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June
18, 2008: SF 8 Judge stops return For now,
SF 8 Judge Philip Moscone halted the transfer of Herman Bell and Jalil
Muntaqim to New York for their parole hearings. By throwing procedural
obstacles at the court, prosecutors were able to delay the transfer, arguing
that there were no guarantees under the existent agreement between the
Governors of New York and California to effect a transfer back of both
men for the scheduled preliminary hearing in September. Hearing
Wed., June 18, 2008 The prosecutor in the San Francisco 8 case will ask Judge Moscone to reconsider his order to transfer Herman Bell and Jalil Muntaqim back to New York for their parole hearings. California State Attorney Druliner is requesting a reversal of an arrangement that took several meetings and two court hearings to work out, ultimately resulting in a judicial order that was filed weeks ago. In the meantime both men have been preparing for their parole appearances in New York. The hearing to consider the state's motion to reconsider will be heard on Wednesday, June 18th at 9:30 am at 850 Bryant Street in San Francisco. Also scheduled for next Wednesday, June 18th and Thursday the 19th will be the first of several conditional examinations of prosecution witnesses who are either old or in poor health. The witness scheduled is Gus Coreris, a former SF homicide inspector and one of the first people at the scene at the Ingleside police station in 1971. Support the brothers and come to court! May
22, 2008: Herman Bell and Jalil Muntaqim After some last-minute procedural issues were resolved, Judge Philip Moscone signed the order to have Herman Bell & Jalil Muntaqim return to New York State for their parole hearings. They will be transported by Federal Marshals. All parties agreed that the move would be temporary. Herman & Jalil waved their rights to fight extradition back to California. They are expected to be back in San Francisco for the beginning of the Preliminary Hearing in the San Francisco 8 case, currently scheduled for September 8. April 21, 2008: SF8 Court Update A very large, well-attended rally preceded today's packed San Francisco 8 court hearing. Four of the SF 8—Ray Boudreaux, Richard Brown, Hank Jones and Francisco Torres—joined in leading chants outside the 850 Bryant Street courthouse along with supporters from all over the Bay Area and from other West Coast cities. The main defense arguments focused on the prosecutors' request to conduct “conditional exams” of 5 witnesses who are old and in poor health and so may not be available at trial. There are legal bases for their testifying in advance of the preliminary hearing and trial. But the defense is arguing that they have full rights to court-ordered discovery pertaining to these witnesses allowing them to prepare to cross-examine them, particularly exculpatory evidence. Judge Philip Moscone seemed to indicate that the standards for these exams would have to meet trial standards, and that he will address the related discovery issues, but would not issue a written ruling until next week's court hearing. Defense subpoenas make clear reference to missing exculpatory evidence including “negative comparisons” of latent prints by FBI fingerprint examiners from 1971 and 1975. “I believe that the FBI has been deeply involved in the investigation of the Ingleside murder,” stated defense attorney Chuck Bourdon, who represents Francisco Torres. Bourdon also thinks that all FBI files “have not yet been provided.” Several agencies made reports of negative results over the years. The only positive identification of any latent print (the same latent print) was made recently by an “expert” who was previously disciplined for making false fingerprint reports. Stuart Hanlon, representing Herman Bell in this case, referenced his previous defense of Geronimo Ji-Jaga Pratt—a major target of the FBI's COINTELPRO program. Geronimo “was falsely imprisoned for 27 years by the withholding of FBI exculpatory evidence,” argued Hanlon. “This request demanding full discovery and particularly FBI evidence is more than reasonable in light of this history. This case is no different,” Hanlon pointed out. “The FBI and COINTELPRO are relevant to this case, as COINTELPRO is a continuum through today's Phoenix Taskforce,” argued Jalil Muntaqim's lawyer, Daro Inouye. The Phoenix Taskforce is a multi-agency force that is difficult to formally define. It is known that it includes the US Attorney, the FBI, local police agencies including the SFPD, and the California Department of Justice. It is the umbrella organization that has reopened this case, empaneled various Grand Jury investigations and is overall responsible for this 37-year-old Panther prosecution. Dave Druliner, the lead State prosecutor, replied to defense references to COINTELPRO dismissively as “an aura that exists out there,” and “just something that the defense brings up from time to time.” Apparently congressional investigations revealing the illegality of the FBI's COINTELPRO program in the 1970s are part of that aura. New
websites can be found at www.CDHRsupport.org and
www.freethesf8.org. Watch Legacy of Torture online: http://www.freespeech.org/videodb/index.php?action=detail&video_id=10689&browse=0 Check out this interview
with Kamel Bell, Herman Bell's son, by JR on Flashpoints 2/15/07. It begins
at 38:30 into the program. http://kpfa.org/archives/index.php?arch=18712 For more background on the history of torture and harassment in this case, and
the recent re-arrest of Harold as well as Richard Brown, Richard O'Neal, Ray
Michael Boudreaux, Henry Watson Jones, Francisco Torres, click on the following
links: San Francisco
8 strong in court appearance Defense attorneys objected
to closing a public
hearing and the judge agreed to let people back
into court if they agreed not to be noisy, but
only after every individual was again searched by
sheriff's deputies and wanded. Although there has yet
to be a formal bail
hearing, Judge Little did lower the outrageous
bail for Ray Boudreaux and Hank Jones from $5
million to $3 million—still outrageous—equalized to the bail
for Richard Brown and Richard O'Neal. A formal hearing on their
bail as well as other motions is scheduled for Tuesday, March 13. To read an interview with Richard Brown, click here! National
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