Saturday, August 31, 2019

After Man Serves 35 Years in Prison for $50 Robbery, US \'Should Be Ashamed of System We Allow\'

After Man Serves 35 Years in Prison for $50 Robbery, US \'Should Be Ashamed of System We Allow\'                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  We ALL must work toward changing this system of INJUSTICE in the USA.  PRISON REFORM NOW!!!!!

"Wealthy CEOs and business executives steal millions of dollars from the public and never go to jail."
hands in cuffs
"Bless Alvin Kennard," Ava Duvernay wrote on Twitter this week. "Everyone in this country should be ashamed of the system we allow." (Photo: Derek Goulet/cc/flickr)
The failures of the nation's justice system were highlighted this week after a judge resentenced a man—who'd been serving life in prison without a chance of parole for a $50.75 bakery robbery—to time served.
Alvin Kennard had already served over 35 years for the 1983 first degree robbery when Judge David Carpenter on Wednesday cut the life sentence short. Kennard is expected to be released in the coming days after processing by the Alabama Board of Corrections.
Author and CNN commentator Keith Boykin weighed in on the case and the disparate hands of justice, writing on Twitter Thursday, "Wealthy CEOs and business executives steal millions of dollars from the public and never go to jail."
As Al.com reported,
Under Alabama's Habitual Felony Offender Act, then 22-year-old Kennard was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. When he was 18, Kennard had been charged with burglary, grand larceny, and receiving stolen property in connection with a break-in at an unoccupied service station. He pleaded guilty to three counts of second-degree burglary for that crime in 1979, and was given a suspended sentence of three years on probation.
Those prior crimes, which were not Class A felonies, led to his sentence under the Habitual Felony Offender Act in 1984.
While that "three strikes" law has been changed to allow a fourth time offender the possibility of parole, as ABC News reported, it had no retroactive effect on those already imprisoned under it. Kennard's upcoming freedom is instead thanks to Carpenter noticing the case. Carla Crowder, Kennard's attorney, told the news outlet, "This was a judge that kind of went out of his way."
The case drew the attention of acclaimed filmmaker Ava Duvernay, who said on Twitter Thursday: "Bless Alvin Kennard. Everyone in this country should be ashamed of the system we allow."
Duvernay's comment came in response to a thread from Birmingham, Alabama-based journalist Beth Shelburne in which she called the previous three strikes law "merciless."
"It was extraordinary to see this wrong made right, but it only happened because the right system actors were in place," Shelburne wrote. "I hope Alabama leaders have the courage to grant the same chance to the 500+ others like Alvin who remain locked up with no hope of release."
Crowder, in her comments to ABC News, made similar points.
While welcoming Kennard's upcoming release, Crowder said that "we know that there are hundreds of similarly situated incarcerated people in the state who don't have attorneys, who don't have a voice."
"As this state grapples with the Department of Justice involvement and unconstitutional prisons," she added, "I would hope our lawmakers, our courts, and our governor would do more to address these injustices."
Kennard, for his part, said in court Wednesday, "I just want to say I'm sorry for what I did.”
"I take responsibility for what I did in the past," he said. "I want the opportunity to get it right."

This is the world we live in. This is the world we cover.

Sunday, August 18, 2019

Simone - "Keeper of Nina's Flame"

Feeling Good - Nina Simone (1965)

You'll Never Walk Alone - Nina Simone



Listen to this rendition for the exquisite instrumentation.  We all must remember that Nina Simone was originally a gifted pianist who studied at Juliard and played in night clubs to pay for her training.  This offering shows her talent and musical skill and experience to the  highest of heights.  She was never appreciated for the fullest extent of her prodigious gifts.  She sang only because she was required to do so by those who hired her, but that produced the inimitable gifts she  gave the world.

Nina Simone - Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair

NINA SIMONE on DAVID BOWIE, JANIS JOPLIN and singing STARS( Live at Mont...

Nina Simone: To Be Young, Gifted and Black

Simone Style -Love Me Or Leave Me- The Peach Voice.Nina Simone.

The Music of Nina Simone - North Sea Jazz Festival 2009

This production is by Nina Simone's daughter, Lisa Simone, who is well qualified to sing her mother's own songs.  More power to her.  She is here in Durham today and Ron and I missed her, but we attended a Black Conference instead and were well satisfied.  We have not learned how to be in two places at once yet --- but we're working on it . . . .

Nina Simone: Take Me To The Water

Nina Simone: Go To Hell

Lisa Simone, daughter of Nina Simone, releases first album

Nina Simone interview with Mavis Nicholson

Nina Simone Interview

Thursday, August 15, 2019

NFL players bail out college student detained by ICE for 3 months after reading poem in public

NFL players bail out college student detained by ICE for 3 months after reading poem in public


LANDOVER, MD - DECEMBER 24: Cornerback Josh Norman #24 of the Washington Redskins celebrates with fans after the Redskins defeated the Denver Broncos 27-11 at FedExField on December 24, 2017 in Landover, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images)
Josh Norman
Jose Bello, a 22-year-old college student and farmworker who was imprisoned for 89 days at the Mesa Verde Detention Center in Bakersfield, California, was released on Monday. The decision by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials to hold Bello on $50,000 bail—a sum Bello could not possibly afford to pay himself—seemed closely tied to Bello’s reading of a poem titled “Dear America” at a public forum on California’s Transparent Review of Unjust Transfers and Holds (TRUTH) Act held on May 13 by the Kern County Board of Supervisors in Bakersfield. Two days after that reading, Bello was arrested by ICE agents and held until National Football League players Josh Norman of Washington and Demario Davis of the New Orleans Saints paid for his bail.
Americans. If he was detained for reciting a peaceful poem then we should really ask ourselves, are our words truly free? This is America right? Where the 1st Amendment is freedom of speech unless I missed the memo somewhere. He was exercising that right."
The American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California has filed a lawsuit on Bello’s behalf, calling ICE’s detention of Bello a retaliatory act infringing on his civil and free speech rights. Bello has been receiving pro bono legal support from the United Farm Workers Foundation. The UFW has been offering its resources to many immigrants targeted by Trump’s racist policies and ICE’s Gestapo-like assaults.
According to The Washington Post, Bello was arrested in May 2018 by ICE agents and accused of being a part of a local street gang. A federal immigration judge ordered Bello released on a $10,000 bond in August of that year. Then Bello was rearrested this January on a misdemeanor DUI charge, but not held. It was not until two days after Bello read his poem that ICE showed up and arrested him for the misdemeanor DUI—four months later.
The football players who helped pay Bello’s bail are members of a group of players who banded together two years ago to point out American injustice and help in any way they could. The group is called Players Coalition.
You can watch Bello read his poem “Dear America” below the fold.

"Dear America" by Jose Bello

Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am - Official Trailer