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NEWS & LETTERS, December 2002

New attacks on Angola 3, and new support

Angola, La.--State Penitentiary administrators are tightening the screws on former Black Panthers Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace, two of the Angola 3, who will be entering their 31st year of solitary confinement. Guards recently raided the cells of Woodfox, Wallace and their friend Kenny Zulu Whitmore. It is not clear what was being sought, but some legal papers, historical photos relevant to their case, and Angola 3 information were taken on the basis of being racist and gang-related.

Prison officials seem intent on sabotaging the ACLU civil rights lawsuit filed against them by using false charges to make the two appear to be dangerous men who must be kept in solitary forever.  However, Wallace has no record of these kinds of offenses and it seems highly suspicious that suddenly, at age 61, with a federal lawsuit pending that threatens prison officials, they are finding contraband in his cell, while he is living in the highest security part of the prison where such material is practically inaccessible. 

This harassment comes at a time of stepped up activity by the Angola 3 legal team on two fronts. The first is a civil suit based on the cruel and unusual punishment clause of the Eighth Amendment, filed by the ACLU of Louisiana, which is working its way up through the courts. The second is a challenge to the wrongful conviction of Woodfox and Wallace for the 1972 murder of prison guard Brent Miller. Woodfox's new post conviction appeal, which includes substantial new exculpatory information, was filed last month.

Among the evidence are signed statements by two of the three living prosecution witnesses, recanting their testimony. Before Miller's death, the two men were successfully challenging the wretched conditions at Angola, which was one of the most notoriously violent prisons in the world. Prison officials falsely accused Woodfox and Wallace in order to stop their prisoner organizing.  

Since Woodfox's second trial and re-conviction in 1998, in Brent Miller's hometown, public attention to the case has increased. The National Coalition to Free the Angola 3 formed, with chapters in several cities across the U.S., and one in Europe. A pro bono legal and investigative team led by Oakland, California-based attorney Scott Fleming, took on Woodfox and Wallace's case. Anita Roddick, the founder of the British cosmetics giant The Body Shop, recently visited Woodfox and Wallace at Angola and sponsored the publication of full back-page advertisements about the Angola 3 in MOTHER JONES and THE NATION.

Meanwhile the third and only free member of the Angola 3, Robert King Wilkerson, continues his tireless crusade across the United States and Europe, speaking out on behalf of his two comrades. He was released in February, 2001 after an appeals court found that the sole evidence used to convict him, the eyewitness testimony of another inmate, was not credible.  

For more information, visit www.angola3.org and www.anitaroddick.org.

--Scott Fleming and Beth Shaw

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