From
Gloria Steinem on Governor Ridge's Signing
of Mumia's Death Warrant
November 1999
Something
is very rotten in the state of Pennsylvania.
Governor
Ridge has signed 176 death warrants in the last five years. ThatŐs
five times more than his predecessors signed in twenty-five years.
He
has done this in defiance of the Philadelphia and Pennsylvania
Bar Associations, both of which have urged a moratorium until
the death penalty can be shown to be racially unbiased and otherwise
justified.
Right
now, the percentage of African American men on death row is nearly
700% higher than in the population at large, a larger racial disparity
than in any other state.
This
means that an African American man growing up in Philadelphia
is eleven and a half times more likely to end up on death row
than one in Georgia or Alabama. Mumia Abu-Jamal is the most famous
such man.
A
radio journalist and political activist, he was accused and convicted
of shooting a Philadelphia police officer.
However,
there are allegations of 29 Constitutional violations in his trial,
as well as prosecutorial misconduct, racial bias in jury selection,
and fabrication of evidence.
There
may also be new evidence of his innocence. There must be a new
trial. If not, this case will join those that undermine public
faith in the justice system, and live on in history as a divisive
force. Since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976, for example,
82 prisoners have been exonerated.
If there is no new trial, it may appear that the Governor supports
this execution in order to render a case moot and conceal errors
in the system. It is in his own interest -- both in the short
term politically and the long term historically -- to re-think
his signing of the death warrant.
Mumia
Abu-Jamal is a human being who deserves the same defense and respect
that each of us would want. That would be reason enough. But he
also stands for many other people, past, present, and future.
His case could encourage a crucial examination of the death penalty.
It could lead us to investigate the prison industrial complex,
and the reasons why more and more prisons are being built even
as the crime rate declines. It could help reveal who is in prison
-- and why.
Most
important right now is the life of Mumia Abu-Jamal. But his case
is also crucial to our safety and democracy. We all have a stake
in the nature of justice in Pennsylvania.
Signed
-- Gloria Steinem 10/24/99