A billboard campaign to mark the 42-year
commemoration launched in New Orleans yesterday.
This statement was released yesterday by the Campaign to Free the Angola 3:
As we mark the 42nd year since the tragic and as yet, unsolved murder of Angola
correctional officer Brent Miller, and the 42nd year since Albert Woodfox was
first put in solitary for a crime he didn't commit, we are confident that it
will be the last. We remain hopeful that the 5th Circuit will finally side with
justice and affirm Judge Brady's second decision to throw out Albert's
conviction once and for all. Although he will then have to petition for bail
and potentially face a retrial, freedom will not be far behind. With the civil
case only months from trial, thousands of others who languish in long-term
solitary could soon have the necessary legal precedent to challenge their
conditions as constitutionally cruel and unusual.
In the past year, challenges and resistance to the widespread use of
solitary confinement have proliferated. New York finally decided that keeping
pregnant women and youth under 18 in solitary was beyond the pale. Maine has
dramatically reduced solitary, Colorado is not far behind, and several other
states are reviewing their policies regarding solitary confinement pushed on by
a groundswell of opposition to this horrific practice which has too long gone
unchecked.
For the 42nd commemoration
of this travesty of justice, Amnesty International once again stands up for
human rights and dignity by demanding Albert's release, while law students at
Southern University devote a week to learing more about solitary and how they
can assist in the effort to abolish the practice. A new initiative has formed in
Louisiana, Citizens Against Solitary, which is asking for a legislative review
of the numbers and costs involved in Louisiana's extensive use of solitary as
standard operating procedure penal practice. Jackie of Herman's House fame is asking all A3 supporters
and justice seekers to tweet for Albert's release
and to stop solitary, and King continues to travel the world speaking out
for Albert's release and a total overhaul of the criminal justice system in this
country.Adding to the growing body of excellent writing on solitary is the Newsweek article, "Solitude's Despair.". The Final Call reported on a "two-day review by the United Nations Human Rights Committee tasked with studying reports concerning Washington's compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, a treaty ratified by the U.S. in 1992." They cited Angola 3 when they discussed their ongoing concern with the use of solitary confinement and asked that the Special Rapporteur on Torture be given unfettered access to all U.S. prisons. Following in the footsteps of Maine, Illinois, Mississippi, Texas and Washington, Representative Moreno of New Orleans has introduced a resolution (HR1) asking for the legislative auditor of Louisiana to evaluate the use of solitary confinement. We hope that this is a significant step towards change in a state that has shamefully held many inmates in solitary confinement for decades. If Bill HR1 passes, the report will be complete by January 1, 2016, and will include details on the effectiveness of solitary confinement, closed-cell restriction and extended lockdown, it's impact on housing costs, prison violence, inmate safety, recidivism, and the mental health of the inmate placed in such conditions. A public hearing is yet to be announced on this topic, but will likely take place in the coming weeks. In the meantime we encourage supporters to contact Rep. Moreno at morenoh@legis.la.gov expressing thanks for her important efforts thus far. Look for updates soon. To all Angola 3 supporters that have stood by Albert, Herman and Robert all these years, take a moment to send your prayers out to the Miller family and align your energy with ours for this final push for freedom for Albert! |
Amnesty International: "The only remedy for Albert
Woodfox is his immediate release from prison"
Today, Amnesty International released a new statement marking 42 years, renewing their call for Albert's immediate release. The new release is reprinted in full below. If you have not yet done so, please take action by adding your name to Amnesty's online petition. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC STATEMENT
USA: After decades in isolation, time to
release Albert Woodfox
April 17,
2014
Forty two years ago today, Albert Woodfox was
placed in an isolation cell in a Louisiana prison on suspicion of murdering a
prison guard. He remains there today. While his solitary confinement has
remained unchanged over four decades, during the last 14 months Albert Woodfox
has again lived with hope on hold, after the state appealed the latest court
ruling overturning his conviction.
In February 2013, a federal judge ruled that Albert
Woodfox's conviction for the murder of the guard should be overturned due to a
finding of racial discrimination in the selection of his grand jury foreperson.
This was the third time a court has ruled to overturn his
conviction.
The state of Louisiana immediately appealed this
2013 ruling and a decision from the Court of Appeals is expected soon.
Albert Woodfox has been held in solitary
confinement for longer than virtually any other prisoner in the USA. He is
confined alone for 23 hours a day in a small cell, and allowed out for only five
hours a week for solitary exercise or showers. He has had no opportunities for
meaningful social interaction, nor rehabilitation programmes.
In the past year, conditions worsened for Albert
Woodfox as the state subjected him to strip searches each time he left or
entered his cell. A court ruled in January 2014 that the prison should
discontinue this humiliating practice. These conditions amount to cruel, inhuman
and degrading treatment or punishment and violate international human rights law
and standards.
During the decades in solitary confinement, Albert
Woodfox has not been afforded any meaningful review by the Louisiana authorities
as to why he should continue to be held in such cruel conditions of isolation.
He has not committed any serious disciplinary infractions for decades, and
prison records indicate that he does not pose a threat to himself, others, or
the institution.
Amnesty International's concerns about this case go
beyond the inhumane conditions of confinement to which Albert Woodfox has been
subjected since 1972, but also the serious legal flaws that have emerged over
the decades of litigation in his case and remain without
resolution.
There is no physical evidence to link Albert
Woodfox to the crime he is acussed; the only eyewitness to the crime was
rewarded by the State for his testimony; testimony from other witnesses gave
conflicting account of the crime - and much of it was subsequently retracted;
the State suppressed exculpatory evidence and Albert Woodfox received
ineffective assistance of counsel at both his trials.
Amnesty International considers that given these
circumstances, the only remedy for Albert Woodfox is his immediate release from
prison.
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