Showing posts with label Scott Sisters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scott Sisters. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Scott Sisters Speak in Brooklyn!!

Time

Saturday, April 23 · 1:00pm - 3:00pm

Location

Restoration Plaza - First Floor
1368 Fulton Street

Monifa Bandele, Lumumba Bandele, Zakia Lorraine

More Info

Malcolm X Grassroots Movement and the National Conference of Black Lawyers will host
a Community Forum and Call to Action for the Scott Sisters.

Hosted by: April Silver of Akila Worksongs

Speakers:
Jamie and Gladys Scott - LIVE via teleconference
Chokwe Lumumba - Attorney for the Scott Sisters
Michael Tarif Warren - Attorney for the Central Park 5
Marc Lamont Hill - TVOne, CNN, MSNBC
Rukia Lumumba

For more information:
Lalit Clarkson at 917.468.7348
info@mxgm.org
http://freethescottsisters.blogspot.com/search/label/Videos

Saturday, April 09, 2011

Off Parole; On With Life: A Full Pardon March & Rally for the Scott Sisters

by Asinia Lukata Chikuyu - 6 April 2011

On the strength of about 500 enthusiastic college students, national justice
advocates, and local organizers, Jamie and Gladys Scott stood strong on the steps of
the Mississippi State Capitol and requested that governor haley barbour finish what
he started. On January 7, 2011, The Scott Sisters were released from the Central
Mississippi Correctional Facility by the governor to save the state the
embarrassment of their continued incarceration with potential death looping over
Jamie Scott due to kidney failure. At the same time, the governor wanted to save the
state the cost of providing for the kidney transplant he order as a condition of the
suspended sentence in granted the Scott Sisters.

On Friday, April 1, 2011 the Scott Sisters asked haley barbour to allow them to move
on with their lives. They told governor barbour that 16 years and 32 days was more
than enough time served for a crime that they didn’t commit. They told haley that
they wanted to vote, go on a get acquainted retreat with their children and
grandchildren. They said they wanted to devote their lives to improving the quality
of life for others wrongfully incarcerated. To do these things, they said they
needed to have freedom of movement and freedom of opportunity to seek gainful
employment. They needed the governor to show compassion and grant them a full
pardon.

The Scott Sisters said they needed to get "Off Parole and On With Life". And that
was the main chant of the 500 supporters who marched the streets of downtown Jackson
and stood at the Capitol Building as colonnade columns, like the ones in the
pyramids, for Jamie and Gladys. The students from Fort Valley State University,
Tougaloo College and Jackson State University stood tall with The Scott Sisters to
urging governor barbour to grant a full pardon out of righteousness.

After freeing five men who actually committed murder, the crowd exhorted haley to
earnestly consider the light his decision will shed on the image of mississippi.
Given the shameful history of this state, it was pointed out the healing and
redemptive quality of a compassionate decision in favor of Jamie and Gladys would
have on this state and this nation. Getting Jamie and Gladys "Off Parole and On With
Life" could be a shining star for a brighter future for them, the state and the
nation, if only the governor could be convinced. Call the governor’s office
requesting a full pardon at 601.359.3150 or 1-877-405.0733 or email the governor to
request a full pardon at governor@governor.state.ms.us

As Afrikans in america continue to fight for freedom, justice and equity, we are
fighting because - "We declare our right on this earth to be a human being, to be
respected as a human being, to be given the rights of a human being in this society,
on this earth, in this day, which we intend to bring into existence by any means
necessary". And we are sick and tired of being the only ones showing respect. That
is why we’re here without fear and we want our sisters totally free. That is why we
will be back here on September 15, 2011 again, bigger and stronger, if it is
necessary to convince the state that denying justice to Jamie and Gladys is a threat
to justice for all of us. On September 15th we’ll be facing the rising sun of our
new day begun, let us march on 'til victory is won. Our prayer is "may we forever
stand, true to our God, true to our native land".


DON'T FORGET TO SIGN THE ONLINE PETITION!
http://www.change.org/petitions/a-full-pardon-for-jamie-gladys-scott#?opt_new=t&opt_fb=f


Asinia Lukata Chikuyu
FREE YOUR MIND...
& see what follows

AFRIKAN TRUTH BE TOLD
(Afrikan_TBT)
for the love of our people

BROTHA LUKATA
The Challenge - "Impress Me!
w/ your deeds, not your words"

Thursday, April 07, 2011

ROSES AND BREAD Annual Women’s Open Poetry and performance event April 15

Friday, April 15 · 6:30pm - 10:00pm

Location

The Commons *

388 Atlantic Avenue

The Women of Resistance in Brooklyn (RnB)
and Their Friends Invite You to

ROSES AND BREAD
16th Annual Women’s Open Poetry and performance event
...
This is an event for WOMEN and TRANS folks only.

Featuring Mimi LaValley and many more!

Friday, April 15, 2011
Door opens at 6:30 p.m. Program runs 7-9 p.m.
Donation: $10, $15, $20 • more if you can, less if you can’t
Refreshments

This year’s celebration will be a benefit for Jamie and Gladys Scott, sisters
recently released from a Mississippi prison, where they had been serving double life
sentences, since 1994, for armed robbery. Released to save the taxpayers the health
care costs for ailing Jamie Scott, on the condition sister Gladys donate a kidney,
they continue to “pay” for a crime they didn’t commit--$52 a month, each, forever,
for private parole monitors to keep an eye on them. Check out
http://freethescottsisters.blogspot.com/.

To sign up to perform, to reserve seats, and/or to confirm childcare, please call
718-783-8141.

Resistance in Brooklyn is an anti-sexist, anti-racist, and anti-imperialist affinity
group.

*By train: Hoyt-Schermerhorn (A, C and G); Bergen Street (F); Atlantic-Pacific (B,
M, Q, R, 2, 3, 4 and 5); Flatbush Avenue (LIRR). By bus: B63 and B65.
See More

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Scott Sisters Freedom Benefit Date: Friday, March 25, 2011

Scott Sisters Freedom Benefit

Date: Friday, March 25, 2011
Time: 7:00pm
Location: Pan African Connection
828 4th Ave
Dallas, TX 75226
For More Info: (214) 254-9396

Sunday, January 16, 2011

OUR COMMON GROUND WITH JANICE GRAHAM HOSTS THE SCOTT SISTERS IN LIVE INTERVIEW

OUR COMMON GROUND COMMUNICATIONS, LLC

Email: OCGinfo@ourcommonground.com
Boston, MA

Press Release
January 11, 2011

Contact: Janice Graham
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

OUR COMMON GROUND WITH JANICE GRAHAM HOSTS THE SCOTT SISTERS IN LIVE INTERVIEW,
SATURDAY, JANUARY 15, 2011, 10:00 P.M.

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/OCG,: Janice Peak-Graham, Executive Producer of Our
Common Ground Communications, producers of OUR COMMON GROUND with Janice Graham
announced that the beloved Jamie and Gladys Scott will make a guest appearance on
her online radio program, “Our Common Ground” on Saturday, January 15, 2011 at 10:00
P.M. Live broadcast from http://www.blogtalkradio.com/OCG

Jamie and Gladys Scott, two sisters were wrongfully arrested, tried and convicted
for a non-violent robbery involving $11. Under a doubtful judicial process, where no
one was hurt, witnesses coerced into testimony, these sisters were sentenced to
two-lifetime terms EACH in prison.

The women served 16 years of that sentence and were released on December 30, 2011
through an indefinite suspension of the sentence ordered by Governor Haley Barbour.
They are currently residing in Pensacola, FL with their Mother, children and family.
After 16 years of incarceration for a crime that they did not commit, the Scott
Sisters have been released to their family with whom they will now work to rebuild
their wrongly disrupted lives.

“Our Common Ground” Host, Janice Graham said on Tuesday that she was “ so pleased to
have Jamie and Gladys visit with us to celebrate their homecoming. Especially as a
radio activist who worked aggressively to engage the community to protest this
injustice and help to get these Sisters released.”

When asked about her plans and approach for the interview, Peak Graham explained, “
this a community celebration, an opportunity for people who were their voices on the
outside, sent email, letters and make calls to welcome them home and hear some of
their story in their own voice. We will do a more serious interview, addressing the
grave issues of their status at a later date. “ Ms. Graham is a founding leader of
Gray-Haired Witnesses for Justice which first took the protest of the sentencing of
these sisters to the U. S. Department of Justice and White House officials in
Washington, DC in June of 2010.

Expect this first grassroots interview with Gladys and Jamie Scott to be relaxed,
informative, loving and an unusual chance to hear these Sisters’ thoughts as they
begin the process of moving forward to be the “voice” of their Sisters left behind
prison walls and to reunite with their loving family.

Janice Graham is a hard-nose and innovative, well-informed broadcaster and activist.
She is a founding member of The Gray-Haired Witnesses, a group of long-term
activists who held a day of fast at the Department of Justice on behalf of the Scott
Sisters. She has produced and hosted OUR COMMON GROUND began broadcasting of
“alternative, activist, empowerment” talk radio since 1989. OUR COMMON GROUND has
been heard on terrestrial radio in South Florida and many stations in the Boston
market. The program broadcasts g through BlogTalk radio, an internet based
broadcast facility and is heard world-wide.

-END-
For public distribution


OUR COMMON GROUND with Janice Graham
URBAN PROGRESSIVE TALK RADIO
☥ SPEAKING TRUTH TO POWER and OURSELVES ☥
ALTERNATIVE ~ ACTIVIST ~ EMPOWERMENT TALK RADIO

"Transforming Truth to POWER one show at a time"
Contact us: OCGinfo@ourcommonground.com

Friday, January 07, 2011

The Scott Sisters’ “Debt to Society” and the New Jim Crow


January 7, 2011 by James Ridgeway Solidarity Watch

Jamie and Gladys Scott walked out of prison today into the free world. The sisters were convicted, on dubious grounds, of an $11 armed robbery, and sentenced to life in prison. Both sisters lost 17 years of their lives behind bars before Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour suspended the remainder of their draconian sentences; Jamie also forfeited her health, and is now suffering from end-stage renal disease. Yet the sisters’ “debt to society” is still far from paid.

First and foremost, the conditions of their release stipulate that Gladys Scott must give Jamie Scott a kidney. From the very beginning of this medical scandal, in which Jamie’s health was further compromised by inadequate prison health care, Gladys offered her kidney for transplant to her sister. For the governor to mandate this donation is both unprecedented and unconscionable. As others have pointed out, releasing Jamie Scott before she has this costly life-saving surgery could also stand to save the state a considerable amount of money; a donation from her sister could save even more, and is apparently part of the price of their freedom.

At the same time, the Scott sisters will have to pay out money to maintain their freedom. Rather than pardoning Jamie and Gladys, Barbour suspended their sentences. According to Nancy Lockhart, a legal advocate who played an instrumental role in the sisters’ release, each will have to pay $52 a month for the administration of their parole in Florida, where their mother lives and where they plan to reside. Since they were serving life sentences, that means $624 a year for the rest of their lives. Both women are now in their thirties; if they live 40 more years, each will have paid the state $24,960. Of course, Jamie, in particular, will be lucky to live so long.

The consequence of failing to pay the fees charged for parole or probation can be a return to prison. As the Southern Center for Human Rights has documented, such fees are part of a larger system that adds up to what are in effect modern-day debtor’s prisons:

Contrary to what many people may believe, there are debtors’ prisons throughout the United States where people are imprisoned because they are too poor to pay fines and fees.

The United States Supreme Court in Bearden v. Georgia, 461 U.S. 660 (1983), held that courts cannot imprison a person for failure to pay a criminal fine unless the failure to pay was “willful.” However, this constitutional commandment is often ignored.

Courts impose substantial fines as punishment for petty crimes as well as more serious ones. Besides the fines, the courts are assessing more and more fees to help meet the costs of the ever-increasing size of the criminal justice system: fees for ankle bracelets for monitoring; fees for anger management classes; for drug tests, for crime victims’ funds, for crime laboratories, for court clerks, for legal representation, for various retirement funds, and for private probation companies that do nothing more than collect a check once a month.

People who cannot afford the total amount assessed may be allowed to pay in monthly installments, but in many jurisdictions those payments must be accompanied by fees to a private probation company that collects them. A typical fee is $40 per month. People who lose their jobs or encounter unexpected family hardships and are unable to maintain payments may be jailed without any inquiry into their ability to pay or the wilfulness of their failure to pay.

This system of imprisonment-by-poverty in turn fits into what author Michelle Alexander, among others, have called “The New Jim Crow”–an America in which mass incarceration has become the new means of wielding control over poor African Americans. For more on how Mississippi and other southern states have historically used fines and imprisonment to extend the institution of slavery, see today’s post on the Prison Culture Blog.