
Part
1
through 4 of Rachel Wolkenstein’s
affidavit , copied from http://www.mumia.org
Rachel
Wolkenstein Declaration, Part One
Posted byFatirah
on Wednesday, September 19 @ 19:55:59 PDT
Contributed by Fatirah
"Please read this Declaration carefully. It explains in
detail
the treachery of Mumia Abu Jamal's former attorney(s) Leonard Weinglass
and Dan
Williams and also answers questions that you may have."
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF PHILADELPHIA COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
COMMONWEALTH
OF PENNSYLVANIA,
Respondent,
-vs-
MUMIA
ABU-JAMAL
Defendant
Criminal
Division Nos. 1357-1358 (January Sessions, 1982)
RECEIVED
SEP 05
2001
PCRA
UNIT
DECLARATION
OF RACHEL H. WOLKENSTEIN
IN
SUPPORT OF MUMIA ABU-JAMAL'S PETITION FOR POST-CONVICTION
RELIEF
AND FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
RACHEL
H. WOLKENSTEIN, declares the following under penalty of perjury:
1. I am
a lawyer licensed to practice in the State of New York. I am also
admitted to
practice in the United States Supreme Court, and various United States
District
Courts. From 1995 through June 1999 I was a member of the legal team
headed by
Leonard Weinglass which presented the initial Petition for
Post-Conviction
Relief of Mumia Abu-Jamal ("Jamal") and pursued its appeal in the
Pennsylvania state courts.
2. In
July 1999, I resigned from Mr. Jamal's defense team because lead
counsel Leonard
Weinglass precluded Mr. Jamal from presenting evidence of Mr. Jamal's
innocence. The exculpatory evidence that Attorney Weinglass refused to
present
included the June 8, 1999 sworn confession of witness Arnold Beverly
that he,
Beverly, had shot and killed police officer Daniel Faulkner, and that
"Jamal had nothing to do with the shooting." Beverly confessed that
he and another man were hired to kill Officer Faulkner, that organized
crime
figures and police officers were involved in the plan to shoot
Faulkner, and
that police officers were present at the shooting. Co-counsel Daniel
Williams
agreed with and was complicit in the suppression of this evidence.
3.
Beverly's confession not only established Jamal's innocence but also
laid bare
the extent and consciousness of police and prosecutorial misconduct in
prosecuting and convicting Mumia Abu-Jamal and sentencing him to death
for a
crime he did not commit. Beverly's account of the shooting did not
stand alone
but was supported by a wealth of information in the record. Among other
things,
one detail of Beverly's account-that he was wearing a green army.
jacket when
he shot Faulkner-was consistent with the reports of several witnesses
that a
black male wearing a green army jacket was involved in the shooting.
Neither
Jamal nor his brother William Cook wore such a jacket. Beverly's
account of
being hired to kill Officer Faulkner was consistent with the fact that
there
were at least three ongoing FBI investigations of police corruption in
the
Center City area where Faulkner worked at the time of his murder, and
that at
least one other informant in those investigations was murdered.
Beverly's
account of the shooting was also more consistent with the available
physical
evidence than the prosecution scenario of the shooting (which was
physically
impossible). Moreover, the claim that police hired Beverly (along with
police
political bias against Jamal) helped to explain the gross police and
prosecutorial misconduct permeating the case. Additionally, Beverly was
subjected
to a polygraph test and the polygrapher's conclusions supported the
truthfulness of Beverly's account that he and not Jamal shot the
officer. Yet
despite the mass of material supporting Beverly's account (which is
discussed
in more detail in the body of this affidavit) Attorney Weinglass and
his
co-counsel Daniel Williams were adamant in refusing to present
Beverly's
testimony.
4. In
addition to his refusal to present the sworn confession of Arnold
Beverly,
Attorney Weinglass resisted and obstructed efforts to investigate,
develop and
present testimony of two other eyewitnesses, William Singletary and Mr.
Jamal's
brother William Cook, both of whom stated that Jamal did not shoot P.O.
Faulkner. According to Singletary, a black male passenger wearing a
green army
coat got out of William Cook's Volkswagen, shot Faulkner, ~-and fled
the scene.
Singletary also testified that police officers appeared on the scene
immediately after the shooting. In a sworn statement dated May 15, 1999
William
Cook confirmed that there was a passenger in his Volkswagen that night,
identified this passenger as his business partner Kenneth Freeman, and
stated
that Freeman said he had participated in the shooting of Faulkner and
that
there was a plan to kill the officer. Attorney Weinglass undermined the
presentation of Singletary' s testimony and refused to present the
sworn
statement of Cook.
5. With
regard to William Cook, Attorney Weinglass not only failed to present
his
exculpatory testimony, but perpetrated a fraud upon the federal
district court
by affirmatively misrepresenting in the federal habeas petition that
Cook
"disappeared" and thus was not available to testify in the habeas
proceedings. The truth is that Weinglass had actual knowledge of Cook's
whereabouts
and that Cook wanted to fully testify about the events of December 9,
1981. In
May 1999 Attorney Weinglass was at a meeting with William Cook which
concluded
with Cook signing a sworn statement exonerating Mr. Jamal and stating
that he
had knowledge that there was a plan to kill Officer Faulkner.
6.
Attorney Weinglass also failed to present the testimony of Mumia
Abu-Jamal
during the PCRA proceedings or in the federal habeas corpus proceedings
begun
in October 1999. Mr. Jamal did not witness the shooting of Officer
Faulkner and
was himself shot and critically wounded as he approached the scene. Mr.
Jamal's
account of what he did witness and experience as set forth in his
affidavit
filed in this action on May 4, 2001 is consistent with key elements of
the evidence
provided by Arnold Beverly, William Singletary and William Cook. Mr.
Jamal
followed lead attorney Weinglass' advice against testifying in the
Pennsylvania
state ~ court proceedings. Attorney Weinglass agreed that Mr. Jamal
would
testify in the federal habeas proceeding but did not present his
testimony.
7. The
obstruction of the presentation of the exculpatory testimony of
Beverly,
Singletary and Cook as well as Jamal's own account was part and parcel
of
Attorneys Weinglass and Williams' refusal to present a defense that Mr.
Jamal
is an innocent man who is the victim of monumental police and
prosecutorial
misconduct including the fabrication of evidence. Attorneys Weinglass
and
Williams' suppression of evidence of their client's innocence
constituted disloyalty
to and an effective abandonment of their client. Their disloyalty
reached its
culmination when Daniel Williams, with Attorney Weinglass' assistance,
published a false, self-serving and unauthorized '4inside account" of
the
Jamal case, Executing Justice, which amounted to a pre-emptive strike
against
the evidence of Mr. Jamal's innocence. Attorney Weinglass did not
prevent the
publication of the book nor fire Daniel Williams for publishing it, but
has
publicly and falsely stated that "[I] don't think that it's done any
legal
damage to the case." On the contrary, the Philadelphia District
Attorney
has quoted extensively from Williams' book in order to defeat Jamal's
efforts
to present this evidence of his innocence. As a result of their gross
act of
disloyalty. Mr. Jamal fired Attorneys Weinglass and Williams and his
new legal
team is presenting the critical evidence of Jamal's innocence which
Weinglass
and Williams had suppressed.
Background
8. I
began working for Mr. Jamal in 1987 as an attorney on matters primarily
relating to his prison conditions. Throughout my years as an attorney
for Mr.
Jamal I worked on a pro bono basis and have never accepted legal fees
for my
work. In 1989, Mr. Jamal was represented in his criminal case by his
state-appointed
appellate counsel, Marilyn Gelb. After Mr. Jamal's direct appeal to the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court was denied in March 1989, I assisted Mr.
Jamal in
finding new counsel to represent him in post-conviction proceedings.
During the
period before Mr. Jamal had counsel representing him in preparing a
post-conviction petition, I came upon information and evidence relevant
to Mr.
Jamal's defense, most significantly the background information provided
by
Arnold Beverly and the exculpatory witness statement of William
Singletary. I
took efforts to preserve any evidence that came into my possession.
However, my
primary task was to assist in finding experienced counsel for Mr. Jamal
who
would bring this evidence forward.
9.
Mumia Abu-Jamal always maintained his innocence of the shooting death
of police
officer Daniel Faulkner. Mr. Jamal confirmed his innocence to me in
unequivocal
and categorical terms. He made it very clear that his goal was to
overturn his
conviction in order to obtain his freedom, and not only to overturn the
death
sentence.
10.
Death penalty experts I consulted, including Henry Schwartzchild of the
ACLU
Capital Punishment Project, Prof Bruce Ledewitz of Duquesne Law School
and
attorneys at the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, made the point that
successful
capital defense strategies emphasized one of two basic claims-the
client's
innocence of the charged capital offense in the context of a
constitutionally
infirm trial, or mitigating factors that would overturn the death
sentence.
11.
Thus based on these consultations with death penalty experts and my own
limited
criminal law experience, I approached the task of finding a new lead
lawyer for
Mr. Jamal with~ the understanding that this lawyer would need to
undertake the
defense of an innocent man on death row beginning with a thorough
investigation
of the case. Given the political context of Mr. Jamal's case-the fact
of his
early Black Panther Party membership and later support to the MOVE
organization
which permeated his case and led directly to his death sentence-a
successful
challenge to Mr. Jamal's conviction required a thorough investigation
of the
case to establish that Mr. Jamal had not shot Officer Faulkner, that
his
prosecution was saturated with gross police and prosecutorial
misconduct, while
also exposing the many other due process violations which permeated the
trial
and sentencing.
12. I
assisted Mr. Jamal in meeting attorneys who would potentially assist
his
defense, including new lead counsel. Ultimately in mid-1991, Mr. Jamal
retained
Leonard Weinglass as lead counsel. Attorney Weinglass had a reputation
as a
successful criminal trial lawyer who had capital case experience.
Previously, I
had brought Mr. Jamal's case to the attention of Steven Hawkins, then
on the
staff of the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, and he initially
provided
assistance on Mr. Jamal's petitions for rehearing to the United States
Supreme
Court. I also enlisted Jonathan Piper, a litigator at the Chicago
office of
Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal to work pro bono on the case,
reviewing the
trial record, drafting legal papers and providing legal and factual
research
assistance. Attorney Weinglass brought Daniel Williams onto the team.
As lead
counsel, Attorney Weinglass was the ultimate arbiter and final
decision-maker
on all questions concerning Mr. Jamal's legal case.
13. I
did not join Mr. Jamal's legal defense team as an active participant
until 1995
prior to the filing of Mr. Jamal's post-conviction petition, although
before
that I attended a number of defense team meetings and provided specific
assistance to Attorney Weinglass when requested.
Attorney
Weinglass' Failure to Pursue Arnold Beverly's Exculpatory Information
and
Present Beverly's Confession
14.
Although Arnold Beverly first confessed to me in March 1999, I had met
this
witness years earlier and he had provided background information about
the
shooting of police officer Faulkner. In 1989 Beverly told me that the
killing
of P.O. Faulkner was a planned "hit" by other police officers and
that Mumia Abu-Jamal did not shoot the officer. Beverly was adamant
that he
would not identify the person who did shoot the officer, and he was
also
adamant that he would never testify and would deny knowing anything if
called
as a witness. As explained in more detail below, Attorney Weinglass
refused to
pursue Beverly as a possible witness and resisted my efforts to develop
the
background information Beverly had supplied. It was only in 1999 that
Beverly
ultimately confessed to me that he had shot P.O. Faulkner, agreed that
he would
provide testimony, and signed a written confession. However, Attorney
Weinglass
refused to proceed with this evidence of Jamal's innocence.
15. I
first contacted Beverly in mid-1989 after I heard that he had
information
relevant to Mr. Jamal's defense. I located and interviewed Mr. Beverly
at
Pennsylvania State Correctional Institute in Hunlock Creek where he was
a
prisoner. In that interview Arnold Beverly told me that he had been
present at
the scene of the shooting of P.O. Faulkner and that Mumia Abu-Jamal had
not
shot Officer Faulkner. Beverly further stated that there was a plan by
Philadelphia police officers to kill Daniel Faulkner and that Officer
Faulkner
was interfering with the police corruption involving drugs,
prostitution, etc.
in the Center City. Among other bits of information, Beverly said that
a black
officer, "Boston" (which I thought was the police officer's
nickname), was involved in the arrangements, that some police officers
were on
the scene to ensure that the "hit" went off as planned. He also told
me that Cynthia White, the main prosecution witness against Mr. Jamal,
"turned tricks" for police. At that time Beverly denied that he had
in fact shot Officer Faulkner, and he refused to identify the shooter.
Arnold Beverly
was emphatic that he would never identify the shooter and made it
equally clear
that he would not testify about anything he knew about the shooting of
P.O.
Faulkner even if under subpoena.
16.
Shortly after Attorney Weinglass was retained, I advised him of what
Arnold
Beverly had told me. Attorney Weinglass bluntly told me he was not
interested
in pursuing this information-that it was too hot to handle-and did not
want to
discuss it further. Attorney Weinglass continued to refuse to discuss,
let alone
investigate, Beverly's account through the 1995 post-conviction
hearing, even
though Jonathan Piper's background investigation confirmed that the
Federal
Bureau of Investigation had been investigating widespread and
high-reaching
police involvement in drug and vice rackets, including prostitution, in
Philadelphia's Center City at the time of P.O. Faulkner's shooting.
This
information not only supported Arnold Beverly's account but also shed
light on
how police could easily coerce the prostitute Cynthia White, the main
prosecution witness, to falsely identify Mr. Jamal as the shooter of
P.O.
Faulkner.
17. The
only reference to the information provided by Beverly which Attorney
Weinglass
would agree to make in the 1995 post-conviction filing was to include
the
simple fact of this police corruption into footnotes to the Memorandum
of Law.
Additionally, Attorney Weinglass acquiesced to including a demand for
information as to whether police officer Faulkner was an informant or
target of
a criminal investigation in Mr. Jamal's Motion for Discovery. As
explained
below, Beverly's account was supported in this regard by eyewitness
William
Singletary, who testified that police officers including "white
shirts" (i.e., police supervisors) were at the scene immediately after
the
shooting. However, Attorney Weinglass was opposed to calling
Singletary,
attempted to prevent him from testifying and when he did take the
stand,
Attorney Weinglass undermined his testimony, including as a Brady
witness, by
asserting that Singletary's recollections of what happened were
inaccurate.
18.
Additionally, Attorney Weinglass was adamant that Inspector Alfonzo
Giordano-already known as having been convicted on federal corruption
charges
in 1986-not be called as a witness at the PCRA proceedings. Giordano
was the
ranking officer at the scene after the shooting, the central
prosecution
witness against Mr. Jamal at his preliminary hearing and bail hearing
claiming
that Jamal had confessed at the scene while lying in the back of a
police wagon
(a confession no other officer heard). It was Giordano who also put
forward the
claim that Jamal's gun, the putative murder weapon, was on the street
and it
was Giordano who arranged the supposed "identification" of Jamal at
the scene by cab driver Robert Chobert. We also knew that Giordano had
worked
closely with Frank Rizzo when he was Philadelphia police chief, and was
involved in the police political surveillance and attacks on leftists
and the
Black Panther Party.
19. At
the close of the post-conviction hearing in September 1995, Attorney
Weinglass
requested I submit a statement to the PCRA court setting forth the
investigation leads we were pursuing, including the testimony of
William Cook
and the need to test the ballistics evidence at an independent
laboratory. It
became clear that Attorney Weinglass was simply posturing. For
instance, there
is the question of William Cook's non-appearance to testify, discussed
more
fully below. Also, Attorney Weinglass was furious that in the closing
statements
I made to the PCRA court I raised Inspector Giordano's role in the
false
prosecution and conviction of Mr. Jamal. Moreover, when I tried to get
authorization and assistance from Attorney Weinglass to continue our
investigation and hire the necessary investigators after the conclusion
of the
1995 PCRA hearing, Attorney Weinglass vetoed my concrete proposals.
20.
Despite his veto against continuing investigation, in early October
1995
Attorney Weinglass announced at a large public meeting in San Francisco
that
there were rumors that Officer Faulkner was an FBI informant and had
been set
up to be killed by fellow officers. Since Attorney Weinglass presented
this
information publicly without the slightest intention of pursuing it
through
investigation or seriously presenting it in court, he and I had a sharp
argument. At the conclusion, Attorney Weinglass finally agreed to
undertake
some of the investigation I proposed and provide the funds for the
investigators. However, Attorney Weinglass still would not agree to
investigate
Beverly's account.
(end
Part 1 of 4)
posted
to forum 09-19-01 Fatirah
Rachel
Wolkenstein Declaration, Part Two
Posted byFatirah
on Wednesday, September 19 @ 19:34:13 PDT
Contributed by Fatirah
Rachel Wolkenstein Declaration (2 of 4)
21. Notwithstanding Attorney Weinglass' refusal to directly pursue the
information provided by Beverly, I was alert for information and leads
which
were consistent with Beverly's overall account and pressed forward with
investigation. Over time, to the extent that Attorney. - Weinglass
grudgingly
acquiesced in conducting investigation, more and more information came
to light
which confirmed aspects of Beverly's account that the murder of police
officer
Faulkner was a "hit" planned by other police officers. As this
corroborating information came to light, it was brought to Attorney
Weinglass'
attention.
22. For
instance, the existence of a police officer named "Boston" was
confirmed when reviewing the records of a 1979 federal law suit
concerning
police brutality in Philadelphia. In late 1996, an eyewitness named
Marcus
Cannon came forward with the information that he saw two white men who
appeared
to be undercover police officers present on the scene during P.O.
Faulkner's
shooting.
23.
Significant corroboration of aspects of Beverly's background account
also came
in connection with a 1997 post-conviction remand hearing centering on
Pamela
Jenkins, a prostitute who had been an informant for the FBI in the
infamous
39th District police corruption scandal. Jenkins testified that in
1982, while
a prostitute and lover of P.O. Thomas Ryan, she learned that a black
police
officer named Boston and other police officers, including "Sarge" and
Det. Richard Ryan, were present during the shooting of Officer
Faulkner.
Consistent with Beverly's account, Jenkins also testified that Cynthia
White
was a police informant and performed sexual favors for police officers.
24.
Lawrence Boston was called as a witness at the 1997 post-conviction
remand
hearing, and confirmed that he had been an officer in the 6th District
where
P.O. Faulkner worked and knew Faulkner very well. However, Boston would
not
provide a clear answer where he was at the time of Faulkner's shooting,
but
strangely responded that he "should have been asleep." Although
Attorney Weinglass knew that Beverly had named Boston as involved in
the plan
to kill Officer Faulkner, Attorney Weinglass gave this opening a pass,
failing
to press Boston to answer the question of his whereabouts. Boston did
confirm
that on his beat he frequently interacted with prostitutes including
Cynthia
White, known to him as "Lucky," and that he had heard that at the
time of Mr. Jamal's trial White was being given extensive favors,
including
being put up in a condominium in New Jersey, apparently by Philadelphia
police.
25.
Significantly, in 1998 I interviewed Donald Hersing, the FBI's
confidential
source during its 198 1-82 investigation of Center City police
corruption. Mr.
Hersing confirmed that' corrupt police were very concerned about
possible
police informants in the winter of 1981-82, and that the corruption
included
James Carlini, head of Homicide; John DeBenedetto, head of the Central
Division
in which P.O. Faulkner worked; as well as Inspector Alfonzo Giordano,
the
senior officer at the scene after the shooting. DeBenedetto and other
Central
Division police officers were convicted in 1983; James Carlini was
named in the
federal indictment as an unindicted co-conspirator. Hersing states that
he
reported all his conversations and associations, including his
information on
Alfonzo Giordano, to the FBI agents who debriefed him regularly and
frequently.
In May 1999 Donald Hersing provided me with a sworn statement setting
forth
this information.
26.
Continued investigation of Alfonzo Giordano disclosed that he had been
in
charge of the Stake Out Unit of the Philadelphia police from 1968-1970
when
they were the tactical force used against the Philadelphia Black
Panther Party.
He also had a supervisory role in the year-long police barricade of the
MOVE
organization's Powelton Village house in 1977-78 which ended with a
police raid
and the shooting death of Stake Out officer James Ramp for which nine
MOVE
members were convicted. Mumia Abu-Jamal was prominent as a journalist
sympathetic to MOVE from the time of the police assault through the
trial of
the MOVE members and was personally known to then Mayor Frank Rizzo,
Civil
Defense Unit head George Fend and presumptively to Giordano himself In
any
event, there can be no serious question that once Giordano learned the
identity
of Jamal at the scene, he instantly would have been aware of who Jamal
was,
including his political background and very public position in defense
of the
MOVE organization.
27.
Personnel records on Alfonzo Giordano were subsequently located, and
they
disclosed information supporting Donald Hersing's report that
Giordano's involvement
in police corruption was known to the FBI and Philadelphia police
officials in
early 1982. The personnel records show that Giordano was transferred
from the
Command Inspectors Bureau (CIB) into the personnel division in May 1982
and
resigned from the police force the first working day after Mumia
Abu-Jarnal's
1982 trial ended. The fact that the prosecution did not put Giordano on
the
witness stand during the trial to retail his false claim that Jamal
confessed
at the scene, despite Judge Sabo's ruling that this testimony was
admissible,
is also powerful indication that the prosecution knew of Giordano's
involvement
in corruption and thought it would be too risky to present him at Mr.
Jamal's
trial. It is notable that Giordano was not indicted until 1986 on
charges based
on his receipt of tens of thousands of dollars in illegal payoffs
during the
1979-80 time period.
28. My
efforts in reviewing the record surrounding the physical and ballistics
evidence, including consultation with experts, revealed that the
prosecution
scenario of the shooting was physically impossible and not supported
even by
the prosecution's own evidence. The prosecution's scenario, adopted by
the
post-conviction court and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, is that Jamal
supposedly ran from the parking lot, shot Faulkner at close range in
the back
and then stood directly over Faulkner who had fallen on his back. Jamal
then
purportedly shot at Faulkner three or four times, with a bullet hitting
Faulkner in the head under the eye. According to the prosecution, Jamal
was
shot by Faulkner as the officer fell. Aside from Jamal and Faulkner,
the only
other person on the scene according to the prosecution was William
Cook,
Jamal's brother. However, as set forth below, this scenario is contrary
to the
available physical and ballistics evidence. For example, the location
of
bullets and fragments recovered at the scene, the absence of divots in
the
sidewalk, as well as the location of sidewalk blood stain, refute the
overall
prosecution scenario, including the claim that P O,. Faulkner was shot
several
times while he lay on the sidewalk with his head pointing east while
the
shooter faced east. The presence of the copper bullet jacket at the
scene is
inconsistent with the bullets supposedly in Jamal's and Faulkner's
guns,
pointing to a different gun from theirs' being fired. Moreover, the
officer who
purportedly found Jamal's gun and turned it in to the ballistics
department,
Stake Out officer James Forbes, testified at trial that the bullet
cartridges
in Jamal's gun were of a different make than that recorded in the
ballistics
report. Similarly, the location of the bullet in the door frame of 1234
Locust
Street as well as the description of this bullet in the ballistics
report
suggests that a second police weapon was fired.
29.
Moreover, information contained in the Medical Examiner's report which
I
discovered just prior to the filing of the post-conviction petition
raises
substantial questions. For instance, there is no reasonable explanation
as to
why the Medical Examiner recorded that Faulkner was shot with a .44
caliber
while the police maintained it was a .38 caliber bullet. Additionally a
sizable
bullet fragment was found in Faulkner's head wound by the Medical
examiner but
was not turned over to ballistics for examination and is missing.
Moreover,
although the Medical Examiner s normal procedures are to x-ray bodies
to locate
all bullets or fragments, no x-rays of Faulkner's body have yet been
located or
produced, raising questions concerning the caliber and number of
bullets in
Officer Faulkner's body and raising issues of suppression of evidence.
30.
There was also ample evidence that Jamal's gun had not been fired that
night
and that police knew this. To begin with, no lead or gunshot residue
testing
was reportedly performed on Jamal's hand, or if such testing was done,
the
results were suppressed. Nor is there any police report as to whether
Jamal's
gun was warm or smelled of burnt gunpowder from being recently fired.
Moreover,
the police ballistics report states that the bullet taken from
Faulkner's head
wound is extremely mutilated and distorted. ..destroying the major
portion of
the rifling markings" such that even its general characteristics are
"indeterminable." The ballistics report, which was unsigned,
concluded that a comparative examination of the evidence bullet against
test-fired bullets "has shown insufficient characteristic markings to
permit a positive comparison." However, a photograph taken of this
bullet
discloses a largely intact lead bullet with pronounced filing
impressions
indicating that a comparative analysis with original exemplar bullets
fired
from it could have resulted in a determination as to whether the bullet
was
fired from Jamal's Charter Arms revolver. Additionally the relative
width of
the lands to the grooves on the bullet reportedly taken from Faulkner's
head
wound is the opposite of all but a few percent of the Charter Arms
revolvers
produced. Thus the prosecution's ballistics evidence (or lack thereof)
itself
raises a strong likelihood that the bullet in evidence from Faulkner's
head
wound was not fired from Jamal's Charter Arms revolver, and that police
ballistics tests were "inconclusive" because properly and competently
performed ballistics would exclude Jamal's gun as the murder weapon.
31. The
physical evidence is also contrary to the prosecution's theory that
Mumia Abu
Jamal was shot by P.O. Faulkner as the officer fell to the ground. The
trajectory of the wounds Jamal suffered-traveling down through his
chest from
his lung and, to his liver-could not have been inflicted if Jamal was
shot from
below as the prosecution claimed. P.O. Faulkner's alleged weapon,
purportedly
used to shoot Jamal, was not in the condition one would expect from a
hunting
enthusiast and ambitious officer about to take the detective's
examination.
According to the police ballistics report, this gun contained powder
fouling,
dirt and lint in the chambers and it would not cock as designed in
single
action because of oversized rubber grips. The gun also had a bent
hammer spur.
All of these irregularities posed the question as to whether this was
in fact
the weapon Officer Faulkner was carrying as a service revolver on
December 9.
32.
Thus, by early 1999, there was a substantial body of accumulated
evidence which
not only further confirmed Mumia Abu-Janial's innocence but was
consistent with
Beverly's overall background account-and which could not be otherwise
explained. Despite Attorney Weinglass longstanding opposition, I
located an
address for Arnold Beverly and in March 1999 met with him. Beverly
confirmed
his prior account that Mr. Jamal had not shot Faulkner. However, for
the first
time Beverly stated he was also shot and wounded, and he bled at the
scene. He
also told me that he wore a green army jacket that night.
33. In
a second interview I conducted a few days later in March 1999 Arnold
Beverly
confessed that he himself shot P.O. Faulkner. He told me that someone
else
fired the first shot that hit P.O. Faulkner, and then Beverly ran
across the
Street and shot the officer in the face. He stated that Jamal arrived
later and
did not shoot anyone. According to Beverly, Mr. Jamal was shot by a
police
officer other than Faulkner.
34.
Within hours of hearing Beverly's confession I apprised Attorney
Weinglass that
Arnold Beverly had confessed to shooting and killing police Officer
Faulkner.
Attorney Weinglass' response to me was to dismiss this evidence out of
hand and
offered the excuse that presenting this confession would risk "losing
credibility" with a federal court judge. A new level of battle began as
Jonathan Piper and I attempted to convince Attorney Weinglass to submit
this
critical new evidence of Mumia Abu-Jamal 's innocence to couirt.
35.
Upon hearing of Beverly's confession, Attorney Weinglass insisted that
Beverly
be immediately subjected to a polygraph examination, but he chose an
examiner,
Earl Rawlings, who was not qualified and who performed an incompetent
examination. Even that examiner concluded that Beverly was being
truthful when
he said that he was present at the scene of the shooting and that Mr.
Jamal was
not the shooter. Subsequently I had Beverly examined by expert
polygrapher
Charles Honts, whom Attorney Weinglass had flown in during the 1995
post-conviction
hearing. Honts reported to me that Beverly confessed to him during the
polygraph examination and that the polygraph test results supported the
truthfulness of Arnold Beverly's confession that he-and not Mumia
Abu-Jamal-
shot police officer Faulkner. I obtained a sworn statement from Dr.
Honts.
36. As
set forth in more detail below, during the spring of 1999, Jonathan
Piper and I
intensified the ongoing investigation, with the assistance of the case
investigators as well as bringing former FBI agents in to assist in
exploring
and developing the evidence. Our work included reviewing the trial and
post-conviction record for anomalies that were consistent with
Beverly's
account. This generated further substantial corroboration of Beverly's
confession, and all this information was systematically brought to the
attention of Attorney Weinglass.
37. For
instance, Beverly's statement that he was wearing a green camouflage
army
jacket that night was extremely significant because the record clearly
established that at least four witnesses-Stake Out officer Forbes who
was
reportedly the first officer on the scene, officer Stephen Trombetta,
prosecution civilian witness Michael Scanlan, as well as William
Singletary-
describe someone at the scene in a green army jacket. Additionally
trial
witness Magilton told one of our investigators that the person he saw
run from
the parking lot was wearing a green army jacket. However, the evidence
is clear
that neither Mr. Jamal nor Mr. Cook wore a green army jacket: Jamal had
a red
quilted ski jacket with a wide vertical blue strip on either side of
the front,
Cook wore a blue Nehru-style jacket with a brass buttons. The
description of
someone on the scene wearing a green army jacket, generally identified
as the
shooter, comes from so many different people, that there can be no
question
that there was at least one person on the scene wearing a green army
jacket.
Beverly's description of what he was wearing-a green jacket-was thus
corroborated by information already in the record from several
independent
sources.
38.
Beverly's testimony that Jamal was shot by a police officer other than
Officer
Faulkner was supported by a Medical Examiner's record from 9:00 am on
December
9, 1981 (some five hours after the shooting) stating that Sgt.
Westermann of
Homicide told a Medical Examiner' s investigator that Jamal was shot by
"arriving police reinforcements." In fact, that report in the Medical
Examiner's log is the only explanation given in any of the police files
as to
how Jamal was shot, and thus presumptively reflects what police
officers at the
time actually were saying had happened. The circumstances of this
report were
the subject of an in camera hearing during the 1982 trial from which
Jamal was
excluded.
39. We
found corroboration for Beverly's claim that Faulkner fell to his knee
in the
autopsy report which stated that the skin on Faulkner's knee was
denuded;
moreover, his pants were torn at the knee. Beverly said he was carrying
a .22
caliber handgun and William Singletary had testified that a small
caliber gun,
a .22 or .25 was used in the shooting of Faulkner. Contradictions in
the
statements and testimony of P.O. Carolyn Chinn demonstrated that it was
her
impression that a black suspect had been taken from the scene before
she
arrived and participated in handcuffing Jamal. This was consistent with
Beverly's claim that he left the scene with help from police officers.
40.
Additionally, we investigated the possibility that Faulkner was an FBI
informant or that his shooting was in some fashion connected with the
federal
investigations of Philadelphia police corruption. Officer Faulkner's
612 beat
covered a Center City area where there was widespread prostitution as
well as
after-hours clubs and gay bars from which payoff money was extorted by
the
Central Division police. In addition to the information from Donald
Hersing
that corrupt police were very aware of the federal investigations and
worried
about informants, Jonathan Piper spoke with the lead federal prosecutor
who prosecuted
DeBenedetto for corruption, and he confirmed that Philadelphia police
officers
were sources in the investigation, including one source who had a
brother who
was also a police officer. This was a description fitting Officer
Faulkner, but
the former prosecutor said he could not say whether or not Faulkner was
an
informant.
(End
Part 2 of 4)
posted to forum 09-19-01 Fatirah
Rachel Wolkenstein
Declaration, Part Three
Posted byFatirah
on Wednesday, September 19 @ 19:26:05 PDT
Contributed by Fatirah
Rachel
Wolkenstein Declaration (3 of 4)
41.
During this period we also learned that George Sherwood, an FBI agent
who oversaw
the FBI's organized crime squad in Philadelphia and was involved in the
investigation Hersing was an informant for, had subpoenaed Faulkner's
army
records in 1982.
Former FBI agents, then working as investigators on the case, advised
me that
the most plausible explanation for this was that Faulkner was an
informant,
confidential source or an investigation target. Sherwood advised our
investigator that unless the FBI had an investigative interest in a
matter the
FBI would not have assisted another agency (including the District
Attorney or
the U.S. Attorney) with the retrieval of Officer Faulkner's military
records.
FBI confidential source, Donald Hersing, reported that George Sherwood
was one
of the FBI agents working on the Center City police corruption
investigation in
198 1-82. FBI records on Daniel Faulkner disclosed an FBI-PH airtel to
the
Director dated 12/30/8 1 that no written summary of the case was being
prepared
because of the ongoing criminal investigation and pending legal
litigation, which
former FBI agents advised me was highly unusual. The case record also
disclosed
that P.O. Faulkner owned a "Topcon" camera and used it the night he
was killed to photograph at least officer Gary Wakshul in the precinct
"lock-key area." Homicide Detective William Thomas had this camera in
his possession when he questioned Wakshul and others about the camera.
1 later
learned was a very expensive camera model which was often used by the
FBI
during that period. Inexplicably, there is no information as to where
the
camera was found since there are no property receipts or records of the
camera
or any film contained in the camera.
42. Our
investigation also revealed that it was far from unheard of that police
officers or witnesses against police would be the subject of "hits"
in Philadelphia in the 1980s. Bertram Schlein, a witness who testified
against
Central Division chief John DeBenedetto, was murdered in 1983. A former
police
officer and reported associate of Giordano, Kenneth Schwartz, was
reportedly a suspect
in Schlein's death. During the prosecution of "Five Squad" narcotics
officers for corruption in the 1980-84 time period, a federal
prosecutor
alleged that Philadelphia police officers had plotted to kill a witness
in a
federal tax-evasion case against an officer. In that same prosecution,
a
witness testified that he feared for his life after he was told that a
Five
Squad" officer who was cooperating with the FBI had been killed in his
home. Other police officers were killed in the early 1 980s under
circumstances
suggesting assassination. The last Philadelphia officer to have been
killed
before P.O. Faulkner was James Mason, who was shot by a sniper in May
1981. The
next officer to be murdered after Daniel Faulkner was Thomas Trench,
who was
shot at close range in his police car with the window open in May 1985,
likely
by someone he knew. Recently, former police officer turned mob hit man,
Ronald
Previte, has been testifying as a government informant in a case
dealing with
gangland killings. Previte boasted that he learned more about being a
crook" during the ten years he spent with the Philadelphia Police
Department than any other time in his life.
43.
Jonathan Piper carried out a detailed review of the police radio tapes,
which
showed that police at the scene had ample opportunity to tamper with,
or plant,
physical and ballistic evidence. The police tapes also were contrary to
the
prosecution claim, adopted by the Pennsylvania courts, that police
reinforcements found Jamal, Faulkner, and their guns on the sidewalk
within
less than a minute of the shooting. It was fully fourteen minutes
before the
officers at the scene reported having found a suspect with a weapon.
The
contemporaneous police radio "flashes" reported without contradiction
that the suspect(s) had fled the scene with Officer Faulkner's gun. In
his
police report, Stake Out officer Forbes claimed to have retrieved two
guns from
the sidewalk just after he arrived at the scene, but no other
witness-police or
civilian-saw him do so. Even Forbes' partner, Shoemaker, reported that
he did
not see Forbes pick up any guns (and Shoemaker claimed he saw only one
gun on
the sidewalk). Witness Arnold Magilton stated in a police interview
report that
police at the scene were searching for a gun. Another eyewitness,
Dessie
Hightower, reported that Officer Faulkner's gun was in his holster as
police
removed him from the scene. Moreover, contrary to police procedure,
Forbes did
not turn the guns over to the mobile crime unit officers at the scene
but
instead apparently took them with him to the police headquarters and
did not
deliver them to the police lab until some two hours later.
44. The
accounts given by Forbes and Shoemaker about their arrival at the scene
were
dubious in other respects as well. Although Forbes claimed to have been
one of
the first two officers on the scene and to have played a prominent role
in
arresting William Cook and retrieving the guns, several arriving police
officers reported that they did not even see Forbes at the scene when
they
arrived. Shoemaker's own actions at the scene are also questionable.
While
Shoemaker claimed he was assisting Officer Faulkner, P.O. John Hefter
pointedly
denied that Shoemaker was helping Faulkner and instead reported that
Shoemaker
was merely "standing over" the fallen officer. Moreover, Forbes and
Shoemaker were Stake Out officers, part of the elite police tactical
unit and
presumptively knowledgeable of and hostile toward Jamal, the reporter
known for
his sympathetic coverage of MOVE, particularly in the aftermath of the
trial of
MOVE members for the murder of fellow Stake Out officer James Ramp who
had been
shot in police crossfire during the 1978 police siege of MOVE's home in
Powelton Village.
45.
Additionally, the police officer responsible for "securing" the crime
scene, Gerald Lynch, was driving squad car 93 which was implicated in
the
police corruption racket. In a 1 985 federal police corruption trial, a
Central
City police officer testified that in 1981 the 93 squad car was
responsible for
collecting pay-off money at a Center City bar. Recently Mr. Jamal's new
legal
team obtained an affidavit from Linn Washington indicating that in
reality the
crime scene was not secured at all when he visited it just a few hours
after
the shooting. The corruption prosecutions also revealed that uniformed
officers
involved in graft performed routine "club checks" of Center City bars
and after-hours clubs to determine the number of patrons present in
order to
gauge the amount of pay-off money that should be demanded from each
club.
Several of the officers who were at the scene on December 9 reported
that they
were involved in making these club checks that night.
46. The
new piece of information that Beverly bled at the scene thus posed new
opportunities for DNA testing of the physical evidence, which if
confirmed,
would conclusively demonstrate the falsity of the prosecution's
scenario. For
example, the bullet removed from the doorway of 1234 Locust Street
should be
tested for blood and DNA because, given the trajectory, this could well
be the
bullet that wounded Arnold Beverly. One puzzle in the case has been the
presence of type 0 blood at the scene according to the criminalist's
report.
This pointed to the presence of another person at the scene because Mr.
Jamal
and Mr. Cook, as well as P.O. Faulkner (based on the Faulkner autopsy
report
and criminalistics report) all had type A blood.
47. In
sum, there was substantial information corroborating Beverly's
confession
throughout the record of this case, ranging from the testimony of other
witnesses to the physical evidence. At the same time there was no
credible
evidence in the case refuting or disproving his claims of what took
place. Yet
despite the sworn statements and other additional information we had
developed
supporting Beverly's account, all of which was explained in detail to
Attorney
Weinglass as well as co-counsel Daniel Williams, they refused to
present a
supplemental post-conviction petition containing the confession by
Beverly, to
say nothing of renewed motions for discovery, ballistic and DNA testing
of the
physical evidence. The more information that was developed which was
consistent
with Arnold Beverly's statement, the more adamant Attorney Weinglass
became
that he would not present a supplemental post-conviction petition based
on this
witness.
48. In
arguing against the presentation of Beverly's confession, Attorney
Weinglass
insisted that Beverly's account was incredible and implausible.
Attorney
Weinglass was adamant and would not engage in rational discussion of
how
Beverly's account squared with any of the supporting evidence.
Co-counsel
Williams argued that if accepted, Beverly's account would mean that
police had
knowingly framed an innocent man, and Williams asserted that it was
"unbelievable"
that police or the.prosecution would do that. These statements flew in
the face
of reality, borne out in testimony by police officers and prosecutors
in such
notorious eases as the hundreds of Philadelphia 39th District cases and
the
Illinois murder conviction of Rolando Cruz. In the course of the
investigation
in Mumia Abu-Jamal's case, I had myself conducted a lengthy interview
with
former police officer John Baird, imprisoned for massive falsification
of cases
in the 39th District. I shared with my then co-counsel many graphic
examples,
courtesy of John Baird, of the fabrication of evidence and
falsification of
police reports, search warrants and court testimony convicting innocent
people.
Moreover, Mr. Jamal's prosecution fit the pattern of numerous examples
of the
government knowingly prosecuting the innocent. In the guise of law
enforcement,
the FBI's COINTELPRO program against the Black Panther Party was an
extermination program leading to the death or prosecution of numerous
radical
black leaders based on their political views and activities. Documents
obtained
under Freedom of Information prove that Jamal was targeted by
COINTELPRO from
the time he was 15 years old based solely on his First Amendment
protected
activities as a Black Panther Party spokesman and writer. The
Philadelphia
police and mayor's hostility to MOVE culminated in a massive police
military
action killing defenseless men, women and children. The California
court system
finally released former Black Panther Geronimo Pratt in 1997 after 27
years of
wrongful imprisonment for a crime which FBI wiretap logs proved he did
not
commit. The list could be continued.
49.
Attorney Weinglass deceived Mumia Abu-Jamal, manipulating, cajoling and
misleading his death row client about the legal significance of
Beverly's
confession. Attorney Weinglass not only failed to assist in the process
of
evaluating Beverly's account, but rather obstructed Jonathan Piper's
and my
efforts to do so. An unauthorized book by Daniel Williams, former
counsel for
Mumia Abu-Jarnal, confirms that Attorney Weinglass intentionally
undermined
this witness in order to prevent Mr. Jamal from presenting his
testimony:
"Concerned
that Mumia would insist upon our presenting this evidence, Len sought
out ways
to push this witness onto the trash heap without further rupturing the
defense
team." (Executing Justice: An inside Account of the Case of Mumia
Abu-Jamal, p. 329 (emphasis added).) Attorney Weinglass threatened that
he
would end his legal representation of Mr. Jamal altogether rather than
allow
the evidence provided by Arnold Beverly to be presented in court.
50.
While Attorney Weinglass refused to present the testimony of Arnold
Beverly in
a supplemental post-conviction petition or in the federal habeas corpus
petition,
he and attorney Daniel Williams "leaked" aspects of Beverly's account
publicly. All discussions of the Beverly confession that Jonathan Piper
and I
participated in were limited to the defense team and consulting
attorneys or
legal assistants and investigators working directly under my
supervision. in
the spring of 1999, Daniel Williams argued that rather than present
Arnold
Beverly's testimony through a second post-conviction petition, his
account
should be "leaked" to the press. Shortly thereafter, a reporter
hostile to Jamal's defense wrote in Vanity Fair magazine (August 1999)
that the
legal team "continues to suggest new possibilities of how Faulkner was
killed, including one recently made by Weinglass that the officer may
have been
set up for execution by members of his own department because of
suspicion that
he was an FBI informant in an investigation of police corruption. He
offers no
concrete proof for this theory-just one more loop-the-loop of
conspiracy after
another." Attorney Williams' sworn statement in an April 10, 2001
affidavit filed in Mumia Abu-Jamal vs. St. Martin's Press and Attorney
Daniel
R. Williams that "nothing in Executing Justice discusses matters that
are
confidential..., even the disagreements among the lawyers were known to
many
pro-Mumia supporters, including left-wing journalists" is Williams'
admission that he and/or Attorney Weinglass took confidential
attorney-client
matters outside the legal team. To disclose this sensitive information
publicly
without seriously pursuing its investigation could only discredit this
powerful
exculpatory evidence and prejudice its ultimate review by a court of
law. These
leaks also apprised the prosecution and police of inside defense camp
information, thereby jeopardizing the safety of potential witnesses and
risking
the destruction of evidence relevant to the leaked claims.
51. Yet
the main damage caused by Attorney Williams' book is to openly
discredit,
misrepresent and sabotage the evidence of Mr. Jamal's innocence, in
flagrant
disregard of the truth, the record, and Mr. Jamal's interests. Williams
openly
discredits Beverly's account as"absurd" and goes on to falsely assert
that to advance Beverly's account would constitute the "propagation of
a
lje." Yet it is Attorney Williams himself, along with Attorney
Weinglass,
who have propagated a falsehood by first suppressing Beverly's
confession and
other evidence of Jamal's innocence, then misrepresenting the substance
of
Beverly's testimony, the record support for it, and falsely claiming
that
William Cook had "disappeared." Attorney Williams' book has borne its
intended fruit as it has become the prosecution's "Exhibit No. 1' in
its
efforts to defeat Jamal's claims of innocence.
Attorney
Weinglass' Failure to Present the Sworn Statement of William Cook
53. For
obvious reasons it was critical to obtain the testimony of Mumia
Abu-Jamal's
brother, William Cook, as to what he witnessed on the night of December
9,
1981. According to the prosecution, Cook was the only other person
besides
Jamal and Faulkner who was on the scene. Although it was Attorney
Weinglass'
stated position in 1995 that William Cook would be an important witness
in the
1995 PCRA proceedings, I have no knowledge of what, if any, attempts
Attorney
Weinglass made to find William Cook to have him available to testify at
that
hearing.
54.
Cook's importance was underscored in 1995 with the PCRA testimony of
Arnold
Howard. In an affidavit submitted to court, Howard stated that Freeman
told him
that he was a passenger in William Cook's car and had been on the scene
the
night of the shooting. Additionally Howard testified that he had given
his
driver's license application to Freeman, and prosecution witness Det.
Edward
D'Amato disclosed for the first time that Howard's license was found on
Faulkner after he was killed. According to Howard, he and Freeman were
brought
into police headquarters that night and his and Howard's hands were
tested for
gun powder residue. Freeman was reportedly put into a line-up and
identified by
a woman. We also learned that in February 1982 Freeman was arrested in
his home
by Stake Out officer Forbes and Detective Richard Ryan who recovered a
.22
caliber handgun and explosives. In May 1985, the night after the police
bombing
of the MOVE Osage Avenue house, Kenneth Freeman, 32 years old, died of
a heart
attack tinder suspicious circumstances.
55. In
September 1995, after the close of the evidentiary PCRA hearing but
prior to
the closing arguments, I interviewed Mr. Jamal's brother, William Cook,
when he
unexpectedly showed up in Pittsburgh at a federal court hearing on Mr.
Jamal's
civil suit against the Department of Corrections. While Mr. Cook stated
that he
was fearful of the consequences, he indicated his willingness to
testify and
wanted to meet again with Attorney Weinglass and me. In an attempt to
reopen
the post-conviction hearing so that Mr. Cook could testify, at Attorney
Weinglass' request, I submitted a statement as to what I believed Mr.
Cook
would say if he testified- that Mr. Jamal did not shoot police officer
Faulkner, that there was another black male occupant in the car with
him and
that another individual, not Mr. Jamal and not Mr. Cook, shot the
officer.
There was agreement of defense counsel that Mr. Cook would be presented
to
testify before the conclusion of the post-conviction proceedings.
However
Attorney Weinglass precluded me froni attending his subsequent meeting
with
William Cook. In the end, William Cook did not appear in court to
testify.
Attorney Weinglass advised me and represented to the court that Mr.
Cook was
unavailable because he was fearful of being arrested on outstanding
bench
warrants if he appeared to testify. This was inconsistent with my own
impressions of Cook and his willingness to be a witness. Based on my
prior conversation
with William Cook, statements by Cook's attorney Daniel Alva and
Attorney
Weinglass' behavior, it was my impression that Attorney Weinglass did
not want
to call William Cook as a witness.
56. In
February 1999, the defense was able to re-establish contact with Mr.
Jamal's
brother William Cook and Attorney Weinglass and I met with him to
discuss
obtaining a sworn statement from him and his agreement to testify in
future
court proceedings. I subsequently met with Mr. Cook and he identified
the passenger
in his Volkswagen as his business partner Kenneth Freeman. William Cook
reconfirmed that neither his brother, Mumia Abu-Jamal, nor he shot P.O.
Faulkner. According to Mr. Cook, Mr. Freeman told him afterwards that
there was
a plan to kill P.O. Faulkner, that Freeman was part of that plan, that
Freeman
was armed that night and participated in the shooting. Cook also
disclosed to
me that P.O. Robert Shoemaker, reportedly one of the first officers at
the
scene after the shooting, was known to Cook and frequently hung out,
"smoking weed," at the vending stand which Freeman and Cook ran in
downtown Philadelphia. Mr. Cook also agreed that he would come forward
and
provide his account of what had happened that night in a sworn
statement and
would testify in court.
57. In
May 1999, Attorney Weinglass and I met with William Cook. At this
meeting
Attorney Weinglass hostilely questioned Mr. Cook and warned him that he
could
be arrested on outstanding criminal charges. In this same meeting,
Attorney
Weinglass indicated his intention to distance himself' from this new
evidence
and announced that when this evidence was filed in court, he would not
be
present and would instead make a trip out of the country. Cook
nonetheless
confirmed his account of the shooting and signed a swOrn statement that
his
brother, Mumia Abu-Jamal, did not shoot Officer Faulkner.
58.
Attorney Weinglass told me that while he refused to present Beverly, he
would
present the testimony of William Cook in federal court. Yet he failed
to do so.
Moreover, in the federal habeas corpus petition filed in the federal
district
court in October 1999, Attorney Weinglass falsely asserts that since
1995
"Cook has again disappeared." This is a false statement because in
fact Attorney Weinglass met with William Cook between February and May
1999. I
was in contact with William Cook until I left the case, and Attorney
Weinglass
had the information on how to locate him. Attorney Weinglass also had a
copy of
Mr. Cook's signed statement.
Attorney
Weinglass Undermined the Exculpatory Testimony of William Singletary
59.
Attorney Weinglass' refusal to present critical evidence of Mr. Jamal's
innocence from Arnold Beverly and William Cook was consistent with his
strong
resistance to presenting the exculpatory testimony of William
Singletary.
Weinglass called Singletary to the witness stand in the 1995 PCRA
hearing,
openly discrediting his testimony in advance of any questioning.
60. I
first learned of Mr. Singletary's existence in the summer of 1990,
after Mr.
Jamal's direct appeal was denied by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court and
at a
time when there was no lawyer representing him for post-conviction
relief.
Hearing that this witness might have exculpatory information, I
contacted
Marilyn Gelb, Mr. Jamal's attorney during the state direct appeal, and
arranged
and attended a meeting between Ms. Gelb and Mr. Singletary, where Ms.
Gelb took
Singletary's deposition. He testified that he witnessed the shooting of
P.O.
Faulkner, that Mr. Jamal did not shoot the officer, that the shooter
was a
black male wearing a green army coat-not Mr. Jamal or Mr. Cook-and that
the
shooter fled the scene. He also testified that police officers appeared
on the
scene immediately after the shooting and that the prosecution's central
witness,
Cynthia White, was not physically present there on the corner at the
time of
the shooting, but had walked around the corner and down 13th Street.
(End
part 3 of 4) posted to forum 09-19-01 Fatirah
Rachel
Wolkenstein Declaration, Part Four
Posted byFatirah
on Wednesday, September 19 @ 19:18:54 PDT
Contributed by Fatirah
Rachel Wolkenstein Declaration (4 of 4)
61. I
transmitted a copy of the Singletary deposition to Attorney Weinglass
in May
1991, apprising him that this case involved substantial issues of
actual
innocence and prosecutorial/police misconduct, in addition to the many
other
procedural constitutional infirmities.
The mere fact that William Singletary provided an exculpatory account
of the
shooting would make him a critical witness to present and develop. His
testimony that police officers destroyed his accurate police statements
and
threatened him to make him change his account also pointed to the depth
of
police misconduct in the case and the need for a thorough investigation
to
unravel the evidence police had tampered with.
62.
When I attended a meeting with Attorney Weinglass and members of his
legal team
in May 1994, at which I pressed to find out what was being done to
pursue Mr.
Singletary's eyewitness testimony, I discovered that Attorney Weinglass
had not
pursued this evidence, and had not even located or interviewed Mr.
Singletary.
In fact, the discussion revealed that he had not even disclosed the
existence
of Mr. Singletary' s account to his associate Daniel Williams, who was
preparing an initial draft of the post-conviction papers. That draft
did not
include any evidentiary claims concerning police or prosecutorial
misconduct.
At that meeting a decision was made that the Singletary account was
important
to pursue. Thereafter Attorney Weinglass made a minimal effort to
locate Mr.
Singletary, who had moved from his former address.
63. Mr.
Singletary's crucial importance was underscored in April 1995 when the
United
States Supreme Court released its decision in Kvles v. Whitley, 115
S.Ct. 1555
(1995) which confirmed the prosecution's Brady duty to divulge any
information
undermining the reliability of the police investigation. Ultimately,
with the
agreement of all defense counsel, the falsification of Mr. Singletary's
exculpatory witness statement became the first claim in Mr. Jamal's
post-conviction petition filed in June 1995, followed by other
instances of
prosecutorial and police misconduct. At the time of filing Attorney
Williams
not only agreed that including claims based on Singletary's testimony
was
important but favored attaching Singletary's deposition to our
post-conviction
petition.
64.
Nonetheless, during the post-conviction hearings in July and August
1995, there
were repeated arguments within the defense team in which Attorney
Weinglass and
Daniel Williams argued against presenting Mr. Singletary as a witness.
In his
effort to keep Singletary off the stand, Attorney Weinglass raised a
host of
bizarre excuses to argue against calling this exculpatory witness-who
at that
time was the only available witness who could testify that Mr. Jamal
did not
shoot the officer. For example, Attorney Weinglass argued that Mr.
Singletary
was incredible or suspicious because he had friends who were police
officers-but this fact clearly made Mr. Singletary a more credible
witness,
because it eliminated any bias against police which could motivate him
to slant
his testimony in Jamal's favor. At the same time, even Attorneys
Weinglass and
Williams conceded that it was undeniable that Singletary was present at
the
shooting, and they also agreed that his account of police intimidation
was
bolstered by the peculiar police interview of highway patrolman Vernon
Jones
two days after the shooting. The Jones interview statement stood out
because
all Jones had to say in his interview was that Singletary purportedly
had not
seen the shooting, and it was clear to all of us that the only purpose
for
police to create such a record was to bolster the false police witness
statement that Singletary witnessed nothing.
65.
Ultimately Attorney Weinglass called Singletary but only after he had
first
openly discredited this key witness before he even took the stand by
making the
blanket statement in open court that Mr. Singletary's recollections of
the
shooting were "inaccurate." Attorney Weinglass called Mr. Singletary
to the stand "only" as a Brady witness and questioned him only
concerning the misconduct of police officers at police headquarters
when they
tore up and falsified Mr. Singletary's witness statements. This was a
total
surprise to me since Attorney Weinglass had not disclosed he was
planning to
question Singletary so as to undermine and discredit him as a witness.
Attorney
Weinglass refused to ask Singletary questions in direct examination
concerning
the substance of his eyewitness testimony in complete abrogation of his
responsibility to act as an advocate for his client.
66.
Attorney Weinglass' so-called "strategy" of calling Mr. Singletary as
a "Brady" witness while discrediting his actual eyewitness account is
completely contrary to the fundamentals of the Brady doctrine, because
establishing a claim for police misconduct requires showing that the
suppressed
evidence could have affected the outcome of the trial. To show
prejudice in the
case of Mr. Singletary would require establishing that his true witness
statement would have said that Mr. Jamal did not shoot the officer. By
undennining the credibility of this witness, Attorney Weinglass
sabotaged Mr.
Jamal's interest. The prosecution took full advantage of Attorney
Weinglass'
gratuitous assertions that Mr. Singletary's account was "inaccurate,"
titling that section of their Pennsylvania Supreme Court brief: "The
PCRA
Testimony of William Singletary Was Incredible-Just as Defense Counsel
Predicted Before Calling Him as a Witness.
67. In
his April 10, 2001 sworn statement, Attorney Williams confirms that it
was his
and Attorney Weinglass' purpose "to prevent Singletary from testifying
about what he claimed to have observed at the crime scene" and to
discredit this witness (Williams' emphasis). He further confirms that
the
federal habeas corpus papers he and Attorney Weinglass filed "never
argued
... that Singletary's account... should be credited." In his March 21,
2001 affidavit in Jamal vs. St. Martin's Press, Williams falsely
states,
"Never has the defense team even attempted to argue in any legal
filings
that Mr. Singletary's account of what he allegedly witnessed on the
night of
the murder is in any way defensible or supportable." This is contrary
to
arguments made in legal memoranda filed with the Pennsylvania Supreme
Court
while I was a member of the defense team during post-conviction
proceedings
where we asserted that Singletary' s factual account was accurate in
its
fundamental substance-that Mr. Jamal is innocent and that a black male
other
than Jamal or Cook shot Officer Faulkner and fled the scene. Attorney
Williams'
sworn statement underscores how the federal habeas corpus papers he and
Attorney Weinglass filed not only failed to move the case forward by
taking
account of the new evidence of Jamal's innocence but undermined and
eviscerated
evidence and arguments already presented in the post-conviction
proceedings.
Attorney
Weinglass Undermined the Defense in Other Ways, Including His Failure
to Mount
An Aggressive Challenge to the Fabricated "Confession"
68. The
initial draft of the post-conviction legal memorandum was prepared by
Attorney
Williams, working with Attorney Weinglass, in 1993-94. The initial set
of
claims Attorney Williams drafted focused solely on procedural due
process
issues and was devoid of claims of actual innocence or police and
prosecutorial
misconduct under Brady. The evidentiary issues raised by Attorney
Williams
dealt with the evidence Attorney Jackson had already attempted to
present
during the 1982 trial-Veronica Jones, Gary Wakshul, evidence of Robert
Chobert'
s criminal record, and the failure to provide funds for defense
investigators
or experts-and Jackson's ineffectiveness in doing so. Jonathan Piper
and I
insisted that the post-conviction petition needed to present the
available
evidence of Mr. Jamal's innocence and of the police and prosecution
misconduct
in suppressing and fabricating evidence, including the concocted
confession and
the testimony of William Singletary. The gross violations of due
process in the
1982 trial flowed from the fact that an innocent man was being
prosecuted on
the basis of falsified evidence.
69. As
discussed above, in the couple of months prior to filing the PCRA
petition,
Jonathan Piper drafted the Brady claim which opened the post-conviction
papers.
He also drafted the summary introduction to the post-conviction
petition which
asserted that "Petitioner Jamal was convicted of a crime he did not
commit
and sentenced to death based on his political views and history." In
this
context, I prepared a Motion for Discovery with the intention of
opening the
prosecution and police files for evidence of Jamal's innocence and the
police
and prosecutorial misconduct which permeated the trial and sentencing.
It was
only when it appeared that Attorneys Weinglass and Williams agreed to
pursue
this approach that I formally joined the defense team. But as set forth
above,
their agreement turned out to be extremely short-lived.
70.
When the post-conviction papers were filed on June 5, 1995 Governor
Thomas
Ridge had already issued a death warrant for Mr. Jamal's execution. The
simple
reality was that at this juncture Attorney Weinglass had made minimal
preparations for an evidentiary hearing. ~ Jonathan Piper and I urged
Attorneys
Weinglass and Williams, who were to handle the presentation of
witnesses at the
hearing, to begin preparing for the hearing in the event that Judge
Sabo, based
on his manifestly pro-prosecution bias, would deny any discovery or
reasonable
preparation time and instead would use the pending execution date as an
excuse
to expedite the hearing. Ultimately Judge Sabo did precisely that.
Attorney
Weinglass's response to our urging was to say that "I can't deal with
it," and that our proposals "give me a headache." He insisted
that if there was an evidentiary hearing at all it would not come for
six
months. As a result of his complete failure to prepare for the hearing,
the
defense team was caught off guard when the post-conviction court
improperly
insisted that the defense begin presenting evidence in July 1995.
Attorneys
Weinglass and Williams did not have a witness list, an order of proof,
or even
an outline for conducting an evidentiary hearing at the time we filed
the
post-conviction papers. Because of their lack of preparation, the task
of
organizing the evidentiary hearing, lining up witnesses, issuing
subpoenas,
attempting to secure discovery, running an investigation to locate
essential
witnesses to subpoena and interview and prepare documentation for court
and
other essential information devolved on me.
71.
During this period Pennsylvania capital litigation experts advised us
that
there was precedent for the state and federal courts to complete the
entire
round of initial post-conviction and federal habeas corpus proceedings
within a
period of weeks under the shadow of a death warrant, and that the
United States
Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit had permitted such a procedure
in the
1993 case of a Delaware prisoner, Kenneth DeShields, resulting in the
exhaustion of all habeas proceedings and his ultimate execution in the
course of
a few weeks. As a result, Pennsylvania capital litigation experts
warned us
in-June 1995 that there was no legal "guarantee" that Mr. Jamal's
August 1995 execution would be stayed.
72.
When the post-conviction hearing began, the only issues on which
Attorneys
Weinglass and Williams had previously made any real preparation efforts
were
ineffective assistance of counsel and the testimony of Dessie
Hightower.
Although I was not involved in the preparation of Attorney Anthony
Jackson to
testify, it is obvious in hindsight that Attorneys Weinglass and
Williams did
not approach this witness with an eye to exposing new evidence which
Jackson
had failed to present, and Attorney Weinglass' questioning of Attorney
Jackson
at the post-conviction hearing was deficient in failing to establish a
predicate for his failure to develop several avenues of defense, such
as the
failure to call William Cook as a witness or the failure to call P.O.
Stephen
Trombetta, who had repeatedly and affirmatively asserted that Jamal
made no
confessions. Moreover, Attorney Weinglass failed to call Attorney
Marilyn Gelb
to testify in support of Mr. Jamal's claim of ineffective assistance in
the
appellate process and agreed to sealing an in chambers discussion
reportedly on
her medical condition.
73.
Attorney Weinglass and his associate Daniel Williams also failed to
present a
thorough challenge to the claim, fabricated two months after the
shooting, that
Jamal "confessed" at the hospital when he was taken for treatment of
his gunshot wound. The only evidence they presented on this question at
the
post-conviction hearing was the testimony of police officer Gary
Wakshul, who
continued to falsely claim that Jamal did in fact confess despite a
December 9,
1981 statement that Jamal "made no comments." However, Wakshul
revealed at the post-conviction hearing that the purported hospital
confession
was first raised at a February 1982 roundtable meeting of all the
police
witnesses in the case under the direction of prosecutor Joseph McGill.
Nonetheless,
Weinglass and Williarñs refused to pursue this new information
which indicated
conscious prosecutorial participation iii the fabrication of this
evidence.
74.
Indeed, two days after Wakshul testified, Attorney Weinglass
inexplicably
waived trial prosecutor Joseph McGill as a witness, after he had been
subpoenaed, thereby failing to make a record about his misconduct with
regard
to the confession and a host of other evidentiary issues including
promises
made to prosecution witnesses White and Chobert as well as his
misconduct
injury selection and closing arguments. The failure to call McGill also
undermined the defense's ability to show the development from the
initial false
claim of Inspector Giordano that Jamal "confessed" in the police wagon
at the scene, to the later false claim inspired at McGill's roundtable
meeting
that Jamal "confessed" at the hospital. The evolution from Giordano's
story-presented at the preliminary hearing before the roundtable
meeting-to the
subsequent hospital confession story presented at trial pointed to a
decision
by McGill that the Giordano version was too risky because McGill had
information that Giordano was the subject of a federal corruption
probe. In
preparing for federal court proceedings, Attorney Williams asserted
that he
would not work on the confession issues if it required arguing that the
prosecution knowingly presented false evidence.
75.
P.O. Stephen Trombetta was an important witness to refute Giordano
because
Trombetta did not endorse Giordano's claim that Jamal said he shot the
officer
while he was in the rear of the police wagon after being arrested.
Trombetta
was a crucial witness because, as Wakshul's partner, he was with Jamal
the
entire time from Jamal's arrest to his medical treatment. In numerous
reports
Trombetta asserted that Jamal did not make any statements, including at
the
hospital. Trombetta never endorsed any of the false claims that Jamal
confessed. Additionally, as indicated above, Trombetta reported thaf
"the
suspect" was wearing a "green army jacket." Yet, Attorney
Weinglass did not want to call witness Stephen Trombetta at the
post-conviction
hearing, and failed to seek the necessary court order to obtain a
subpoena to
compel the testimony of this out-of-state witness.
76.
More broadly, Attorneys Weinglass and Williams did not seriously
attempt to
present evidence to discredit the other trial witnesses who falsely
claimed
that Jamal confessed," P.O. Gary Bell and security guard Priscilla
Durham.
They also did not challenge the prosecution's fabrication and improper
introduction into the 1982 trial record of a typed statement purporting
to
memorialize Priscilla Durham's account, but which Durham herself
disavowed.
This too, was an issue to have been pursued with prosecutor McGill.
77. Subsequent
to the post-conviction hearing, as part of preparation for the federal
habeas
corpus proceedings, Jonathan Piper and I reviewed the record concerning
the
confession, which we felt had been inadequately addressed by Attorneys
Weinglass and Williams, and developed numerous new discrepancies
further
demonstrating that the claimed confession was a fabrication. Although
we
prepared this analysis specifically for Attorneys Weinglass and
Williams, they
did not incorporate it into their federal habeas filings. For example,
we
determined that the accounts of the "confession" provided by various
police officers and security guards were completely inconsistent and
contradictory as to when and where the confession supposedly took
place, or
even whether Jamal was "walking" or lying on the floor at the time he
supposedly confessed. This issue was one that Attorney Weinglass also
declined
to bring out at the PCRA hearing by not calling to the witness stand
Dr.
Anthony Colletta, who had been subpoenaed and was available to testify
that Mr.
Jamal did not make any confession during the entire time the was in he
emergency rooiii. The medical evidence demonstrates that in reality
Jamal had
been shot through the lung and had lost substantial amounts of blood,
and was not
in a condition where he could have "hollered" out a confession as
claimed.
78.
There are many other instances of Attorney Weinglass' dereliction which
amounted to an abandonment of his client, a number of which follow.
During the
post-conviction hearing Attorney Weinglass failed to bring out in
direct
examination of witness Robert Chobert (or in an offer of proof) the
fact that
Chobert had told a defense investigator in 1995 that his police
interview
reports from 1981 were materially inaccurate in their description of
what he
witnessed. Attorney Weinglass did not proffer Arnold Howard's testimony
that
Ken Freeman admitted that he was an occupant in William Cook's car and
on the
scene of the shooting. Attorney Weinglass' failure to call trial
prosecutor Joseph
McGill to the stand prejudiced the Batson claim because we were not
able to
create a record of McGill's claimed reasons for striking black and
white
jurors, in order to show that any claimed non-race-based reasons for
striking
black jurors were pretextual.
79. At
the 1995 post-conviction hearing, Attorney Weinglass advised Mr. Jamal
against
testifying in his own defense, telling Mr. Jamal that he should wait
and take
the stand only at a retrial of his case. These instructions were
contrary to
Mr. Jamal's best interests, preventing him from testifying that he did
not
shoot Officer Faulkner and is innocent. Attorney Weinglass made
repeated
statements to the press that Mr. Jamal would provide an account of what
"really happened" when he testified at a retrial. This was in
flagrant disregard of the fact that Mr. Jamal could not and would not
ever be
able to provide such an account because he did not see the shooting of
Officer
Faulkner.
80. The
ballistic and other physical evidence was another critical component of
the
case requiring thorough investigation, discovery and testing, but which
Attorney Weinglass failed to pursue. Mr. Jamal has always maintained
that he
did not shoot P.O. Faulkner. The police ballistics and criminalistics
reports
assert that the police tests of this evidence were inconclusive in that
they
could not establish that any bullet recovered at the scene or from P.O.
Faulkner's body came from Mr. Jamal's gun. Testing of the ballistics
and
physical evidence, including DNA testing, could be critical to
establish, among
other things. that Mr. Jamal's gun was not used to shoot the officer,
that
other guns were fired at the scene, that other persons were present at
the
scene, or that physical evidence was doctored or planted by police.
81.
Despite the central importance of the ballistics and physical evidence,
Attorney Weinglass did not seriously pursue this aspect of the case.
Prior to
the post-conviction hearing, the extent of his efforts in this regard
was to
retain two experts to state that it would have been useful for the
defense to
have obtained funds to pay for the assistance of medical and ballistics
experts. However, there was no attempt to retain an expert to pursue
actual
testing of the evidence. Attorney Weinglass' ballistics expert, George
Fassnacht, claimed that a conflict of interest preventedhim from being
the one
to test the evidence.
82.
When the court granted the defense permission on.July 20, 1995 to
inspect and
test the physical evidence, Attorney Weinglass did not go to inspect
this
evidence himself and told me that he would not do so but that I could.
As a
result, by default, I became responsible for reviewing the physical
evidence
and subsequently consulting with experts in that regard, although at
that point
in time I had limited familiarity with ballistics and criminalistics.
This
physical evidence included the weapons allegedly carried by Officer
Faulkner
and Mumia AbuJamal, and their respective clothing which showed signs of
blood,
holes and tears. Also available for inspection were the charts used by
the
prosecution to demonstrate the scene to witnesses as well as the
hospital area
where Jamal purportedly confessed. A tape of an interview of Cynthia
White as
well as a tape of the police radio transmissions were also available to
be
listened to. To my knowledge this was the only time that the physical
evidence
had been viewed in some thirteen years and even the condition of the
wrapping
of the evidence would be potentially relevant to future litigation. Yet
Attorney
Weinglass took no responsibility for this viewing of the evidence.
83.
During the period after the post-conviction hearing, because Attorney
Weinglass
was not diligently pursuing the ballistics and physical evidence
issues, I
attempted to develop a plan for pursuing the relevant discovery and
testing in
federal court, including DNA testing. Throughout the disputes over
whether to
present Arnold Beverly as a witness, I repeatedly made the point that
Beverly's
account opened up avenues for scientific testing of the physical
evidence.
Presenting his testimony would increase the chances of obtaining court
permission to carry out tests which could be critical in disproving the
prosecution theory of the case and establishing Mr. Jamal's innocence.
However,
the court record of the habeas corpus proceedings indicates that of all
the
issues posed regarding the ballistics and other physical evidence, the
only
request made concerns the question of whether trace metal testing took
place.
My
Resignation from the Defense Team in 1999
84. 1
resigned from the defense team in early July 1999, along with Jonathan
Piper.
The immediate reason for our resignation was that Attorney Weinglass as
lead
counsel deceived Jamal about the legal significance of the Beverly
confession
and was adamant in refusing to file a supplemental post-conviction
petition
based on the sworn statements of Arnold Beverly and William Cook, in
conjunction with supporting affidavits and demands for discovery and
testing of
the physical evidence, including DNA testing. Attorney Weinglass'
refusal to
proceed with the Beverly and Cook statements was also my final
realization that
Attorney Weinglass would not carry out the defense demanded by our
innocent
client, that he would not pursue the necessary attack on the massive
prosecutorial misconduct permeating this case, and that he would not
pursue
discovery, scientific testing of the physical evidence and an
evidentiary
hearing in federal court. With the final realization that, no matter
what the
evidence, lead counsel Weinglass would preclude the necessary steps
from being
taken to provide a defense for an innocent man and fight to overturn
Jamal's
unjust conviction, it was no longer possible for me to function
ethically on
his legal team.
85. 1
am aware of certain facts which may help explain why Attorney Weinglass
would
act in such gross disregard for the best interests of his client.
Attorney
Weinglass reported to me prior to submission of the post-conviction
petition
that he was physically threatened by Ronald Freeman, the brother of
Kenneth
Freeman, the man Cook has now sworn was involved in the shooting of
P.O.
Faulkner. Some time prior to the filing of the post-conviction petition
in
1995, Attorney Weinglass received a threatening telephone call from
Ronald
Freeman, who was then reportedly in prison. According to Attorney
Weinglass,
Ronald Freeman called him from the warden's office at the prison and
said that
if Weinglass dared to name Kenneth Freeman as the shooter, he,
Weinglass. would
be in physical danger. Attorney Weinglass said that he was upset and
frightened
by this phone call, particularly because the call came from the
warden's
office, suggesting collusion between state actors to interfere with the
investigation and intimidate the defense team. During and after the
post-conviction hearing, a private investigator hired by Attorney
Weinglass to
interview current and former Philadelphia police officers also reported
hearing
of threats that police would 'take care of' the defense team. In light
of these
threats, Attorney Weinglass may well have been in fear of the
consequences that
could result-including risk to his life and safety-if he conducted a
thorough
investigation of the real facts of P.O. Faulkner's death and presented
that
evidence in court.
86. It
is consistent with the overall heated climate surrounding this case
that
threats would be made against Mumia Abu-Jamal's attorneys. The efforts
of the
Fraternal Order of Police nationally to intimidate Mumia Abu-Jamal's
supporters
and potential supporters are well known. The FOP has waged a
well-publicized,
well-funded, nationwide campaign demanding that Jamal be execi~ted.
Using the
widow of Officer Faulker as a spearhead, the FOP has retailed lies and
threats
against Jamal supporters through the media and has sought to chill the
exercise
of free speech by defenders of Jamal, from musicians trying to organize
benefit
concerts to students who have voted to hear messages from Jamal at
their
graduation ceremonies.
87.
Attorney Weinglass' obstruction of the investigation and refusal to
present
evidence exonerating Mr. Jamal constituted fundamental disloyalty to
his client
and were contrary to pursuing a legal fight for Mumia Abu-Jamal's
freedom.
Attorney Weinglass not only abandoned any advocacy on behalf of Mumia
Abu-Jamal
but effectively pled him guilty to a crime he did not commit.
88. The
concrete documentation of this abdication of counsel is the federal
habeas
corpus petition which was filed by Attorneys Weinglass and Williams in
October
1999. That document not only fails to present the confession of Arnold
Beverly
but does not include Mumia Abu-Jamal' s own statement of his innocence
nor the
exculpatory witness evidence of William Cook. The habeas corpus
petition and
accompanying memorandum are devoid of the substantial body of
exculpatory
material concerning the fabricated confession and other police and
prosecutorial misconduct which had been developed in the period
following the
postconviction hearing. The evidence of Mumia Abu-Jamal's innocence and
proof
of gross violation of due process resulting from police, prosecutorial
and
judicial misconduct were deliberately suppressed by Attorney Weinglass.
89.
This affidavit is submitted to refute the claims advanced by the
prosecution
based on the false and self-serving book written by Williams and
supported by
Attorney Weinglass that presenting Arnold Beverly's testimony
constitutes
"propagation of a lie." Rather, as set forth above, a review of the
entire record of this case and the information discovered over years of
investigation independently corroborate Arnold Beverly's confession
that he,
and not Mumia Abu-Jamal, shot and killed police officer Daniel
Faulkner. This
affidavit certainly does not exhaust the information I obtained during
my years
as Jamal's couñsel which demonstrates his innocence and the
massive police and
prosecutorial misconduct which resulted in his conviction and death
sentence.
The failure to present this evidence in court in 1999 was solely the
result of
attorneys Weinglass and Williams' abandonment of their client by
suppressing
this critical evidence of Mumia Abu-Jamal's innocence.
90. I
am competent to testify as to all matters set forth in this Affidavit
and if
called as a witness would so testify. The foregoing is stated subject
to the
penalties of 18 Pa.C.S. Section 4904 relating to unsworn falsification
to
authorities.
RACHEL
H. WOLKENSTEIN
Dated:
August 7,2001
posted
to forum 09-019-01 Fatirah
Read or leave comments in the Pagesincolor.com Blog
Pagesincolor.com
888 E Santa Clara St.
San Jose, CA 95116 USA
408-924-0846
info@pagesincolor.com