $50,000 per year.
The March 4 Justice was successful in getting a bill, known as A10169, introduced into the New York State Assembly. If passed, it would be the most progressive law for compensating the wrongfully incarcerated in the nation. It allows for $1 million per year of wrongful incarceration, free tuition at any public university or vocational course for the exoneree or his/her children, enhancement on civil service examinations and enhanced access to housing and jobs programs.
This bill is part of a loose package of legislation that is predicated on the Innocence Project's model bills for criminal justice reform. The other bills (A1131-a, A9575 and A8157-b) would collectively would establish a commission to investigate complaints or prosecutorial misconduct, provide re-entry services and benefits to exonerees, require the recording of all interrogations of felony crimes, and require procedures for conducting taint-free eyewitness identification of suspects.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
THE MARCH 4 Justice had as many as 50 participants throughout, with about 10 to 15 core members doing all or most of the 150-mile walk to Albany. Marchers stopped at cities and towns along the way, speaking to community members about the injustice done to those who fall victim to the criminal system of injustice.
In Peekskill, marchers spoke at a forum hosted by the NAACP and spoke to students at the Peekskill High School. Other talks and forums were held in Tarrytown, Beacon, Hudson and Albany. Among the highlights for the marchers was joining Pete Seeger's daughter in a rendition of "We Shall Overcome" in Beacon.
All of the marchers agreed the march itself was a success overall. They uniformly saw it as just the beginning of the struggle, saying it will take many more marches and a much greater level of organization to actually win the reforms the group proposed.
Maria Velazquez, one of the marchers, said she wants to get word out about her son's wrongful conviction. Jon Adrian Velazquez has been wrongfully incarcerated for 17 years. Maria encourages people to sign the petition to gain his freedom.
Maria commented that she initially "thought the idea of the March was crazy--it was a lot of miles," but that after she met organizers at Central Park, she realized that she had to do this for her son. She explained that she trained for three months, sometimes walking around the shopping mall on rainy days just to get in shape for the march. Upon the march's conclusion, she said she "felt invigorated--it feels like justice is running through my blood!"
Aisha Salaam, the sister of exoneree Yusef Salaam, said the march was "productive in bringing attention to issues, and we were successful in getting the first draft of our bill introduced."
She said she joined the march because of "what happened to our family in the Central Park Five case and how hard it was for my brother to move on and find employment and become a productive member of society." Aisha added, "I have my own children and don't want this to happen to my children or any children--I want people to be held accountable!" She added:
The cops involved in the Central Park Five case just didn't care. And police in general tend to go after certain races of people and certain classes of people. Their mindset is that eventually "they" are going to do something bad, so it doesn't matter if they did this particular crime or not.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
MARCH ORGANIZER Sharonne Salaam said that she was "pleased we could get so much support. I'm amazed so many people were following us on Facebook and that so many people were concerned enough to support the cause."
She added that "now is a good time for positive change to benefit the wrongfully convicted," and that the march was "a step toward change for the wrongfully incarcerated and their families. They've suffered enough!"
She connected the march to what happened with her son Yusef:
[A]fter the situation with my son Yusef, there's a difficult road that people who are wrongfully incarcerated have had to follow. Many of their families are also out on a limb because there's a huge stigma about being associated with incarcerated people...What happened to Yusef is, "Let's get someone quick."
She noted that there was no real investigative process with the Central Park Five case. "Once they decided [the Central Park Five] were the ones who did it, [prosecutors and police] began to sell that to the media," she said.
She added that accountability was the key to radical reforms of the criminal system of injustice:
Often, district attorneys want to make names for themselves. It's very hard to erase this phenomenon because no classes are taught [in police academies] to avoid arresting the wrong people. When police arrest people and DAs prosecute the wrong people, there's no risk to those people in that there's no punishment against those who convicted the wrong person.
In the end, the marchers were honored before the New York State Assembly, but all were aware that this was just the beginning.
"Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated" will be holding a panel at the upcoming Left Forum in New York City this weekend and is scheduling monthly organizing meetings at the State Office Building in Harlem to plan further local and regional actions against the criminal system of injustice.

Monday, May 16, 2016

Meet us today at Legislative Office Bldg today at 11:30

We're planning to have a press conference and showing of the Central Park Five.  Time is tentative, but details may be obtained from Assemblyperson Keith Wright's office.

Sunday, May 15, 2016

Please join us at our final destination tonite: Albany!

We'll have a forum at St John's Church of God & Christ, 94 Herkimer St, Albany, NY at 7pm tonite!

Marchers leaving from New Baltimore today

set to leave from Red Carpet Inn, New Baltimore, around 9-9:30 - our last leg going into Albany!

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Update on March

Thursday:
• Tonight we will be "Upstate Films" in Rhinebeck, for dinner.
Friday;
• Breakfasts will be had at each of our home stays. We will re-gather at Upstate Films in Rhinebeck at 9am, to continue walking north towards Hudson for a Friday night gathering and forum.

Marchers are leaving from Hulme Park, Poughkeepsie

Set to leave around 9-9:15 - traveling North on Rt 9 from Poughkeepsie - today's destination is Rhinebeck

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Just arrived at Universalist Uniterian Church

We're planning a forum at 7pm - see you there!

Destination Tonite: Uniterian Church, Poughkeepsie

67 S Randoph Ave, Poughkeepsie

Having Lunch in Wappingers Falls

Taking a break at Margarita's restaurant before continuing north on Rt 9 towards Poughkeepsie.

Wed Morning update

We're leaving this morning from outside the Extended Stay America hotel, just off Rt 9 in Fishkill (exact address is 25 Merritt Blvd, Fishkill).

Since we're much closer to today's destination (Poughkeepsie), we may be leaving a little later than normal (probably around 10-10:30-ish).

If anyone has any questions along the way, call and/or txt us at 347-749-5818.

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Article publicizing our March & our Cause

Organizing for real justice in New York

David Bliven reports on the efforts of New York City activists to fight wrongful incarceration--and looks at what it will take to dismantle the larger injustice system.
Originally published at SocialistWorker.org.
Sharonne SalaamSharonne Salaam
NEW YORK City activists fighting the criminal injustice system have come together to form the organization "Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated." Among other actions, the group is planning a statewide march from Harlem to Albany on May 8-16.
The organization was spearheaded by Sharonne Salaam, mother of Central Park Five exoneree Yusef Salaam. The group is fighting for substantial reform of the criminal injustice system in New York, and has added its qualified support to a bill currently before the New York legislature (S5875/A8157).
If passed, it would require videotaping of violent felony interrogations from start to finish. It would also require photo lineups to be "double-blind," meaning that officers assigned to a case don't know a suspect's identity or can't see which photo an eyewitness is viewing.
Ultimately, Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated believes accountability--that police officers must be criminally prosecuted, fired or otherwise disciplined for infractions--is the key to any such legislation. But under the current proposal, there is no accountability if any of the rules are violated.
The failure to videotape an interrogation wouldn't automatically result in a confession being suppressed--though it is considered as one potential factor. All police have to say is that the equipment either wasn't working or was "unavailable."
Moreover, there must be a finding that the failure to videotape was "intentional," not merely an accident or negligence for a confession to be suppressed. Similar weaknesses surround provisions about photo arrays and lineups. If an officer violates a particular rule, no punishment is given to the officer.
WHAT YOU CAN DO
Visit the Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated Facebook page to find out how you can participate in the march to Albany, New York, beginning May 8.
Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated is currently pushing for bills to be introduced that would allow for automatic compensation to the wrongfully incarcerated.
Many states have laws that provide automatic minimum levels of compensation to those exonerated after having been wrongfully incarcerated. For example, Texas gives minimum compensation to the wrongfully convicted of $80,000 per year of incarceration, and Mississippi gives $50,000 per year of incarceration. New York has no such law, and the process for exonerees to apply for any compensation at all is highly complicated.
Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated advocates for an automatic referral to a compensation board, and a minimum award of at least $1 million per year of wrongful incarceration to not only exonerees, but their families as well, which suffer right along with those wrongfully incarcerated. Ultimately, the group believes targeted communities of those wrongfully incarcerated should also receive compensation.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
AS MICHELLE Alexander explains in her book The New Jim Crow, the system of mass incarceration developed during the 1970s and 1980s as a reaction to the social movements in the 1960's. Society failed to provide decent housing, jobs, schools and other resources to working class and poor people. Black and Brown lives didn't matter from the perspective of those in power.
The growth of mass incarceration started at the same time that the Nixon administration in the 1970s and Reagan administration in the 1980s were constructing the phantom "war on drugs," which eventually began the skyrocketing incarceration from 200,000 in the early '70s to over 2 million today. At the same time, the federal government was drastically cutting funding for mental health services, leading to the warehousing of people with mental health problems in prisons.
This was a bipartisan project. For most of the Reagan years, Democrats controlled at least one, if not both, houses of Congress.
It is not only the case that the criminal injustice system is a means of social control over the poor and working class, but it also serves as an excuse for the system failing to provide social services for all. As stated by Angela Davis her book Are Prisons Obsolete:
The prison therefore functions ideologically as an abstract site into which undesirables are deposited, relieving us of the responsibility of thinking about the real issues afflicting those communities from which prisoners are drawn in such disproportionate numbers. This is the ideological work that the prison performs--it relieves us of the responsibility of seriously engaging with the problems of our society, especially those produced by racism and, increasingly, global capitalism.
As Michelle Alexander notes, the U.S. imprisons a greater percentage of its Black population than South Africa did at the height of apartheid. And Angela writes notes that Blacks, Latinos and Native Americans are now more likely to go to prison than to go to college.
Our end goal as activists fighting the criminal system of injustice is, ultimately, the dismantling of the system of mass incarceration. Passage of S5875/A8157 would be just the opening for us. But we also recognize that the power structure will not willingly deconstruct a multibillion-dollar industry that serves its aims so well. As community rights activist Paul Cienfuegos has said, "It's not that this system is corrupt. It's that the system functions as it was designed to."
Our movement must incorporate civil disobedience and mass marches to wrest any major reforms away from the system. But we also recognize that, as Glenn Greenwald has said, "any institution that is built by human beings, no matter how formidable and powerful it may seem, can be undermined, or altered, or even replaced by other human beings."
Those motivated to dismantle the criminal system of injustice should join Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated and march from Harlem to Albany starting on May 8.

Article from our meeting last November in Mt Vernon

What will change a system of injustices?

David Bliven reports on a panel discussion about strategies to win justice for those who have been victimized by the injustice system.
Panelists at the forum against wrongful convictions in Mount Vernon, New YorkPanelists at the forum against wrongful convictions in Mount Vernon, New York
ON NOVEMBER 7, some 40 people turned out for a public meeting in Mount Vernon, New York, titled "Justice for the Wrongfully Incarcerated."
The meeting started with a showing of the film The Central Park Five, a stirring documentary about the wrongful conviction of five Black teenagers for the 1989 rape of a white woman in Central Park. The case was used by politicians and the media--including Donald Trump--to push for more police, more jails and tougher sentencing.
After the film showing, the meeting moved into a lively panel discussion with active audience participation. Panelists included Yusef Salaam, one of the Central Park Five; Sharonne Salaam; Damon Jones of Blacks in Law Enforcement of America; Jefffery Deskovich; Jose LaSalle of Cop Watch NYC; William Bastuk of It Could Happen To You; and this author, representing the International Socialist Organization. The meeting sought to draw connections between past acts of wrongful incarceration and today's movements for racial justice and against the criminal injustice system.
Participants also highlighted the budding group March 4 Justice in New York City, which is planning both local and statewide demonstrations to gain justice for the wrongfully convicted and for radical reforms of the criminal injustice system.
Many agreed that one of the primary issues is holding the police accountable for their actions. For instance, New York currently has a bill pending in the state legislature (S5875/A8157) that would reform lineup and photo array identifications and require videotaping of felony interrogations. However, the bill does not include any penalties whatsoever against the police themselves if they decide to violate any of those laws. Participants agreed that cops should be fined, fired and/or criminally prosecuted for such violations.
Moreover, New York--supposedly a liberal bastion--has no laws on the books requiring any kind of recording of interrogations, no laws addressing eyewitness identification, no laws requiring preservation of evidence and an extremely weak law providing for compensation for the wrongfully convicted.
This puts New York behind such states as Texas, Georgia, Alaska, Mississippi, Arkansas and Alabama, that do have at least some laws on the books addressing those issues, however weak they may be.
The meeting concluded with a call for more direct action campaigns--with possible marches on City Hall and the state Capitol building in Albany next spring. While our movement may give qualified support to certain legislative proposals, its ultimate place is in the streets, not in the hallowed halls of power. 
We don't want to tinker with the criminal injustice system, we want to bring it down. To do so, our movement cannot ask of our elected representatives, "Please give us some justice?" Instead, we need to set forth our list of demands--and follow through with sit-ins, sit-downs, blockages, mass marches and other forms of civil disobedience if those demand are not met.
Originally printed in Socialist Worker.

We've arrived at St Andrews Church in Beacon, NY!

Stopping for lunch in Beacon

Will be continuing on to our event tonite at St Andrews Church in Beacon
#FishkillCorrectionalFacility
#Justice4theWrongfullyIncarcerated
#EnoughIsEnough
#Justice4theWronglyIncarcerated
#StopMassIncarceration
#StopInjustice
#NYJusticeLeague
#JusticeLeagueNY
#WalkToAlbany
#CP5
#BlackLivesMatter
#EndIndustrialPrisonComplex
#ShutItDown
#EndPoliceBrutality
#BecauseTheWorldMustKnow

Visiting Fishkill Correctional Facility

Solidarity to all the prisoners - not only the wrongfully convicted - but also those who are there only because our society has failed them!

Tonite's Destination

St. Andrews Church
17 South Ave.
Beacon , NY

At Graymoor

We're at Graymoor n Garrison, Ny - along Rt 9 - taking a rest before moving on

Meeting at Peekskill High School

We thank our hosts at Peekskill High School - about to set off our March heading North on Route 9!

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Pit stop in Irvington

We're at:

Eileen Fisher Foundation
1 Bridge Street
Irvington, NY

Hanging out in Irvington before we continue

Heading to 28 N Broadway, Yonkers for our lunch stop

We're at Edgar A Poe Park at 192nd

North on ACP Blvd to McCombs bridge

Marching!

about to leave - for the lathe-comers, catch up with us going East along 125th towards the Bx

Weather

According to Weather Channel, rain is only supposed to be early morning & is supposed to taper off by mid-morning. Nevertheless, best to bring umbrellas

The March is On!

Yes the March is still on despite the rain - the March is set to begin at 9:30, so pls start assembling at 9am at Adam Clayton Powell State Office Bldg - 163 W 125th St @ ACP Blvd

Saturday, May 7, 2016

March to Albany from Harlem tomorrow!

Dear Friends, 

The Walk to Albany is near. Are you ready?

This Sunday, May 8, 2016, Mother’s Day, at 8:30 AM, Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated will gather at the State Office Building, 163 West 125 Street, Harlem, NY.After a press conference we will head to Albany. The Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated walk will end on May 16, 2016 after a day of programs and the introduction of our legislative agenda.

Attached is the walking route. Look at it; see where we are going. Those who are joining the walk along the way can pick your places to make that connection happen.

Monthly a wrongfully convicted person is released. Monthly the family of the wrongfully incarcerated is destroyed. How do we mind these families? How do we make law enforcement accountable for their actions?

Join Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated. Walk with us…Become apart of the solution.

I will see you on the road. 

Justice 4 the Wrongfully Incarcerated
Sharonne Salaam