IN
THE SPRING OF 1994, I was strolling down
Philadelphia's legendary South Street. I noticed
a poster in a storefront window, reminiscent of
those seen in Moscow, Beijing, and Hanoi that
informed passersby the latest news. "Free
Mumia," read the headline. The sign
concerned efforts by the Uhuru Democratic Party,
the local successor to the Black Panthers, to
release the convicted murderer of Philadelphia
police officer Daniel Faulkner from death row.
Abu-Jamal killed Faulkner back in 1981, and a
jury found him guilty only one year later. In the
intervening seventeen years, however, left-wing
supporters have waged a tireless campaign to
exonerate their man. In April, thousands marched
in Philadelphia to demand his freedom. Speakers
at the rally included Ramsey Clark and Ossie
Davis.
They are but two of the many celebrities on
the Mumia bandwagon. Whoopi Goldberg, Ed Asner,
Peter Coyote, Mike Farrell, punk-rock band Rage
Against the Machine, and many others are also on
board. The group is so eclectic that its
difficult to see what it is that unites them
around this particular murderer.
Well, ignorance, for one. Ed Asner once
complained to Philadelphia Magazine that
there were no African Americans on the jury that
convicted Mumia. But Asner was wrong, there were
two. In a December, 1998, broadcast of ABCs
20/20 he claimed that police had performed
no ballistics tests in their investigation. He
was wrong about that, too.
Then theres fanaticism. Rage Against the
Machines website dedicates much space to
the bands egalitarian, utopian views,
inveighing against capitalism, industry, and
corporationswhile they earn millions
precisely because of those very institutions. For
hard-core leftists, Mumia, (like Alger Hiss
before him) is innocent, or at least the question
of his guilt is irrelevant, because he is a
comrade
Hatred is also largely to blame. The police,
more than any other organization, represent
government power. For those out to discredit
American democracy or its laws, they make an easy
and popular target. Some of Ramsey Clarks
other ventures into political activism have
included participating in war-crimes trials
against the US for its involvement in the Gulf
War and representing the Iraqi government in the
US. Various pro-Mumia organizations, such as
MOVE, the African People's Socialist Workers
Party, or the Uhuru Democratic Party routinely
call for Communist revolution.
Last but not least, theres racism. Many
racial agitators see Bull Connors in every white
police officer. Their knee-jerk reaction to a
white cop shooting a black person is that the
shooting is murder. All white officers are evil;
all black criminals are innocent.
Even news of the murderers confession
doesnt seem to change their thinking. The
pro-Mumia march in April, plus the undeserved
invective that has been thrown in Mrs.
Faulkners direction, recently prompted one
of Mumias former confidants to speak out.
Philip Bloch, a former volunteer with the
Pennsylvania Prison Society and an opponent of
capital punishment, is quoted in the August
issue of Vanity Fair as saying that Mumia
once privately expressed regret about killing
Officer Faulkner.
Predictably, Mumia supporters have begun their
character assassination. Pam Africa, head of
International Concerned Family and Friends of
Mumia Abu Jamal, and the murderers
number-one fan, told the Philadelphia Daily
News that Abu-Jamal would never confess to
"some young white boy." With that one
statement, Ms. Africa symbolizes the hatred,
racism, and fanaticism that is typical of
pro-Mumia activists. For them, truth is a small
sacrifice to make for the Movement, as is the
life of a police officer.
Whatever their reasons, Mumias advocates
are as numerous as they are diverse. Their
advocacy is also a shibboleth. The-left wing
fanatics of America and the world are revealed by
their endorsement of this cause. For that we owe
them our gratitude.
We also should be grateful that they have
exposed the complacency inherent in
Americas institutions. There has been no
substantial campaign to counter the distortions
and propaganda proffered by Mumias
proponents. No crusade to tell the truth about
this case. The city of Philadelphia, its police
department, its police officers union, its
DA's officenone has chosen to respond to
the fabrications. Because of their lack of
response, elected officials in San Francisco,
Madison, Wisconsin, and other cities have passed
resolutions esteeming a murderer. In 1995, I
attended a rally to uphold Mumias
conviction. There were few Philadelphia police
officers present. The lack of attendance is a sad
commentary on the apathy of the average patrolman
and citizen.
Only the widow of the murdered police officer
mounted a counter effortdespite death
threats by Mumias backers. But it has
little following. Recently a Philadelphia
talk-show host organized a fund-raising dinner to
support her organization. So far, the impact
seems to have been negligible. If the fanatics of
the left achieve their goal of releasing a
convicted murderer and even with Philip
Blochs testimony, they still mightit
will be a direct result of mainstream
Americans apathy, and its failure to heed
the warning of Edmund Burke, that "The only
thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for
good men to do nothing."
Mr. Tremoglie is a former Philadelphia
police officer, and now a health-care consultant
and freelance writer living in Philadelphia.
© 1999 FrontPagemag.com
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