Open
Letter from Assata
Shakur
May 2005
My name is Assata Shakur, and I am a 20th century escaped slave. Because
of government persecution, I was left with no other choice than to
flee from the political repression, racism and violence that dominate
the US government's policy towards people of color. I am an ex-political
prisoner, and I have been living in exile in Cuba since 1984.
I have been a political
activist most of my life, and although the U.S. government has done
everything in its power to
criminalize me,
I am not a criminal, nor have I ever been one. In the 1960s, I participated
in various struggles: the black liberation movement, the student rights
movement, and the movement to end the war in Vietnam. I joined the
Black Panther Party. By 1969 the Black Panther Party had become the
number one organization targeted by the FBI's COINTELPRO program. Because
the Black Panther Party demanded the total liberation of black people,
J. Edgar Hoover called it "greatest threat to the internal security
of the country" and vowed to destroy it and its leaders and activists.
In 1978, my case was one of many cases bought before the United Nations
Organization in a petition filed by the National Conference of Black
Lawyers, the National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression,
and the United Church of Christ Commission for Racial Justice, exposing
the existence of political prisoners in the United States, their political
persecution, and the cruel and inhuman treatment they receive in US
prisons. According to the report:
The FBI and the
New York Police Department in particular, charged and accused Assata
Shakur of participating in attacks on
law enforcement
personnel and widely circulated such charges and accusations among
police agencies and units. The FBI and the NYPD further charged her
as being a leader of the Black Liberation Army which the government
and its respective agencies described as an organization engaged in
the shooting of police officers. This description of the Black Liberation
Army and the accusation of Assata Shakur's relationship to it was widely
circulated by government agents among police agencies and units. As
a result of these activities by the government, Ms. Shakur became a
hunted person; posters in police precincts and banks described her
as being involved in serious criminal activities; she was highlighted
on the FBI's most wanted list; and to police at all levels she became
a 'shoot-to-kill' target."
I was falsely accused
in six different "criminal cases" and
in all six of these cases I was eventually acquitted or the charges
were dismissed. The fact that I was acquitted or that the charges were
dismissed, did not mean that I received justice in the courts, that
was certainly not the case. It only meant that the "evidence" presented
against me was so flimsy and false that my innocence became evident.
This political persecution was part and parcel of the government's
policy of eliminating political opponents by charging them with crimes
and arresting them with no regard to the factual basis of such charges.
On May 2, 1973
I, along with Zayd Malik Shakur and Sundiata Acoli were stopped on
the New Jersey Turnpike, supposedly
for a "faulty
tail light." Sundiata Acoli got out of the car to determine why
we were stopped. Zayd and I remained in the car. State trooper Harper
then came to the car, opened the door and began to question us. Because
we were black, and riding in a car with Vermont license plates, he
claimed he became "suspicious." He then drew his gun, pointed
it at us, and told us to put our hands up in the air, in front of us,
where he could see them. I complied and in a split second, there was
a sound that came from outside the car, there was a sudden movement,
and I was shot once with my arms held up in the air, and then once
again from the back.
Zayd Malik Shakur was later killed, trooper Werner Foerster was killed,
and even though trooper Harper admitted that he shot and killed Zayd
Malik Shakur, under the New Jersey felony murder law, I was charged
with killing both Zayd Malik Shakur, who was my closest friend and
comrade, and charged in the death of trooper Forester. Never in my
life have I felt such grief. Zayd had vowed to protect me, and to help
me to get to a safe place, and it was clear that he had lost his life,
trying to protect both me and Sundiata. Although he was also unarmed,
and the gun that killed trooper Foerster was found under Zayd's leg,
Sundiata Acoli, who was captured later, was also charged with both
deaths. Neither Sundiata Acoli nor I ever received a fair trial We
were both convicted in the news media way before our trials. No news
media was ever permitted to interview us, although the New Jersey police
and the FBI fed stories to the press on a daily basis. In 1977, I was
convicted by an all- white jury and sentenced to life plus 33 years
in prison. In 1979, fearing that I would be murdered in prison, and
knowing that I would never receive any justice, I was liberated from
prison, aided by committed comrades who understood the depths of the
injustices in my case, and who were also extremely fearful for my life.
The U.S. Senate's
1976 Church Commission report on intelligence operations inside the
USA, revealed that "The FBI has attempted covertly
to influence the public's perception of persons and organizations by
disseminating derogatory information to the press, either anonymously
or through "friendly" news contacts." This same policy
is evidently still very much in effect today.
On December 24,
1997, The New Jersey State called a press conference to announce
that New Jersey State Police had written
a letter to Pope
John Paul II asking him to intervene on their behalf and to aid in
having me extradited back to New Jersey prisons. The New Jersey State
Police refused to make their letter public. Knowing that they had probably
totally distort the facts, and attempted to get the Pope to do the
devils work in the name of religion, I decided to write the Pope to
inform him about the reality of' "justice" for black people
in the State of New Jersey and in the United States. (See attached
Letter to the Pope).
In January of 1998,
during the pope's visit to Cuba, I agreed to do an interview with
NBC journalist Ralph Penza around
my letter to the
Pope, about my experiences in New Jersey court system, and about the
changes I saw in the United States and it's treatment of Black people
in the last 25 years. I agreed to do this interview because I saw this
secret letter to the Pope as a vicious, vulgar, publicity maneuver
on the part of the New Jersey State Police, and as a cynical attempt
to manipulate Pope John Paul II. I have lived in Cuba for many years,
and was completely out of touch with the sensationalist, dishonest,
nature of the establishment media today. It is worse today than it
was 30 years ago. After years of being victimized by the "establishment" media
it was naive of me to hope that I might finally get the opportunity
to tell "my side of the story." Instead of an interview with
me, what took place was a "staged media event" in three parts,
full of distortions, inaccuracies and outright lies. NBC purposely
misrepresented the facts. Not only did NBC spend thousands of dollars
promoting this "exclusive interview series" on NBC, they
also spent a great deal of money advertising this "exclusive interview" on
black radio stations and also placed notices in local newspapers.
DISTORTIONS AND LIES IN THE NBC SERIES
In an NBC interview
Gov. Whitman was quoted as saying that "this
has nothing to do with race, this had everything to do with crime." Either
Gov. Whitman is completely unfamiliar with the facts in my case, or
her sensitivity to racism and to the plight of black people and other
people of color in the United States is at a sub-zero level. In 1973
the trial in Middlesex County had to be stopped because of the overwhelming
racism expressed in the jury room. The court was finally forced to
rule that the entire jury panel had been contaminated by racist comments
like "If she's black, she's guilty." In an obvious effort
to prevent us from being tried by "a jury of our peers the New
Jersey courts ordered that a jury be selected from Morris County, New
Jersey where only 2.2 percent of the population was black and 97.5
percent of potential jurors were white. In a study done in Morris County,
one of the wealthiest counties in the country, 92 percent of the registered
voters said that they were familiar with the case through the news
media, and 72 percent believed we were guilty based on pretrial publicity.
During the jury selection process in Morris County, white supremacists
from the National Social White People's Party, wearing Swastikas, demonstrated
carrying signs reading "SUPPORT WHITE POLICE." The trial
was later moved back to Middlesex County where 70 percent thought I
was guilty based on pretrial publicity I was tried by an all-white
jury, where the presumption of innocence was not the criteria for jury
selection. Potential jurors were merely asked if they could "put
their prejudices aside, and "render a fair verdict." The
basic reality in the United States is that being black is a crime and
black people are always "suspects" and an accusation is usually
a conviction. Most white people still think that being a "black
militant" or a "black revolutionary" is tantamount to
being guilty of some kind of crime. The current situation in New Jersey's
prisons, underlines the racism that dominates the politics of the state
of New Jersey, in particular and in the U.S. as a whole. Although the
population of New Jersey is approximately 78 percent white, more than
75 percent of New Jersey's prison population is made up of blacks and
Latinos. 80 percent of the women in Jersey prisons are people of color.
That may not seem like racism to Gov. Whitman, but it reeks of of racism
to us.
The NBC story implied
that Governor Christie Whitman raised the reward for my capture based
on my interview with NBC.
The fact of the matter
is that she has been campaigning since she was elected into office
to double the reward for my capture. In 1994, she appointed Col. Carl
Williams who immediately vowed to make my capture a priority. In 1995,
Gov. Whitman sought to "match a $25,000 departmental appropriation
sponsored by an "unidentified legislator." I watched a tape
of Gov. Whitman's "testimony" in her interview with NBC.
She gave a very dramatic, exaggerated version of what happened, but
there is no evidence whatsoever to support her claim that Trooper Foerster
had "four bullets in him at least, and then they got up and with
his own gun, fired two bullets into his head." She claimed that
she was writing Janet Reno for federal assistance in my capture, based
on what she saw in the NBC interview. If this is the kind of "information" that
is being passed on to Janet Reno and the Pope, it is clear that the
facts have been totally distorted. Whitman also claimed that my return
to prison should be a condition for "normalizing relations with
Cuba". How did I get so important that my life can determine the
foreign relations between two governments? Anybody who knows anything
about New Jersey politics can be certain that her motives are purely
political. She, like Torrecelli and several other opportunistic politicians
in New Jersey came to power, as part- time lobbyists for the Batistia
faction - soliciting votes from right wing Cubans. They want to use
my case as a barrier for normalizing relations with Cuba, and as a
pretext for maintaining the immoral blockade against the Cuban people.
In what can only
be called deliberate deception and slander NBC aired a photograph
of a woman with a gun in her hand
implying that the woman
in the photograph was me. I was not, in fact, the woman in the photograph.
The photograph was taken from a highly publicized case where I was
accused of bank robbery. Not only did I voluntarily insist on participating
in a lineup, during which witnesses selected another woman, but during
the trial, several witnesses, including the manager of the bank, testified
that the woman in that photograph was not me. I was acquitted of that
bank robbery. NBC aired that photograph on at least 5 different occasions,
representing the woman in the photograph as me. How is it possible,
that the New Jersey State Police, who claim to have a detective working
full time on my case, Governor of New Jersey Christine Whitman, who
claimed she reviewed all the "evidence," or NBC, which has
an extensive research department, did not know that the photograph
was false? It was a vile, fraudulent attempt to make me look guilty.
NBC deliberately misrepresented the truth. Even after many people had
called in, and there was massive fax, and e-mail campaign protesting
NBC's mutilation of the facts, Ralph Penza and NBC continued to broadcast
that photograph, representing it as me. Not once have the New Jersey
State Police, Governor Christine Whitman, or NBC come forth and stated
that I was not the woman in the photograph, or that I had been acquitted
of that charge.
Another major lie
and distortion was that we had left trooper Werner Foerster on the
roadside to die. The truth is that
there was a major
cover-up as to what happened on May 2, 1973. Trooper Harper, the same
man who shot me with my arms raised in the air, testified that he returned
to the State Police Headquarters which was less than 200 yards away, "To
seek aid." However, tape recordings and police reports made on
May 2, 1973 prove that not only did Trooper Harper give several conflicting
statements about what happened on the turnpike, but he never once mentioned
the name of Werner Foerster, or the fact that the incident took place
right in front of the Trooper Headquarters. In an effort to hide his
tracks and cover his guilt he said nothing whatsoever about Foerster
to his superiors or to his fellow officers.
In a clear attempt
to discredit me, Col. Carl Williams of the New Jersey State Police
was allowed to give blow by blow distortions
of
my interview. In my interview I stated that on the night of May 2,
1973 I was shot with my arms in the air, then shot again in the back.
Williams stated "that is absolutely false. Our records show that
she reached in her pocketbook, pulled out a nine millimeter weapon
and started firing." However, the claim that I reached into my
pocketbook and pulled out a gun, while inside the car was even contested
by trooper Harper. Although on three official reports, and when he
testified before the grand jury he stated that he saw me take a gun
out of my pocketbook, he finally admitted under cross-examination that
he never saw me with my hands in a pocketbook, never saw me with a
weapon inside the car, and that he did not see me shoot him.
The truth is that I was examined by 3 medical specialists:
(1) A Neurologist who testified that I was immediately paralyzed immediately
after the being shot.
(2) A Surgeon who testified that "It was absolutely anatomically
necessary that both arms be in the air for Mrs. Chesimard to receive
the wounds." The same surgeon also testified that the claim by
Trooper Harper that I had been crouching in a firing position when
I was shot was "totally anatomically impossible."
(3) A Pathologist who testified that "There is no conceivable
way that it [the bullet] could have traveled over to hit the clavicle
if her arm was down." he said "It was impossible to have
that trajectory"
The prosecutors presented no medical testimony whatsoever to refute
the above medical evidence.
No evidence whatsoever was ever presented that I had a 9-millimeter
weapon, in fact New Jersey State Police testified that the 9-millimeter
weapon belonged to Zayd Malik Shakur based on a holster fitting the
weapon that they was recovered from his body.
There were no fingerprints, or any other evidence whatsoever that
linked me to any guns or ammunition.
The results of the Neutron Activation test to determine whether or
not I had fired a weapon were negative.
Although Col. Williams
refers to us as the "criminal element" neither
Zayd, or Sundiata Acoli or I were criminals, we were political activists.
I was a college student until the police kicked down my door in an
effort to force me to "cooperate" with them and Sundiata
Acoli was a computer expert who had worked for NASA, before he joined
the Black Panther Party and was targeted by COINTELPRO.
In an obvious maneuver to provoke sympathy for the police, the NBC
series juxtaposed my interview with the weeping widow of Werner Foerster.
While I can sympathize with her grief, I believe that her appearance
was deliberately included to appeal to people's emotions, to blur the
facts, to make me look like a villain, and to create the kind of lynch
mob mentality that has historically been associated with white women
portrayed as victims of black people. In essence the supposed interview
with me became a forum for the New State Police, Foerster's widow,
and the obviously hostile commentary of Ralph Penza. The two initial
programs together lasted 3.5 minutes - me - 59 seconds, the widow 50
seconds, the state police 38 seconds, and Penza - 68 seconds. Not once
in the interview was I ever asked about Zayd, Sundiata or their families.
As the interview went on, it was painfully evident that Ralph Penza
would never see me as a human being. Although I tried to talk about
racism and about the victims of government and police repression, it
was clear that he was totally uninterested.
I have stated publicly
on various occasions that I was ashamed of participating in my trial
in New Jersey trial because
it was so racist,
but I did testify. Even though I was extremely limited by the judge,
as to what I could testfy about, I testified as clearly as I could
about what happened that night. After being almost fatally wounded
I managed to climb in the back seat of the car to get away from the
shooting. Sundiata drove the car five miles down the road carried me
into a grassy area because he was afraid that the police would see
the car parked on the side of the road and just start shooting into
it again. Yes, it was five miles down the highway where I was captured,
dragged out of the car, stomped and then left on the ground. Although
I drifted in and out of consciousness I remember clearly that both
while I was lying on the ground, and while I was in the ambulance,
I kept hearing the State troopers ask "is she dead yet?" Because
of my condition I have no independent recollection of how long I was
on the ground, or how long it was before the ambulance was allowed
to leave for the hospital, but in the trial transcript trooper Harper
stated that it was while he was being questioned, some time after 2:00
am that a detective told him that I had just been brought into the
hospital. I was the only live "suspect" in custody, and prior
to that time Harper, had never told anyone that a woman had shot him.
As I watched Governor
Whitman's interview the one thing that struck me was her "outrage" at my joy about being a grandmother,
and my "quite nice life" as she put it here in Cuba. While
I love the Cuban people and the solidarity they have shown me, the
pain of being torn away from everybody I love has been intense. I have
never had the opportunity to see or to hold my grandchild. If Gov.
Whitman thinks that my life has been so nice, that 50 years of dealing
with racism, poverty, persecution, brutality, prison, underground,
exile and blatant lies has been so nice, then I'd be more than happy
to let her walk in my shoes for a while so she can get a taste of how
it feels. I am a proud black woman, and I'm not about to get on the
television and cry for Ralph Penza or any other journalist, but the
way I have suffered in my lifetime, and the way my people have suffered,
only god can bear witness to.
Col. Williams of
the New Jersey State Police stated "we would
do everything we could go get her off the island of Cuba and if that
includes kidnaping, we would do it." I guess the theory is that
if they could kidnap millions of Africans from Africa 400 years ago,
they should be able to kidnap one African woman today. It is nothing
but an attempt to bring about the re-incarnation of the Fugitive Slave
Act. All I represent is just another slave that they want to bring
back to the plantation. Well, I might be a slave, but I will go to
my grave a rebellious slave. I am and I feel like a maroon woman. I
will never voluntarily accept the condition of slavery, whether it's
de-facto or ipso-facto, official, or unofficial. In another recent
interview, Williams talked about asking the federal government to add
to the $50,000 reward for my capture. He also talked about seeking "outside
money, or something like that, a benefactor, whatever." Now who
is he looking to "contribute" to that "cause"?
The Ku Klux Klan, the Neo Nazi Parties, the white militia organizations?
But the plot gets even thicker. He says that the money might lure bounty
hunters. "There are individuals out there, I guess they call themselves
'soldiers of fortune' who might be interested in doing something, in
turning her over to us" Well, in the old days they used to call
them slave-catchers, trackers, or patter-rollers, now they are called
mercenaries. Neither the governor nor the state police say one word
about "justice." They have no moral authority to do so. The
level of their moral and ethical bankruptcy is evident in their eagerness
to not only break the law and hire hoodlums, all in the name of "law
and order." But you know what gets to me, what makes me truly
indignant? With the schools in Paterson, N.J. falling down, with areas
of Newark looking like a disaster area, with the crack epidemic, with
the wide-spread poverty and unemployment in New Jersey, these depraved,
decadent, would-be slave-masters want federal funds to help put this "nigger
wench" back in her place. They call me the "most wanted woman" in
Amerika. I find that ironic. I've never felt very "wanted" before.
When it came to jobs, I was never the "most wanted," when
it came to "economic opportunities I was never the "most
wanted, when it came to decent housing." It seems like the only
time Black people are on the "most wanted" list is when they
want to put us in prison.
But at this moment,
I am not so concerned about myself. Everybody has to die sometime,
and all I want is to go with dignity.
I am more
concerned about the growing poverty, the growing despair that is rife
in Amerika. I am more concerned about our younger generations, who
represent our future. I am more concerned that one-third of young black
are either in prison or under the jurisdiction of the "criminal
in-justice system." I am more concerned about the rise of the
prison-industrial complex that is turning our people into slaves again.
I am more concerned about the repression, the police brutality, violence,
the rising wave of racism that makes up the political landscape of
the U.S. today. Our young people deserve a future, and I consider it
the mandate of my ancestors to be part of the struggle to insure that
they have one. They have the right to live free from political repression.
The U.S. is becoming more and more of a police state and that fact
compels us to fight against political repression. I urge you all, every
single person who reads this statement, to fight to free all political
prisoners. As the concentration camps in the U.S. turn into death camps,
I urge you to fight to abolish the death penalty. I make a special,
urgent appeal to you to fight to save the life of Mumia Abu-Jamal,
the only political prisoner who is currently on death row.
It has been a long
time since I have lived inside the United States. But during my lifetime
I have seen every prominent
black leader, politician
or activist come under attack by the establishment media. When African-Americans
appear on news programs they are usually talking about sports, entertainment
or they are in handcuffs. When we have a protest they ridicule it,
minimized it, or cut the numbers of the people who attended in half.
The news is big business and it is owned operated by affluent white
men. Unfortunately, they shape the way that many people see the world,
and even the way people see themselves. Too often black journalists,
and other journalists of color mimic their white counterparts. They
often gear their reports to reflect the foreign policies and the domestic
policies of the same people who are oppressing their people. In the
establishment media, the bombing and of murder of thousands of innocent
women and children in Libya or Iraq or Panama is seen as "patriotic," while
those who fight for freedom, no matter where they are, are seen as "radicals," "extremists," or "terrorists."
Like most poor and oppressed people in the United States, I do not
have a voice. Black people, poor people in the U.S. have no real freedom
of speech, no real freedom of expression and very little freedom of
the press. The black press and the progressive media has historically
played an essential role in the struggle for social justice. We need
to continue and to expand that tradition. We need to create media outlets
that help to educate our people and our children, and not annihilate
their minds. I am only one woman. I own no TV stations, or Radio Stations
or Newspapers. But I feel that people need to be educated as to what
is going on, and to understand the connection between the news media
and the instruments of repression in Amerika. All I have is my voice,
my spirit and the will to tell the truth. But I sincerely ask, those
of you in the Black media, those of you in the progressive media, those
of you who believe in truth freedom, To publish this statement and
to let people know what is happening. We have no voice, so you must
be the voice of the voiceless.
Free all Political Prisoners,
I send you Love and Revolutionary Greetings From Cuba, One of the Largest,
Most Resistant and Most Courageous Palenques (Maroon Camps) That
has ever existed on the Face of this Planet.
Assata Shakur
Havana, Cuba
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