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(SF) Rally supports arrested Panthers

by Workers World newspaper
But if a Jan. 28 support rally is any indication, the Bay Area progressive community will
not tolerate this outrageous attack on the Black liberation movement.
http://www.workers.org/2007/us/sf-panthers-0208/
[]


SAN FRANCISCO


Rally supports arrested Panthers

By Judy Greenspan
San Francisco
Published Feb 1, 2007 9:54 PM
Five of the indicted Panthers are on cover of<br />new DVD, 


Five of the indicted Panthers are on cover of
new DVD, “Legacy of Torture: The War
Against the Black Liberation Movement.”
From left, Hank Jones, John Bowman
(deceased), Ray Boudreaux, Harold Taylor
and Richard Brown.
Photo: Scott Braley 2006

On the same day that U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales announced that people do not
have a constitutional right to challenge their imprisonment, eight former Black Panther
Party leaders and community activists were indicted for something that happened over 35
years ago­the killing of a San Francisco policeman.

But if a Jan. 28 support rally is any indication, the Bay Area progressive community will
not tolerate this outrageous attack on the Black liberation movement.

On Jan. 23, after a two-year witch hunt by local, state and federal police, six former
Bay Area Black Panther Party organizers were arrested: Richard Brown, Richard O’Neal,
Francisco Torres, Ray Boudreaux, Hank Jones and Harold Taylor.

Two well-known political prisoners, Herman Bell and Jalil Muntaqin (Anthony Bottom), part
of the New York Three who were falsely accused and convicted of killing two New York City
policemen, have also been accused and indicted. John Bowman, the ninth target of the
two-year-long grand jury witch hunt, died in December.

Why did the government indict this group of Black freedom fighters now? Why has the
government relentlessly pursued these activists more than 35 years after the alleged
“crime” was committed?

On Jan. 28 a local activist media collective, Freedom Archives, premiered their latest
exposé of racism and injustice in this country, “Legacy of Torture: The War Against the
Black Liberation Movement.” The new DVD documents the torture of several of the arrested
activists­Bowman, Jones, and Taylor­at the hands of the New Orleans Police Department in
1973.

Several of the men were incarcerated for refusing to testify before a grand jury. The
video also captures the level of police brutality, assassinations and abuse suffered by
the Black community during the 1960s and 1970s.

According to the Committee for the Defense of Human Rights (CDHR), a group devoted to
exposing human rights abuses against progressive organizations and individuals, 13 Black
activists were arrested in New Orleans in 1973 and tortured for several days in a manner
similar to today’s torture at Guantánamo Bay and Iraq’s Abu Ghraib.

In “Legacy of Torture,” Bowman, Jones and Taylor graphically describe being stripped
naked and beaten by slapjacks and blunt objects; probed by cattle prods in their genital
areas; and nearly suffocated by plastic bags being placed over their heads and wet wool
blankets wrapped tightly around their bodies.

The government failed in the early 1970s to bring any of these men to trial for the
killing of San Francisco policeman John Young. In fact, California courts deemed all the
coerced false confessions from New Orleans inadmissible due to the physical abuse and
torture suffered by the men.

Brown, who has spent the last 30 years working with young people in this city’s
African-American community, denounced the government’s violence against the Black
liberation movement in an interview with the SF Bay View newspaper. “I was named as a
participant in 1971 in the murder case. All Panthers were targeted. If we were doing
something constructive, we were singled out. They killed Bunchy Carter, arrested and
imprisoned Geronimo [Pratt]. It was just our turn. We were next on the list,” Brown
stated.

Soffiyah Elijah, a New York-based attorney who has defended many Black freedom fighters,
spoke briefly at today’s program, which drew so many people to the Roxie Theater that the
film had to be shown twice. “In the wake of 9/11 and the Patriot Act, the government is
now resurrecting its Cointelpro actions. Homeland Security is merely an extension of that
effort,” Elijah said.

Cointelpro was the domestic government program used to undermine, disrupt and assassinate
the leadership of domestic liberation movements, revolutionary organizations and
progressive groups in this country that were protesting government policies in the 1960s
and 1970s.

John Bowman says in “Legacy of Torture,” now dedicated to his memory: “I am sick of these
people trying to destroy our community.” The support at today’s program echoed this
sentiment as hundreds of people signed up to become involved in the defense effort.

A large crowd attended John Bowman’s memorial at the African American Art and Culture
Complex following the film showing. A bail hearing for the imprisoned Black activists is
scheduled.

For more information about how to support these activists or purchase a copy of the new
video, write to cdhrsupport [at] freedomarchives.org or visit http://www.freedomarchives.org. “Legacy
of Torture” is available at http://www.leftbooks.com.

----------
Articles copyright 1995-2007 Workers World. Verbatim copying and distribution of this
entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is
preserved.

Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011
Email: <MAILTO:ww [at] workers.org>ww [at] workers.org
Subscribe <MAILTO:wwnews-subscribe [at] workersworld.net>wwnews-subscribe [at] workersworld.net
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<http://www.workers.org/orders/donate.php>http://www.workers.org/orders/donate.php Page
printed from:
http://www.workers.org/2007/us/sf-panthers-0208/

The Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
(415) 863-9977
http://www.freedomarchives.org
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