(Elie October 3, 2007 IJortlanò (©bseruer Page B3 L aw & J ustice State Farm* Providing Insurance arid hnanci.il Services Home Office Bloomington. Illinois 61 /10 Ernest J. Hill, Jr. Agent 4946 N Vancouver Avenue Portland. OR 9/2 1/ 503 286 1,03 fa . 503 28b 1146 ernie lull hSmbx/istatefaui) com Probe and Pardon in Jena 6 ’ Case Wanted For separate, unequal justice The Congressional Black Cau­ cus asked the Justice Department to investigate possible civil-rights violations in the "Jena 6” case that sparked a massive protest in Loui­ siana. “This shocking case has focused national and international attention on what appears to be an unbeliev­ able example of the separate and unequal justice that was once com­ monplace in the Deep South," the group of 43 lawmakers said in a letter last week to Acting Attorney General Peter Keisler. Justice Department spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said the depart­ ment has been closely monitoring the case of six black high-school teens arrested for beating a white classmate in Jena, La. He said the department also is investigating al­ legations of threats against the stu­ dents and their families. Top Justice officials were set to discuss the case on Friday with civil rights leaders, including the Rev. Jesse Jackson and National Urban League President Marc ‘Jen a 6 ' d e fe n d a n t Mychal Bell is finally re le a se d from jail and walks out o f the facility with his attorneys on Thursday after several w e e k s o f c o n fin e m e n t while his c a s e w as co n sidered by a district attorney. the charge was reduced from at­ tempted murder. Bell was one of six Jena High School students arrested after a December attack on a white stu­ dent. Justin Barker, and the only one to be tried. He was tried as an Mortal. The caucus also sent a separate le tte r ask in g L o u isia n a G ov. Kathleen Blanco to pardon 17-year- old Mychal Bell, the black teen convicted in adult court of aggra­ vated second-degree battery after adult and convicted of aggravated second-degree battery after the charge was reduced from attempted murder. A state appeals court re­ cently threw out his conviction, saying he could not be tried as an adult. District Attorney Reed Walters said Thursday that he would not appeal that decision and would let a juvenile court deal with the case. Late Thursday, Bell was released on $45,000 bail. The black lawmakers call the decision to charge Bell and his classmates as adults "an abuse of prosecutorial discretion" and claim no action was taken in a recent similar case involving a white de­ fendant and a black victim. More than 20,000 people con­ verged on the small town last week to protest the case, accusing local officials of prosecuting blacks more harshly than whites. The case dates to August 2006, when a black Jena High School student asked the principal whether blacks could sit under a shade tree that was a frequent gathering place for whites. He was told yes, but nooses appeared in the tree the next day. 24 Hour Good Neighbor Service" Black Americans For Life & Precious Children of Portland Invite all to 40 Days for Life September 26th to November 4th by Prayer & Fasting Vigil at MLK Blvd. and Beech St. Community Outreach Make a Difference: Stop Planned Parenthood, the nation's largest abortion provider, from putting a large three-story abortion facility at Beech & MLK. Did you know that Blacks are targeted for Abortion? (See www.blackgenocide.org) www.pdx41ife.org 503-3347-6183 'Funerals • Cremations • M em orai Services 503-2*94788 Rights Violated by Feds in Mayfield Case 191 people. The FBI said the print under the Foreign Intelligence Sur­ matched Mayfield's. He was released veillance Act violated the Fourth about two weeks later when the FBI Amendment’s guarantee against admitted it had erred in saying the unreasonable search and seizure. fingerprints were his. Aiken agreed with Mayfield, re­ Before his arrest, the FBI put peatedly criticizing the govern­ Mayfield under 24-hour surveil­ ment. lance, listened to his phone calls “For over 200 years, this Nation and surreptitiously searched his has adhered to the rule of law — home and law office. with unparalleled success. A shift The federal government later to a Nation based on extra-consti­ apologized and settled part of the tutional authority is prohibited, as lawsuit for $2 million. But as part well as ill-advised," she wrote. of the settlement. Mayfield retained By a sk in g her to d ism iss the right to challenge parts of the Mayfield’s lawsuit, the judge said, Patriot Act, which greatly expanded the U.S. attorney general's office the authority of law enforcers to was “asking this court to, in es­ investigate suspected acts of ter­ sence, amend the Bill of Rights, by giving it an interpretation that rorism. Mayfield claimed that secret would deprive it of any real mean­ searches of his house and office ing. This court declines to do so." Court sides with falsely accused Muslim convert (AP - Two provisions of the USA Patriot Act are unconstitu­ tional because they allow search warrants to be issued without a showing of probable cause, a fed­ Brandon M ayfield eral judge in Portland ruled in a lawsuit filed by a Portland attorney and searches of American citizens who was falsely accused with ter­ without satisfying the probable rorism. cause requirements o f the Fourth U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken Amendment.” ruled Sept. 26 that the Foreign In­ Brandon Mayfield, a M uslim con­ telligence Surveillance Act, as vert, was taken into custody on May amended by the Patriot Act, “now 6, 2(X)4, because of a fingerprint permits the executive branch of found on a detonator at the scene of government toconduct surveillance the Madrid train bombing that killed ■MMMN (AP) - More than three times as many black people live in prison cells as in college dorms, the gov­ ernment said in new report. “It’s one of the great social and economic tragedies of our time," said Marc Mortal, president and CEO of the Urban League. “It points to the signature failure in our education system and how w e’ve been raising our children.” There are a lot of reasons why black students do not reach college at the same rate as whites, said Amy Stuart Wells, a professor of sociology and education at Colum­ bia University’s Teachers College. Black students are more likely to attend segregated schools with high concentrations of poverty, less qualified teachers, lower expecta­ tions and a less demanding cur­ riculum, she said. “And they are perceived by so­ Local Attorney Honored A local attorney with a record of commitment to civil rights was recently h o n o re d by the Multnomah Bar Associa­ tion for his lifetime work in the legal profession. Carl R. Neil received the group's highest honor Carl R. for professionalism during an awards luncheon at the Governor Hotel. In 1966, Neil traveled to Missis­ sippi to serve as volunteer counsel to victimsof civil-rights violations Neil He has handled civil lib­ erty cases for the Ameri­ can Civil Liberties Union and currently serves on the board of directors for the Urban League of Port­ land. He also volunteers with Legal Aid Services of O regon's Senior and N eig h b o rh o o d Law Projects. Neil received his law degree from Columbia Law School in 1958 and was in the lop 10 percent of his graduating class. Fax: (503) 528-8298 | Must present coupon at time of purchase Available 24 hours a day 503-249-1788 rA*0 • • • • Funerals Cremations Memorial Services Pre-arrangements "Dedicated to providing excellent service and superior care o f your loved one" New Prices Effective May 1, 2007 Martin Cleaning Service Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning I Residential & Commercial Services NI i n i ni mu Service CHG ciety as terrible schools, so it is for minorities hasn't yielded results. Mortal said. But, he added, minority students hard to get accepted into college," He said conservatives blame a lack Wells said. “Even if you are a high- of family values while liberals blame also need more early childhood achieving kid who beats the odds, a lack of government programs, with education, longer school days, you are less likely to have access to neither side seeing the whole pic­ longer school years and more mean­ ingful summer-job opportunities. the kinds of courses that colleges ture. “We need to get serious about are looking for.” “We do. in the African-Ameri­ Students who don't graduate can community, need to instill a true investment on the front end," high school are much more likely stronger value on education," Mortal said. to go to prison, said Gary Orfield, co-director of the Civil Rights Project at UCLA. Nearly 40 percent of inmates lack a high-school diploma or the equivalent, according to the census data. “The criminal economy is one of the only alternatives in some of these places," Orfield said. "You basically have the criminalization of a whole community, particu­ larly in some inner cities." Blacks made up 41 percent of Buy one get one free lunch entrée! the nation’s 2 million prison and | (Valid between 11am & 2pm only fre e entre must be of equal or lesser vatuel jail inmates in 2(X)6. Non-Hispanic whites made up 37 percent and Expires 11/1/07 Hispanics made up 19 percent. 2808 NE MLK Blvd Ste H Mortal, who is a former mayor j of New Orleans, said the political | Portland OR97212 debate over high incarceration rales I Phone: (503) 249-1675 | Portland's Newest Funeral Home Serving the Metropolitan Area. 2337 N. 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