The Jena Six - Targets of Small Town Racism

<font size="5"><center>Sharpton to Lead March for Jena Six</font size><font size="4">
September 20, 2007 In Jena</font size></center>

Black Press USA
by Hazel Trice Edney
NNPA Editor-in-Chief

WASHINGTON (NNPA) - The Rev. Al Sharpton, preparing to lead a march in Jena, La., on behalf of the Jena Six Sept. 20, says the case of the six Black high school students hits home across the nation and the issues are no longer contained to the small Louisiana town.

''It gives a real focus on the fact that all over this country, young Blacks, particularly young Black males. are being overcharged by a criminal justice system and prosecutors who have gone wild. It is also important because of the double standards of justice being used against young Blacks,'' says Sharpton.

The march is set to start at 9 a.m. at the Court House in Jena. Sharpton will be accompanied by Martin Luther King III, author and radio talk show host Michael Baisden, as well as other national leaders.

The march was to coincide with the sentencing of Mychal Bell, who could face up to 15 years on an aggravated second-degree battery conviction.
The ruckus started a year ago after three White Jena High School students hang nooses in a tree at the school, known as the ''White Tree''. The three students were suspended for the nooses, which were in response to a Black student having sat under the tree one day earlier.

In a December fight at the school, directly related to the noose controversy, six Black male students, now called the ''Jena Six'' were arrested for beating up a White student, whose wounds were so minor that he attended a school function later that day.

Five initially were charged as adults with attempted second-degree murder. Following the national protests and publicity surrounding the story, charges against three of the students were reduced from attempted second-degree murder to aggravated second-degree battery. A sixth student is being charged in juvenile court.

Sharpton says a double standard exists because the prosecutor failed to file criminal charges against the students who hanged the nooses, viewed as a life-threatening gesture, or against a young White man said to have pulled a shotgun on three Black students at a local store amidst the controversy.

Instead, three Black teens were arrested and accused of aggravated battery and theft after they took the gun from him.

Sharpton says he plans to request a state investigation in the case and to file misconduct charges against District Attorney Reed Walters, the prosecutor in the cases.

He says, ''If they can put the prosecutor at Duke in jail, certainly they can deal with this prosecutor that Whites committed against the Blacks in Jena and then overcharged these young Black students.''


http://www.blackpressusa.com/News/Article.asp?SID=3&Title=Hot+Stories&NewsID=14128
 
I’m sure the pressure of next weeks march caused the racists to come to their senses. Let this be a lesson to all of you so called Black conservatives, racism deniers and Al Sharpton, civil rights group haters. Protesting and marching DOES work. If it didn’t, most of you porch monkeys wouldn’t be in the positions that you are!

source: The New York Times.com

Conviction in Racially Tinged Louisiana Case Is Overturned

By RICHARD G. JONES
Published: September 15, 2007

NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 14 — A Louisiana appeals court on Friday overturned the conviction of an African-American high school student who was accused of the beating of a white classmate in case that has become a flashpoint for accusations of racial bias in the state’s judicial system.

The student, Mychal Bell, 17, was one of six black teenagers accused in the beating of a schoolmate in the northern Louisiana town of Jena last December. Mr. Bell was the first accused student to face trial, and his conviction on charges of conspiracy and aggravated battery drew accusations that prosecutors were biased.

His lawyers argued that Mr. Bell was not old enough to be tried as an adult and that the maximum penalty that he faced — 22 years in prison — was excessive. Facing increasing pressure from national civil rights groups, prosecutors in recent weeks have reduced the charges against some of the other defendants, who are yet to face trial.

On Sept. 4, Mr. Bell’s conviction on conspiracy charges was overturned by another judge.

A lawyer for Mr. Bell, Louis Scott, said in a telephone interview Friday night that his client felt a sense of relief at the decision but is still concerned by the prospect of another trial in Juvenile Court.

“I explained it to Mychal in football terms,” Mr. Scott said. “We started the game down by a touchdown and a field goal. On Sept. 4, we got the field goal. Today, we got the touchdown. Now, we get to start the game all over again.”

The teenagers, who have come to be known as the Jena Six, were originally charged with attempted murder in the beating of a classmate, Justin Barker, who was injured in a brawl that was sparked by racial taunts, including the dangling of hangman’s nooses from a tree.
 
Given the abovefore mentioned article, I would still hope the march goes on. On different terms perhaps, but, just because we need to experience what it it is like to assemble with a common goal, and let the one leading the pack, be tactful, knowlegeable and sensible, for the advancement, equality of all (BLACK) people.

Passionate words of MLK, lingering in my head, I have a dream...
 
Jackson criticizes Obama​

Presidential candidate’s response to Jena, La., case called too weak

The State
South Carolina
By RODDIE A. BURRIS
rburris@thestate.com
Wednesday, September 19, 2007

The Rev. Jesse Jackson called Tuesday on Democrats seeking the 2008 nomination for president to give S.C. voters “something to vote for” when they go to the polls in January.

On a statewide tour to register new voters, Jackson said South Carolina will determine “who has momentum” in the primary when it votes Jan. 29.

Jackson sharply criticized presidential hopeful and Illinois Sen. Barack Obama for “acting like he’s white” in what Jackson said has been a tepid response to six black juveniles’ arrest on attempted-murder charges in Jena, La. Jackson, who also lives in Illinois, endorsed Obama in March, according to The Associated Press.

“If I were a candidate, I’d be all over Jena,” Jackson said after an hour-long speech at Columbia’s historically black Benedict College.

“Jena is a defining moment, just like Selma was a defining moment,” said the iconic civil rights figure, who worked with Martin Luther King Jr. in the 1965 Selma civil rights movement and was with King at his 1968 assassination.

Later, Jackson said he did not recall making the “acting like he’s white” comment about Obama, stressing he only wanted to point out the candidates had not seized on an opportunity to highlight the disproportionate criminal punishments black youths too often face.

Jackson also said Obama, who consistently has placed second in state and national polls behind New York Sen. Hillary Clinton, must be “bolder” in his political positions if he is to erase Clinton’s lead.

Jackson is the only African-American ever to carry South Carolina in a presidential primary election.

Obama’s South Carolina campaign pointed to a statement it released last week in which Obama called on the local Louisiana district attorney to drop the excessive charges brought in the case.

“When nooses are being hung in high schools in the 21st century, it’s a tragedy,” the Obama statement said. “It shows that we still have a lot of work to do as a nation to heal our racial tensions.”

Thousands from across the country, including some from Columbia, are expected to converge on the small town of Jena today to protest the “Jena 6” arrests.

Jackson told the 500 to 600 students in his audience at Benedict that “criminal injustice,” instead of a rope, is the pressing civil rights issue of their day, but that voting remained their strongest ally.

“Your fight is not about ropes, it’s about hope,” Jackson said, blasting the flood of guns and violence he said permeates many black communities.

Civil rights, he said, has become the counterculture of the day rather than the prevailing culture. “You can’t call on the Justice Department anymore; it’s not there.”

Jackson, who became only the second major black candidate to run for president, won five primaries in his 1984 bid for the office, then 11 primaries and nearly 7 million votes in his 1988 run.

He said the 2008 presidential candidates must speak most directly to the pressing S.C. issues of housing, high tuition costs, health care and a plan to end the war in Iraq.

“The candidates have got to speak to South Carolina,” said Jackson, who was traveling also to S.C. State University in Orangeburg and to Charleston Tuesday evening before wrapping up his registration drive tonight in Aiken.

A Greenville native, Jackson said he hoped to register thousands of new voters during the statewide swing, which began Saturday in Rock Hill.

“Their votes must equal change,” he said, referring to residents in a state where only 1 in 4 eligible voters go to the polls. “I want to make sure the right agenda is being voted on in 2008.”

His approach worked for senior mass-communications major Darius Dior Porcher, 21, who graduated from famed Scotts Branch High School in Clarendon County, which produced the Briggs v. Elliott school desegregation case of 1954.

“The main thing when you speak to students is to get them to move,” Porcher said. “He moved students today. He got them to come down to the floor and register to vote.”

Reach Burris at (803) 771-8398.

http://www.thestate.com/local/v-print/story/177514.html
 
The march is still on. If you have not heard already, the people will assemble in Jena, Louisiana on the 20th of September. The District Attorney is appealing Michael Bell's adult charges all the way to the Louisiana Supreme Court and there are 6 more young men that are facing charges. It’s not over. Where are the so called Black conservatives on this issue? Oh, they don’t want to offend massa!
 
Even if we are outraged at the sentences given those young Black men in Jenna Blacks should understand the logic of what's going on there. We have seen what happens to a community when misguided, angry young thugs take the law into their own hands. Those White people in Jenna have every right to be scared and do what they think is necessary to protect their town even if they went overboard in doing so. Who can blame them for not wanting their small town to turn into another gang infested, crime ridden hood. This is an opportunity for Us to chastise and teach our youth and for Whites to see the error of their ways but as usual it's turning into another 'us vs them' squabble where nobody wins.
 
the point is that America is still a young country that hasn't tackled the subject of race besides the Civil Rights Era. Everybody thought it was over, but there are still some bitter mothafuckas, white and black, who still are racists, and racists come in every fucking color.
 
Jena 6: Too Early to Celebrate​

by George E. Curry
Jena 6: Too Early to Celebrate

The judge who presided over the trial of Mychal Bell and, more recently, the Louisiana Third Circuit Court of Appeals have vacated felony charges against Bell growing out of a group of Black teens beating a White youth at Jena High School.

Both legal entities agreed that Bell, who was 16 years old at the time, should have never been tried as an adult and ordered all proceedings against him be handled by juvenile officials.

Both actions followed intense public pressure, much of it stimulated by the Black media and communications on the Internet. Bell had been scheduled to be sentenced Thursday, but that has been made moot by the rulings declaring him a minor.

Under Louisiana law, 17-year-olds can be tried as adults for serious criminal offenses.

Dropping the sentencing of Bell, who has been held in custody since the attack nine months ago, did not alter plans to hold a national protest Thursday in the tiny town in central Louisiana, not far from Alexandria. Thousands are expected to arrive on buses, easily outnumbering the approximately 3,000 residents of Jena.
While throwing out the charges against Bell of conspiracy and aggravated second-degree battery represents a clear victory for the social justice movement, it is too early to celebrate.

Four of the Jena 6 – Carwin Jones, Bryant Purvis, Theo Shaw and Robert Bailey – were at least 17 years old at the time of the attack and therefore can still be tried as adults. There was another unidentified juvenile and District Attorney Reed Walters has already announced that he will petition the Louisiana Supreme Court to allow him to prosecute Bell as an adult.

The facts are startling:


• At a school assembly on August 31, 2006, an African-American student, who noticed that Black and White students congregated separately at Jena High (Whites usually assembled under a shade tree and Black students sat on bleachers near the auditorium), asked if it was okay for African-Americans to sit under the “White” tree. The principal said yes and a a couple of Black students tested the waters.

• The next day, three nooses were discovered hanging from the tree, conjuring up the images of lynching. Anthony Jackson, one of two Black teachers at the school said, “I jokingly said to another teacher, ‘One’s for you, one’s for me. Who is the other one for?” Three White students were identified as the culprits and the principal expelled them. However, the Board of Education overruled the principal and gave the students a 3-day, in-school suspension. The superintendent said, “Adolescents play pranks. I don’t think it was a threat against anybody.”

• Black protests followed, with African-American students protesting the incident under the tree, which was later cut down.

• On November 30, a fire destroyed Jena High’s main academic building, with some Blacks and Whites accusing one another for starting the fire.

• Robert Bailey, one of the high school protest leaders, was beaten on December 1, 2006 at a mostly White party. The next day, Bailey and two friends went to a convenience store and encountered a student who allegedly participated in the attack on Bailey. The White student went to his pickup truck and grabbed a shotgun. The African-American youths wrestled him to the ground and took the gun away from him. Bailey, who took the gun home, was later charged with theft of a firearm, second-degree robbery and disturbing the peace. No charges were filed against the White student who pulled the gun.

• The central incident that led to the charges against the Jena 6 did not happen in a vacuum. On December 4, Justin Barker, a White student, was said to have used the n-word and “bragged” about Bailey being beaten Friday night. When Barker left the gym, he was allegedly jumped by Bailey and five others. He was struck, kicked and knocked unconscious. His eye was swollen shut and he suffered a concussion. He was examined at a local hospital and released. Barker wasn’t too injured to attend a ring ceremony at school that night.​

What’s next?

At a press conference in Atlanta on Monday, Charles Steele Jr., president of the Christian Leadership Conference, said: “Rather than seeking prison time for these young people, both Black and White, I say let’s wipe the slate clean and begin anew. Adults should act like adults and say, ‘There is enough blame to go around for everyone.’ Rather than seeing any of these young people have their lives and future careers ruined, let’s embrace them and show them through our action that there is a better way.”

Whether that happens depends on the actions of the district attorney, the person who was heavy-handed in charging the Black youth in the first place.

George E. Curry, former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his Web site, www.georgecurry.com.

http://www.blackpressusa.com/Op-Ed/speaker.asp?SID=16&NewsID=14190
 
the point is that America is still a young country that hasn't tackled the subject of race besides the Civil Rights Era. Everybody thought it was over, but there are still some bitter mothafuckas, white and black, who still are racists, and racists come in every fucking color.

I agree with you in part, and disagree in part. America is a young country, but it has been dealing with race issues for it's entire history,not just during the civil rights era. Slavery was one of the most hotly contested issues during the constitutional discussions during the Confederacy, and Jefferson actually had the abolition of slavery on it's final draft, but had it removed. When he did so, he stated (and many agreed) that the issue of slavery would be cause for war. They were right.
 
As if this situation wasn't bad enough, to see the ignorance of some of the people on BLACK girl online who can't see the wrong being done :smh:. How do you quote the laws of the same white man that not too long ago realized that there was a problem... "they traded in the sheets and horses for badges and dogs" never forget :smh:

________________________
4d0299e13b.jpg

9f071c1a91.jpg

and Lord if you cannot show Vick the way, then forgive him for being Lost....
 
Last edited:
As if this situation wasn't bad enough, to see the ignorance of some of the people on BLACK girl online who can't see the wrong being done :smh:. How do you quote the laws of the same white man that not too long ago realized that there was a problem...
Is this a problem of "laws" or is it a problem of equal and just "enforcement" of the law??? Of course, 80-90% of the law on the books were written or influenced by whites. The question, however, is whether (1) the law is just (if not it needs to be changed; MLK in the Letter from the B'ham jail said they ought not be obeyed either); and (2) whether the just laws are being equally and properly enforced.

The problem in this Jena case is not the law. I don't believe anyone has raised an issue with the statutes (the "laws") being defective. The problem, as I see it, is that the laws are being enforced unequally and with a heavy hand towards the Black residents: the white students were not charged when they could have been; and the Black students were "OVER CHARGED" when all of the acts should have been the subject of juvenile court proceedings - - and not, as was done with respect to the acts allegedly committed by the Black students, the criminal court system.


QueEx
 
I think the biggest problem here is how we've become hostages to government's weak leadership and incompetence. I don't get the impression the citizens of Jenna condone racism, it seems they made every effort to do whats right, the problem here seems to be with the School Board, DA and judge. If they did their job, there wouldn't be a problem not of this magnitude anyway, but it seems like they wanted to put their personal stamp on this and send a message to Blacks and Whites that they were in charge.
 
As if this situation wasn't bad enough, to see the ignorance of some of the people on BLACK girl online who can't see the wrong being done . How do you quote the laws of the same white man that not too long ago realized that there was a problem... "they traded in the sheets and horses for badges and dogs" never forget
Bruh, pump your breaks and use some contextual method based reading comprehension. I was responding SOLEY to the comment posted by someone else. And what I said was correct. I know what wrong is being done, I even cut a check to help pay for the buses that went to Jena. But I don't let my emotions cloud reality, and think that one thing is everything. And you shouldn't either. Stop it. We need your energy for other things.
P.S. It's those same "white man's laws" that we are demanding to be carried out !! Make up you mind. Do you want the "white man" to carry out the laws fairly, or do you want some other set of laws which are not in effect in this country to be upheld.
 
Last edited:
What Went Wrong?
The Trial of Mychal Bell of the Jena 6



The Dallas Examiner

Many would argue that the case of Mychal Bell is one that never should have gone to court. In fact, some believe he should not have even been arrested.

Bell is the first youth to be convicted among a group of African American teenagers who have come to be known nationally as the Jena 6. The six youth were allegedly involved in a school fight that left a White teenager unconscious and landed the six youth in jail, facing charges of attempted murder and conspiracy to commit murder.
Accusations of ineffective counsel have left many wondering just what went wrong in the trial of Mychal Bell.





Improper use of authority


The saga opens with Kenneth Purvis, a junior at Jena High School, who asked a school official if he and his friends could sit under a tree which was traditionally the gathering place of White students during lunch.


The school administrator told the boys they were free to sit wherever they wanted. But the following day, nooses hung from the tree where the Black students had sat. When the school failed to expel the boys who hung the nooses, racial unrest ensued.


At a school assembly, immediately following a staged protest under “the White tree,” District Attorney Reed Walters warned the Black students to stop the “acting out,” telling the youth, “I can make your lives disappear with a stroke of my pen.”






An ax to grind

Racial tensions came to a head on Dec. 4, 2006, when Justin Barker, a White student, allegedly began to taunt Robert Bailey for “getting his a** whooped” by several youth and adults at a party that weekend. According to reports, he continued his taunts, calling Bailey a n****r and speaking favorably of the nooses.


It is an allegation Barker denies.
However, several witnesses, including Barker, his girlfriend and best friend stated in court they had heard the Black students involved in the attack call out to Barker, “I’ll teach you to keep your M-F mouth shut.”


During the attack, Barker was knocked unconscious and rushed to the hospital.
Walters wrote in a statement to the Jena Times, “I will not tolerate this type of behavior. To those who act in this manner, I tell you that you will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law and with the harshest crimes that the facts justify. When you are convicted, I will seek the maximum penalty allowed by law. I will see to it that you never again menace the students at any school in this parish.”


Subsequently, six youth were arrested and all, but one, were charged as adults with attempted murder and conspiracy to commit murder.


However, the White student who threw the first punch during the attack on Bailey the previous weekend was charged with simple battery, a misdemeanor.


The others who were involved in the attack, some wielding beer bottles, were not charged at all.






Jena court system


Bail had been set at $90,000, more than Jones and Mellissa Bell were able to raise for their son. Many believe this is the real reason Bell was the first to go to trial.



“Whenever you get in a financial bind where you have to be depending on a court appointed lawyer, that’s what happens,” Marcus Jones, Bell’s father said.


According to the Department of Justice, “About three-fourths of the inmates in State prisons and about half of those in Federal prisons received publicly-provided legal counsel for the offense for which they were serving time.”


Many blame Bell’s court appointed attorney, Blane Williams, for not challenging the six-member, all-White jury, saying Bell was not tried before a jury of his peers.


Williams told reporters Blacks were called for jury duty, but failed to show up.
According to the Jena Times, during a town hall meeting, a LaSalle Parish resident said she had a copy of a jury pool list of over 150 residents called to serve and only four Black residents were on the list. Two of them, she stated, were relatives of Bell’s and the other two did not show up.

Only 50 residents in all showed up for jury duty that day.
Williams told reporters he believed his client could still get a fair trial with an all White jury. Attorney Lewis Scott, of Monroe disagrees, saying the trial should have been moved away from Jena because of pretrial publicity.
The jury found Bell guilty in less than three hours.





Exclusion of crucial information

“At the root is a civil rights issue,” Scott said. “That is whether or not citizens similarly situated can have equal access to public property. It’s an old-time 1957 civil rights issue in 2007.”


However, Williams was unable to present his case as such becauseJudge J.P. Mauffray Jr., who presided over the trial, ruled the noose incident was irrelevant to the case and couldn’t be mentioned at trial. This ruling caused many of the events that lead up to the attack to also be inadmissible.






Conflicting testimony


Of the 17 witnesses called on to testify, only seven said they actually saw the individual who initially punched Barker.
Both Jessica Oliver and Lexi Jones said the person who initially punched Barker was wearing a big green jacket with a hood confirming testimony by James Hutzler, who also said the attacker wore a hood.
Only four testified they saw Bell hit Barker: Jessica Hooter, Lacey Elliott Justin Cooper and Denim Robertson. Hooter was a family friend of Barker and was currently dating Eric Scroggs, Barker’s best friend.
Hooter said Bell was standing in front of Barker when he punched and kicked him, contradicting other reports that Barker was hit from behind.


Additionally, in a written statement a day after the fight, she indicated there were too many students involved in the attack to identify any of them, saying she saw “someone” hit Barker.

Cooper was not only Barker’s friend, he was one of the boys who hung the nooses. Coach Jeffrey Manning, who was present at the end of the attack, testified he did not recall seeing Cooper in the area. Manning also testified that immediately following the fight, Coach Benjy Lewis told him to grab Malcolm Shaw, but was not allowed by the judge to tell why.


Teacher, Kristy Martin was the only adult to place Bell in the group that attacked Barker, but did not see the incident.

Martin, who had obtained a list from one of the coaches who had been taking names of rowdy students during lunch, was the only one able to name more than three people allegedly involved in the assault.
No one else placed Bell at the fight.
Bean, who was at the trial and has been working closely with the Jena 6 since last year, stated all of the witnesses called to testify were clearly identified with one side of a long standing feud between the “country” Whites and the Black student athletes outraged about the nooses.

Although some witnesses testified with confidence that Bell hit and/or kicked Barker, other witnesses contradicted this testimony making it impossible to draw a clear conclusion as to Bell’s guilt.





He didn’t do it


“I saw Malcolm Shaw hit Justin Barker with his right fist to the right side of Justin’s head, right around the temple,” Coach Benjy Lewis wrote. “Justin went down face first, knocked out…”


According to Bean, Lewis, who provided a written statement detailing the fight blow-by-blow, was the only adult to directly witness the fight. Lewis, like Barker, stated that Barker was attacked from behind, conflicting with testimony citing a face-to-face confrontation.
Lewis was never subpoenaed to testify.






Ineffective counsel


“Basically the case screams out incompetent counsel,” Bob Noel said. “Everyone, despite what they are charged with, deserves a good defense and a fair trial.”
But some believe that Bell was set up from the beginning.


“Walter Reed walked into Blane Williams’office and dropped the file on his desk and said, ‘make this go away. I do not want the Black Panthers and the NAACP down here,’” Bean said Williams told him.
It appears Williams set out to do just that.


“The court appointed lawyer tricked him [Bell] into taking a plea and turning state evidence against the other boys in exchange for dropping the charges,” Jones said. “He told him to take the charge now or the DA would throw book at him,” His son had already agreed to the plea, but Jones advised him not to follow through with the agreement.
During the trial, Bell surprised Williams by pleading not guilty, but the charges had already been reduced.
It became apparent to some in the courtroom that Williams never expected to try the case.

Williams rested his case immediately after Walters rested his; failing to call a single witness or introduce a single piece of evidence in Bell’s defense.






Lack of jurisdiction


Louis Scott, one of the Monroe Lawyers who agreed to take Bell’s case following his conviction said that had Bell been charged with battery in the beginning, the case never would have been transferred from the juvenile system.


On Sept. 14, Louisiana’s 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals agreed with Scott. Acting on an emergency defense appeal, the court reversed Bell’s conviction, stating that, based on the charges, Bell should have been tried as a juvenile.


The ruling will have no bearing on the rest of the Jena 6 who were 17 at the time of the fight and, therefore, no longer considered juveniles.






The battle continues


Walters said he will appeal the reversal to the Louisiana Supreme Court after he reviews the decision carefully. According to The Washington Post, Walters now has the option of trying Bell as a juvenile or charging him with attempted murder and trying him as an adult.
According to Sheriff Carl Smith, Walters must appeal within two weeks. Bell cannot be released unless Walters misses the deadline or unless the Supreme Court rules in Bell’s favor, the Sheriff told reporters.

http://www.dallasexaminer.com/cgi-bin/examiner/display_story.cgi?front_Page/story1.txt



Looks like a fucking set-up of a lynching to teach black boys a lesson while trying to make it go away as fast as possible "before the Black Panther and the NAACP get here"



:angry::angry::angry:
 
Whitlock on the Jena 6 case

Jason Whitlock says the case is more complex and reveals a few facts that I hadn't heard anywhere else.

Break out the Colin Powell pics :) :rolleyes:


Lessons from Jena, La.
By Jason Whitlock
September 20, 2007
here's the link: http://www.kansascity.com/sports/columnists/jason_whitlock/story/284511.html

Now we love Mychal Bell, the star of the 2006 Jena (La.) High School football team, the teenage boy who has sat in jail since December for his role in a six-on-one beatdown of a fellow student.
Thursday, thousands of us, proud African-Americans, expressed our devotion to and desire to see justice for the “Jena Six,” the half-dozen black students who knocked unconscious, kicked and stomped a white classmate.
Jesse Jackson compared Thursday’s rallies in Jena to the protests and marches that used to take place in cities like Selma, Ala., in the 1960s. Al Sharpton claimed Thursday’s peaceful demonstrations were to highlight racial inequities in the criminal justice system.
Jesse and Al, as they’re prone to do, served a kernel of truth stacked on a mountain of lies.
There are undeniable racial and economic inequities in our criminal justice system, and from afar the “Jena Six” rallies certainly looked and felt like the righteous protests of the 1960s.
But the reality is Thursday’s protests are just another sign that we remain deeply locked in denial about the path we need to travel today for true American liberation, equality and power in the new millennium.
The fact that we waited to love Mychal Bell until after he’d thrown away a Division I football scholarship and nine months of his life is just as heinous as the grossly excessive attempted-murder charges that originally landed him in jail.
Reed Walters, the Jena district attorney, is being accused of racism because he didn’t show Bell compassion when the teenager was brought before the court for the third time on assault charges in a two-year span.
Where was our compassion long before Bell got into this kind of trouble?
That’s the question that needed to be asked in Jena and across the country on Thursday. But it wasn’t asked because everyone has been lied to about what really transpired in the small southern town.
There was no “schoolyard fight” as a result of nooses being hung on a whites-only tree.
Justin Barker, the white victim, was cold-cocked from behind, knocked unconscious and stomped by six black athletes. Barker, luckily, sustained no life-threatening injuries and was released from the hospital three hours after the attack.
A black U.S. attorney, Don Washington, investigated the “Jena Six” case and concluded that the attack on Barker had absolutely nothing to do with the noose-hanging incident three months before. The nooses and two off-campus incidents were tied to Barker’s assault by people wanting to gain sympathy for the “Jena Six” in reaction to Walters’ extreme charges of attempted murder.
Much has been written about Bell’s trial, the six-person all-white jury that convicted him of aggravated battery and conspiracy to commit aggravated battery and the clueless public defender who called no witnesses and offered no defense. It is rarely mentioned that no black people responded to the jury summonses and that Bell’s public defender was black.
It’s almost never mentioned that Bell’s absentee father returned from Dallas and re-entered his son’s life only after Bell faced attempted-murder charges. At a bond hearing in August, Bell’s father and a parade of local ministers promised a judge that they would supervise Bell if he was released from prison.
Where were the promises and supervision before any of this?
It’s rarely mentioned that Bell was already on probation for assault when he was accused of participating in Barker’s attack. And it’s never mentioned that white people in the “racist” town of Jena provided Bell support and protected his football career long before Jesse, Al, Bell’s father and all the others took a sincere interest in Mychal Bell.
You won’t hear about any of that because it doesn’t fit the picture we want to paint of Jena, this case, America and ourselves.
We don’t practice preventive medicine. Mychal Bell needed us long before he was cuffed and jailed. Here is another undeniable, statistical fact: The best way for a black (or white) father to ensure that his son doesn’t fall victim to a racist prosecutor is by participating in his son’s life on a daily basis.
That fact needed to be shared Thursday in Jena. The constant preaching of that message would short-circuit more potential “Jena Six” cases than attributing random acts of six-on-one violence to three-month-old nooses.
And I am in no way excusing the nooses. The responsible kids should’ve been expelled. A few years after I’d graduated, a similar incident happened at my high school involving our best football player, a future NFL tight end. He was expelled.
The Jena school board foolishly overruled its principal and suspended the kids for three days.
But the kids responsible for Barker’s beating deserve to be punished. The prosecutor needed to be challenged on his excessive charges. And we as black folks need to question ourselves about why too many of us can only get energized to help our young people once they’re in harm’s way.
I’ve been the spokesman for Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Kansas City for six years. Getting black men to volunteer to mentor for just two hours a week to the more than 100 black boys on a waiting list is a yearly crisis. It’s a nationwide crisis for the organization. In Kansas City, we’re lucky if we get 20 black Big Brothers a year.
You don’t want to see any more “Jena Six” cases? Love Mychal


Jena 6 case caught up in whirlwind of distortion, opportunism

By Jason Whitlock
The Kansas City Sta/SIZE]r
September 29, 2007
here is the link: http://www.kansascity.com/sports/columnists/jason_whitlock/story/296701.html

Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and talk-show hosts certainly feasted on the racial unrest in this tiny central Louisiana town.
But it would be unfair to claim they threw the match that ignited the Jena Six case into a global blaze of hostility and misinformation.
That distinction belongs to Alan Bean, a 54-year-old white, self-proclaimed Baptist minister from Tulia, Texas.
“Do I know him?” was LaSalle Parish District Attorney Reed Walters’ sarcastic and dismissive response when I asked about Bean during a 45-minute interview.
“People are reluctant to say it,” said Craig Franklin, editor of the Jena Times, “but there is no doubt that Alan Bean created all of this.”
This is different things to different people. To some, this is a long overdue civil-rights reawakening, which points out pervasive racism in the South and in our justice system. To others, this is a horrific public-relations crime against the white people of Jena and irreparable damage to race relations in the poor oil town. And to some dispassionate observers, this is an unfortunate situation being exploited by white and black racial extremists.
On Sept. 20, when Jackson, Sharpton and Jena Six family members led competing rallies in support of six black youths accused of brutally attacking a white classmate, this — more than 20,000 marchers — was something no one in Jena could ever imagine.
But Alan Bean could.
Bean — the creator of Friends of Justice, an organization primarily dedicated to helping poor minorities victimized by our justice system — had warned prominent members of the Jena community as early as January that the town would be painted as racist by the national media if Walters didn’t back down.
“I told them I was going to bring media attention to this situation, and it was likely the same thing would happen to them that happened to my little hometown,” Bean said by phone on Friday. “Tulia got a bad rap, a rap it probably didn’t deserve. But the media doesn’t do its job. It’s in the entertainment business.”
“Tulia” refers to the case that made Bean and Friends of Justice a player in the world of American criminal justice. In the late 1990s, Bean exposed a corrupt cop in his hometown. More than a dozen drug convictions against minorities were overturned because of Bean’s work. Tulia was labeled as racist, and Bean became the person to call if you thought the police and/or a prosecutor were exploiting you.
A lawyer in New Orleans put Bean and parents of the Jena Six in contact with each other in December. Within three months, Bean had researched Jena and the events surrounding the assault, and published a 5,400-word narrative titled “The Making of a Myth in Jena, Louisiana” and a 2,400-word, media-friendly narrative titled “Responding to the Crisis in Jena, Louisiana.”
These two pro-defense narratives form the outline for most of the world’s understanding of the case. Bean connected the December assault on Justin Barker to the September noose hangings, to Reed Walters’ infamous “I can ruin your life with the stroke of a pen” statement at a hastily called school assembly, and to separate off-campus confrontations between Robert Bailey and white men on the Friday and Saturday before the attack on Barker.
Walters said Wednesday he’d never heard that the attack on Barker had anything to do with the noose hangings until the defense filed motions in the spring to recuse him from the case.
Bean said he first spoon-fed his narratives to Tom Mangold of the BBC because Mangold had worked with Bean on the Tulia drug cases. The BBC filmed a documentary on the Jena Six titled “Race Hate in Louisiana.” Bean said he then gave the Jena Six story to newspaper reporter Howard Witt of the Chicago Tribune, which published a similar story on May 20.
“I put it in the hands of people I knew would do a good job with the story,” Bean said.
Bean also gave his story to a blogger, Jordan Flaherty, and a law professor, Bill Quigley. From all of these sources the story mushroomed and became fact.
The Jena Six beat up Justin Barker because they were still angry about the lack of sufficient punishment given to white kids who hung nooses on a whites-only shade tree, and the six were railroaded by an overzealous district attorney who failed to properly prosecute white men who viciously assaulted Robert Bailey and later pulled a shotgun on Bailey and two others at a convenience store.
Walters, police investigators, school officials and some Jena residents say Bean’s story is hogwash. There is at least some legitimacy to those claims. Bean’s story and subsequent posts on his Web site contain factual errors.
The three kids responsible for hanging the nooses were given more punishment than just a “few days of in-school suspension.” They went to an alternative school for nine days and received two weeks of in-school suspension, LaSalle Parish school superintendent Roy Breithaupt said.
But more than the factual errors, Bean’s story is framed — by his own admission — as an indictment of the criminal justice system and the people in power in Jena and, therefore, the story is unfairly biased. Bean never examined the other forces at work that contributed to the Jena Six assault and Walters’ heavy-handed approach to justice as it relates to the alleged perpetrators.
“I didn’t know,” Bean said when asked whether he knew of defendant Mychal Bell’s violent juvenile history when he was crafting his narratives. “I never talked to Mychal’s family, and I never talked to Mychal. He was in jail. I knew he had a history for getting into trouble. I knew he was a kid at a crossroads.”
Bean also didn’t know that in fall 2006, Bell, who 16 at the time, was living with his then-18-year-old best friend John McPherson and McPherson’s then-16-year-old wife, Ashley, in a three-bedroom trailer. The McPhersons are white. Bell is the godfather to their 18-month-old daughter.
Bean has a very idealistic view of the Jena defendants.
“These are fun-loving, impetuous, athletically gifted black males that don’t drink and don’t smoke, and they go to church as well,” he told me.
The church-going contention flies in the face of what Rev. Jimmy Ray Young, pastor at L&A Baptist Church, said Wednesday.
“None of these boys have been in church except when Al Sharpton was in town,” Young complained. “I’ve told the ministers we need to get these boys back in church.”
Walters claims that Bean and the media have distorted other key elements in the case.
Bean reported that Walters directed his “stroke of the pen” remark at black students when the school called an assembly to quell protests of the noose hangings. Some pro-Jena Six chain e-mails create the impression that Walters met privately with black students and threatened them. Not true, Walters and police say.
Paul Smith, Jena’s chief of police, says he and sheriff’s investigator Jimmy Arbogast called Walters to the school after a student took a swing at Smith when he was breaking up a fight between students.
“Tensions were high. Everybody was upset,” Arbogast said. “We wanted Reed to explain to them that, ‘Hey, look, you have to think for a minute. Look what age you are. Y’all are in high school.’ ”
Flanked by Arbogast and Smith, Walters addressed the entire student body. He said he began by telling the students about an aggravated rape case (possible death penalty) that he was considering.
Walters recalls saying: “ ‘I can be your best friend or your worst enemy. With the stroke of a pen I can make life miserable on you or ruin your life. So I want you to call me before you do something stupid.’ That last part doesn’t get reported. It doesn’t make good press.”
Bean also wrote that three days before the Jena Six assault a white man, Matt Windham, pulled a shotgun on Bailey and two others. He wrote that they wrestled the gun away from the man and ran off, and that Walters charged them with a crime rather than the white man.
The police contend that Windham — not the boys — called the police, claimed the boys threatened him, chased him back to his vehicle and wrestled his gun away. The police also say that two uninvolved female witnesses backed Windham, and that’s why the boys were charged.
Bean also mischaracterized the simple battery that Bailey suffered at the Fair Barn party four days before the attack on Barker, according to Walters, police, several witnesses and Bailey’s statements to police.
“Robert Bailey Jr. was attacked by a savage white mob at a local dance,” Bean wrote. “True, he wasn’t knocked unconscious — but that is just a matter of aim and good fortune. He was punched, he was kicked, and he was smacked over the head with a beer bottle (and he’s got the scars to prove it).”
Walters, who prosecuted Bailey’s lone attacker (Justin Sloan), said there was no mob attack. It was simply a dispute at the door of a mixed-race, invitation-only party that Bailey was denied access to.
“It wasn’t a fight,” Walters said. “Robert Bailey didn’t swing. He didn’t do anything. The kid hit him, knocked him down. No beer bottle, no anything. There was no statement of the victim at that time indicating any weapon was used. … The defendant (Sloan) was arrested on a simple battery. He was prosecuted on a simple battery. He pled guilty to a simple battery.
“It was only after the fact that I learned that a beer bottle was involved, that stitches were involved,” Walters continued. “And I checked after the fact with my local hospital: Did this happen? The information (about a beer bottle) came up in a motion to recuse me from the current charges. That’s the first time I’d heard about that.”
Ironically, Bean is now growing frustrated with the way the case has turned, particularly since Jackson and Sharpton got involved. He said they wouldn’t return his calls. He indicated there was a riff between the Bailey (Bean camp) and Bell (Sharpton camp) families.
People in Jena say the feud is over money. The families are handling the donations to the Jena Six defense fund. Robert Bailey recently posted and took down MySpace photos of himself and another Jena Six defendant with wads of $100 bills stuffed in their mouths and splashed across their bodies.
“I can tell you there is no misappropriation of the funds,” said Bean, adding he was not being paid for his services. “I’ve been there and seen them handling the checks. Where Robert got his hands on that money, I don’t know. He’s a kid. It was a stupid thing to do.”
As for Bean’s thoughts on Jackson and Sharpton?
“I’m not at all comfortable with the way this has been handled by the Jackson and Sharpton folks,” Bean said. “What’s wrong is that Jesse and Al have tried to turn this into an old civil-rights story in which Mychal Bell emerges like Rosa Parks, and that’s not right. These guys (Jackson and Sharpton) have lost their gravitas, lost their credibility. People are really tired of the same old 1960s shtick.”
Based on the crowds in Jena on Sept. 20, I’m not so sure.
Bell before he violently breaks the law.
 
Re: Whitlock on the Jena 6 case

Boy, I don't like Jason Whitlock and lately he's taken the "Bash Jesse and Al" route to get back on television since being banned from ESPN. He's not entirely wrong in his first article but loses his point by going after Revs. Jackson and Sharpton and mixes in several different topics.
 
New John Mellencamp Music Video About Jena Six

This is the just-released video from John Mellencamp. The song and video address the 'Jena Six' and situations that occured in Jena. [FLASH]http://www.liveleak.com/player.swf?token=e0a_1191687588[/FLASH]
 
Mychal Bell of the `Jena 6' Back in Jail​

Washington Post
By MARY FOSTER
The Associated Press
Friday, October 12, 2007; 7:32 AM

NEW ORLEANS -- A judge decided the fight that thrust a teenager into the center of a civil rights controversy violated his probation for a previous conviction and ordered the boy back to jail, the teen's attorney said.

Mychal Bell, who along with five other black teenagers is accused of beating a white classmate, had gone to juvenile court in Jena on Thursday expecting another routine hearing, said Carol Powell Lexing, one of his attorneys.

Instead, state District Judge J.P. Mauffrey Jr. sentenced Bell to 18 months in jail on two counts of simple battery and two counts of criminal destruction of property, Lexing said.

"We are definitely going to appeal this," she said. "We'll continue to fight."

Bell had been hit with those charges before the Dec. 4 attack on classmate Justin Barker. Details on the previous charges, which were handled in juvenile court, were unclear.

Mauffrey, reached at his home Thursday night, had no comment.

"He's locked up again," Marcus Jones said of his 17-year-old son. "No bail has been set or nothing. He's a young man who's been thrown in jail again and again, and he just has to take it."

After the attack on Barker, Bell was originally charged with attempted murder, but the charges were reduced and he was convicted of battery. An appeals court threw that conviction out, saying Bell should not have been tried as an adult on that charge.

Racial tensions began rising in August 2006 in Jena after a black student sat under a tree known as a gathering spot for white students. Three white students later hung nooses from the tree. They were suspended but not prosecuted.

More than 20,000 demonstrators gathered last month in the small central Louisiana town to protest what they perceive as differences in how black and white suspects are treated. The case has drawn the attention of civil rights activists including the Revs. Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson.

Sharpton reacted swiftly upon learning Bell was back in jail Thursday.

"We feel this was a cruel and unusual punishment and is a revenge by this judge for the Jena Six movement," said Sharpton, who helped organize the protest held Sept. 20, the day Bell was originally supposed to be sentenced.

Bell's parents were also ordered to pay all court costs and witness costs, Sharpton said.

"I don't know what we're going to do," Jones said. "I don't know how we're going to pay for any of this. I don't know how we're going to get through this."

Bell and the other five defendants have been charged in the attack on Barker, which left him unconscious and bleeding with facial injuries. According to court testimony, he was repeatedly kicked by a group of students at the high school.

Barker was treated for three hours at an emergency room but was able to attend a school function that evening, authorities have said.

Bell, Robert Bailey Jr., Carwin Jones, Bryant Purvis and Theo Shaw were all initially charged _ as adults _ with attempted second-degree murder and conspiracy to commit the same. A sixth defendant was charged in the case as a juvenile.

Bell, who was 16 at the time, was convicted in June of aggravated second-degree battery and conspiracy to commit that crime. LaSalle Parish prosecutor Reed Walters reduced the charges just before the trial. Since then, both of those convictions were dismissed and tossed back to juvenile court, where they now are being tried.

Charges against Bailey, 18, Jones, 19, and Shaw, 18, have been reduced to aggravated second-degree battery. Purvis, 18, has not yet been arraigned.

___

Associated Press writer Chevel Johnson contributed to this report.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/12/AR2007101200369.html
 
Re: New John Mellencamp Music Video About Jena Six

Thanks for the drop M-B.!! Any idea when black artists will be singing protest songs about this situation? (sarcasm)
 
Re: Jena 6 DA Thanks Jesus Christ

<font size="5"></center>Judge removed from cases against 'Jena Six' teens</font size></center>

Associated Press
By MARY FOSTER
August 2, 2008

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The judge overseeing the criminal cases for the remaining Jena Six defendants was removed against his will Friday for making questionable remarks about the teenagers.

Judge J.P. Mauffray Jr. had acknowledged calling the teens "trouble makers" and "a violent bunch" but insisted he could be impartial. Defense attorneys disagreed and asked that he be removed.

Judge Thomas M. Yeager, who was appointed by the state Supreme Court to decide whether Mauffray should be taken off the case, found there was an appearance of impropriety.

"The right to a fair and impartial judge is of particular importance in the present cases," Yeager wrote.

Six black teens were arrested and initially charged with attempted murder and conspiracy to commit murder in connection with a December 4, 2006, attack on fellow Jena High School student Justin Barker, who is white. The charges were later reduced.

Jesse Ray Beard, Robert Bailey Jr., Carwin Jones, Bryant Purvis and Theo Shaw now face aggravated second-degree battery charges. Beard is charged as a juvenile.

Mychal Bell is the only member of the group that has been tried. He was originally charged as an adult with attempted murder. The charge was reduced before a jury convicted him last June of aggravated second-degree battery.

In September, an appeals court overturned the verdict and ordered Bell tried as a juvenile. He pleaded guilty to a juvenile charge of second-degree battery. He now lives in Monroe, La., with a foster family and is attending school.

Bell's attorney Louis Scott said he would also ask to have Mauffray removed from Bell's case. Although Bell's plea will remain unchanged, Scott said he did not want Mauffray to oversee the teen's probation.

The case aggravated racial tensions in the tiny, central Louisiana town, and led to a massive civil rights demonstration last September.

Mauffray was out of town, court officials said, and would not comment on the ruling.

District Attorney Reed Walters said he may appeal the decision.

"Whatever ultimately happens concerning the judge, this does not mean these cases go away," he said. "It will just take longer to get them to trial. However, I may seek to have the decision overturned."

An attorney for Beard said he hoped it the Louisiana Supreme Court would quickly appoint a new judge to hear the remaining cases.

"Everyone is entitled to a fair judge, not the judge they want," attorney David Utter said. "It mystifies me why the district attorney would fight this."


http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5g_B895UEtV38cUvZWav9zg08hh3QD929NB6O4
 
Re: Jena 6 DA Thanks Jesus Christ

<font size="5"><Center>
Lawyer: Jena Six teen shot himself </font size><font size="6">
out of despair</font size></center>



ALeqM5i_EMgWmqESZEbhQOIGbcp5FqRW4w

In this Thursday, Sept. 27, 2007 picture, Mychal Bell,
one of the Jena Six, appears at a news conference after
leaving LaSalle Parish Courthouse in Jena, La. Bell, 18,
was arrested Christmas Eve and booked on a shoplifting
charge, police said Monday, Dec. 29, 2008. He was freed
on $1,300 bond following his arrest at a mall in Monroe,
La. He also was booked on charges of resisting arrest and
simple assault. (AP Photo/Kita Wright)


Associated Press
By KEVIN McGILL
December 31, 2008


NEW ORLEANS (AP) — One of the central figures in the 2007 Jena Six civil rights case never gave up pursuing his football career, even after his well-publicized run-ins with the law.

Mychal Bell, an 18-year-old high school running back, clung to the hope that he could earn a college football scholarship. Then came another legal scrape this Christmas Eve.

After news broke of his arrest on a shoplifting charge, Bell shot himself in the chest Monday with a .22-caliber handgun. He remained hospitalized Tuesday but police said his chest wound was not life-threatening.

"When it was broadcast that he was charged with shoplifting he just felt that the whole year had been wasted and that he had worked all of that time for nothing," said Louis Scott, who represented Bell in the case where Bell and five other black teenagers were charged in the 2006 beating of a white classmate.

Bell's grandmother, Rosie Simmons, and mother, Melissa Bell, told police that "Mychal had made comments over the past two days that, because of the current media attention he had because of the shoplifting arrest, he didn't feel like he could live anymore," Monroe Police Lt. Jeff Harris said, reading from a police report.

Bell and the other members of the "Jena Six" once faced attempted murder charges in the beating at Jena High School, in north central Louisiana's Lasalle Parish. The charges for all the defendants were eventually reduced. But the severity of the original charges brought widespread criticism and eventually led more than 20,000 people to converge in September 2007 on the tiny town of Jena for a major civil rights march.

After being sentenced to 18 months following his guilty plea to juvenile charges, Bell moved from Jena to Monroe, where he was in foster care. He was released from state supervision on Dec. 4, said Bill Furlow, a spokesman for Reed Walters, the district attorney for LaSalle Parish.

A football star at Jena High until the Barker beating, Bell had hoped to play for Monroe's Carroll High School, where he is on track to graduate in the spring. But the Louisiana High School Athletic Association wouldn't grant him a fifth year of eligibility to play. Bell had spent 10 months in prison awaiting trial after his 2006 arrest in the beating case.

"He had kept his grades up and he had worked out the whole year even though he couldn't play. He had dealt with the fact that the state athletic association would not let him play high school ball," Bell's lawyer, Louis Scott said Tuesday.

It was unclear whether his dreams of a college football career were realistic. According to Scott, family members believed Bell was having encouraging discussions with the University of Louisiana-Monroe.

The school's director of football operations, Peter Martin, said in an e-mail that the school had not evaluated Bell as a prospective student-athlete and would not speculate on his potential at the college level.

Police said Bell's Christmas Eve arrest came after he allegedly tried to steal several shirts and a pair of jeans from a department store and fled when a security guard and off-duty police officer tried to detain him. After they found him hiding under a car, Bell "swung his arms wildly" and one of his elbows struck the security guard with a glancing blow, according to a police report. He was freed on $1,300 bond.

Scott said he believed the arrest likely resulted from a misunderstanding.

"I would be very surprised if he was shoplifting," Scott said. "I had seen him working out every day even though he knew he wasn't going to be able to play high school football."

Monday's shooting was reported at 7:40 p.m. According to the police report, Bell was staying at his grandmother's home and his mother was visiting at the time. Melissa Bell told police she and Simmons heard a gunshot coming from Mychal's room. They found him on his bed, wounded in the chest. It was not clear Tuesday who owned the gun.


http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5g_B895UEtV38cUvZWav9zg08hh3QD95DBLF85
 
Re: Jena 6 DA Thanks Jesus Christ

<font size="5"><center>
'Jena 6' beating case wraps up with plea deal</font size></center>



06-25-2009_jena-300x225.jpg



Associated Press
By MARY FOSTER
June 26, 2009


JENA, La. (AP) — Five members of the Jena Six pleaded no contest Friday to misdemeanor simple battery and won't serve jail time, ending a case that thrust a small Louisiana town into the national spotlight and sparked a massive civil rights demonstration.

State District Judge Tom Yeager then sentenced the five, standing quietly surrounded by their lawyers, to seven days unsupervised probation and fined $500. It was a far less severe end to their cases than seemed possible when the six students — all of whom are black — were initially charged with attempted murder in the 2006 attack on Justin Barker, a white classmate. They became known as the "Jena Six," after the central Louisiana town where the beating happened.

"I just thank God that it's all over," said John Jenkins, father of Carwin Jones. "It's been a long, painful journey for everyone on both sides of this thing."

Barker and his family and friends sat without expression throughout the hearing. Barker's attorney said he graduated and is now an oil field worker. The family did not comment.

As part of the deal, one of the attorneys read a statement from the five defendants in which they said they knew of nothing Barker had done to provoke the attack.

"To be clear, not one of us heard Justin use any slur or say anything that justified Mychal Bell attacking Justin nor did any of us see Justin do anything that would cause Mychal to react," the statement said.

The statement also expressed sympathy for Barker and his family, and acknowledged the past 2 1/2 years had "caused Justin and his parents tremendous pain and suffering, much of which has gone unrecognized."

Barker spent several hours in the emergency room after the attack, but was discharged and attended a school event the next night.

By pleading no contest, the five do not admit guilt but acknowledge prosecutors had enough evidence for a conviction. LaSalle Parish District Attorney Reed Walters said in a statement that he could have won convictions but wanted to end the matter for Barker.

Charges against Jones, Jesse Ray Beard, Robert Bailey Jr., Bryant Purvis and Theo Shaw had previously been reduced from attempted murder to aggravated second-degree battery. All but Shaw were assessed $500 in court costs. The judge did not tack that punishment on to Shaw's case because he stayed in jail for almost seven months, unable to raise bail, following his initial arrest.

Each paid the fine and court costs immediately. The payment of restitution to Barker was also part of the deal, but the amount was not released. A lawsuit filed by Barker against the group was also settled Friday, though the terms were confidential.

The only member of the group to serve jail time was Bell, who pleaded guilty in December 2007 to second-degree battery and was sentenced to 18 months in jail.

Four of Friday's defendants have graduated from high school, and all are attending or getting ready to attend college. Purvis has completed his first year and Bell is planning to attend college this fall. Beard is a senior in high school in Connecticut.

"They can move along with their lives," said Bailey's attorney, James Boren. "And because there are no felonies they can look forward to full lives ahead."

The severity of the original charges brought widespread criticism and eventually led more than 20,000 people to converge in September 2007 on the tiny town of Jena for a major civil rights march. Some $275,000 was raised to hire a large defense team for the six, said Beard's attorney, David Utter.

Racial tensions at Jena High School reportedly grew in the months before the attack. Several months prior to the attack, nooses were hung in a tree on the campus, sparking outrage in the black community. Residents said there were fights, but nothing too serious until December 2006 when Barker was attacked.

"Everybody pointed a finger at Jena during this, but this happens to African-American males across the country," Utter said. "These young men were lucky that people cared and donated money so they could afford good attorneys. That made the difference."

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.



http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iRhUbYLvMhsIydqlCUXsqJGlzsIAD992KK7O0
 
Re: Jena 6 DA Thanks Jesus Christ

<IFRAME SRC="http://newsone.com/nation/associatedpress4/jena-6-anniversary/" WIDTH=780 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://newsone.com/nation/associatedpress4/jena-6-anniversary/">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 
Back
Top