A federal judge in Baton Rouge has
called for the unconditional release of Albert Woodfox, the only
remaining imprisoned member of the Angola 3. For more than 40 years,
Woodfox, 68, has been in solitary confinement at Louisiana State
Penitentiary at Angola, and other state prisons, for reasons
related to the 1972 murder of prison guard Brent Miller. Woodfox
has twice been convicted of Miller's murder, but courts later
overturned both the convictions. U.S. District Judge James Brady
issued a ruling Monday
(June 8) afternoon calling for the unconditional release of Woodfox from
state custody and barring a third trial of the murder charge.
Woodfox has always maintained his innocence, claiming he was implicated in the murder of the 23-year-old guard to silence his activism as an organizing member of the prison's Black Panther Party chapter. His attorney Carine Williams said Woodfox would spend Monday night at a pretrial detention center in West Feliciana Parish, where he's been since February. He was transferred to the parish facility from a state prison after a grand jury there handed down Woodfox his third indictment in the 43-year-old murder case…
In his ruling, Brady
denied the state's request for a stay. But Caldwell's office is seeking an
emergency stay from the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, [Aaron] Sadler [spokesperson
for Caldwell’s office] said, "to make sure this murderer stays in prison
and remains fully accountable for his actions."
Countering Sadler's
remarks, a statement from Woodfox's attorneys said there was "nothing
arbitrary about the federal court's ruling, which is carefully considered and
relies on firmly established law. ...The federal court further recognizes that
the State has now had two chances to secure a valid conviction against Mr.
Woodfox and has been unable to do so."
In the 27-page
ruling, Brady said it is more customary to issue "conditional"
release based on the outcome of a retrial. However, he gave five factors
in Woodfox's case that qualify as "exceptional
circumstances" to merit barring a third trial:
"The five factors
include: Mr. Woodfox's age and poor health, his limited ability to present a
defense at a third trial in light of the unavailability of witnesses, this
Court's lack of confidence in the State to provide a fair third trial, the
prejudice done onto Mr. Woodfox by spending over forty-years in solitary confinement,
and finally the very fact that Mr. Woodfox has already been tried twice and
would otherwise face his third trial for a crime that occurred over forty years
ago."
Woodfox's lawyers and
lawyers for the state will meet Tuesday (June 9) with Brady in a closed-chamber
setting in Baton Rouge before Brady determines how to proceed,
whether it be the logistics of Woodfox's release or a stay of the
release during appeals.
Williams said she and
Woodfox's other attorney, George Kendall, delivered the news to their
client in person, around 7:30 p.m. Monday. By then the
ruling had been issued hours earlier. Woodfox was expecting
a visit from the New York-based lawyers to discuss his civil case
about the conditions of his solitary confinement. He did not expect news
about his habeas corpus petition.
"He was neither
jaded nor excited," initially, Williams said. "I think he was more
shocked."
While Woodfox
grew "guardedly optimistic" about his potential release,
Williams said, he is "very seasoned, unfortunately, about
(Louisiana's) courts." He knew the state would seek any means to keep
him incarcerated. Williams said Woodfox was curious if they had told
his family about the ruling. "He mostly wants to talk to his brother."
…Woodfox's designation
as a member of the Angola 3 stems from what the group's supporters
believe are wrongful convictions for prison murders in which Woodfox,
Wallace and Robert King were implicated in retaliation
for organizing an official Black Panther Party chapter inside the
prison, which led hunger strikes and other demonstrations opposing inhumane
prison conditions. Those conditions, in the early 1970s, included
continued racial segregation, corruption and "systematic prison
rape," Tory Pegram, the manager of the International Coalition to Free
the Angola 3, has said.
Amnesty International,
a major human rights organization, has called for Woodfox's release
and has decried conditions of his solitary confinement, which a November
2014 editorial in The New York Times called
"barbaric beyond measure."
The slain prison
guard's widow, Teenie Rogers, has said she believes Woodfox and
Wallace were not
involved in her husband's death and has previously called
for their release. In 2008, she told The Los
Angeles Times, under the last name from a previous marriage:
"If I were on that jury, I don't think I would have convicted them."
In 2013, she attended a rally with
Angola 3 supporters at the Louisiana State Capitol in Baton
Rouge demanding the state halt its attempts to keep Woodfox incarcerated
for her late husband's murder.
Woodfox, of New
Orleans, was originally sentenced to prison at Angola on charges of armed
robbery. That sentence would have expired decades ago, Pegram said. He was
at Angola only a few years before he was implicated, along with
Wallace, in Miller's murder.
Woodfox was first
convicted of Miller's murder in 1974. That conviction was
overturned in 1992 by a state court due to "systematic
discrimination." He was then re-indicted in 1993 by a new grand jury and
reconvicted five years later, in 1998.
Robert King, the third
member of the Angola 3 who was convicted of killing a fellow inmate, was
exonerated and released from prison in 2001, after 29 years in solitary. King
remains active in the campaign to release Woodfox from prison and end the
practice of solitary confinement.
Brady overturned
Woodfox's second conviction in 2008, stating Woodfox's defense counsel was
ineffective. The state appealed,
and the case made its way to the Fifth Circuit. Once there, the court
reversed Brady's ruling and determined that while his 1998 trial "was not
perfect," Woodfox couldn't prove there would have been a different outcome
with different counsel.
Woodfox's attorneys
then focused in on the discrimination issue, arguing there were also
problems with the 1993 indictment because black grand jury forepersons
were woefully underrepresented in West Feliciana Parish in the previous 13
years. Brady agreed Woodfox's 1998 retrial was constitutionally mired by
racial discrimination in the selection of the grand jury foreperson. In
May 2012, he overturned Woodfox's conviction a second time. The case was
kicked up to the Fifth Circuit after the state
appealed.
The
Fifth Circuit, in a November 2014 ruling, [unanimously] agreed with
Brady that the conviction should be overturned.
On Feb. 3, the Fifth
Circuit denied the
state's request for a review of its decision by a full
panel of judges. On Feb. 6, Woodfox's attorneys filed a motion seeking his
conditional release. On Feb. 12, the state's attorneys announced
a West Feliciana Parish grand jury had indicted Woodfox
for a third time in the decades-old Angola prison murder.
Woodfox was then transferred from David Wade Correctional Center
in Homer to the West Feliciana Parish facility -- Angola's
jurisdictional parish.
Brady's ruling on
Monday calling for Woodfox's release comes about three months after Woodfox
entered a federal court
hearing in Baton Rouge with shackles and graying hair,
wearing a black-and-white jumpsuit and dated eyeglasses.
"We are optimistic
that Louisiana will comply with the federal court's ruling," his
attorneys' statement continued. "We look forward to Mr.Woodfox going
home to his family; getting much needed medical attention; and living the
remainder of his days in peace."
Meanwhile, Woodfox
is still being held in solitary confinement at the parish facility in St.
Francisville…It remains unclear, she said, how soon Woodfox could possibly be
freed if the state fails in its efforts to thwart
his release.
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NOTE: You may read and download Federal Judge James J. Brady's entire 27-page decision at Nola.com
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NOTE: You may read and download Federal Judge James J. Brady's entire 27-page decision at Nola.com
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