Listen Live
Praise 102.5 Featured Video
CLOSE

Following the announcement of Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams that Mumia Abu-Jamal “will no longer be facing the death penalty,” Archbishop Desmond Tutu called for further action.

“Now that it is clear that Mumia should never have been on death row in the first place, justice will not be served by relegating him to prison for the rest of his life—yet another form of death sentence,” he said in a statement released by the International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal and The Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition (NYC).

RELATED: 10 Things You Didn’t Know About Mumia Abu-Jamal

SEE ALSO: Worst Auto Correct Fails Of 2011

Dr. Cornel West is participating in a forum at the National Constitution Center this Friday, thirty years to the day that police officer Daniel Faulkner was murdered and Abu-Jamal was arrested as the accused perpetrator. A full day of fundraising and organizing is scheduled for December 10 at the Germantown Event Center.

Abu-Jamal, an activist and journalist born Wesley Cook, was in his taxi in Philadelphia just before 4 a.m. December 9, 1981, when Faulkner conducted a traffic stop of a light blue Volkswagen. His brother, William “Billy” Cook, was the driver. Abu-Jamal, parked just across the street, approached the scene. Within minutes he had been shot in the chest and Faulkner had been shot dead.

The details of precisely how those minutes unfold remain one of the most debated accounts in recent case history. However, since his 1982 conviction, there has been enough evidence stacking on the side of those who maintain Abu-Jamal’s innocence that entire books, movies, and fashions have been dedicated to the Free Mumia cause. Five top reasonings for his innocence are:

Faulty Evidence

1. There was never a “blow-back” test conducted to show gun residue on Abu-Jamal, and the original medical examiner’s report, which not seen by the 1982 jury that convicted him, stated that the fatal bullet was a .44 caliber. A police ballistician reported that the bullet was actually a .38 caliber. Abu-Jamal was said to have been carrying a legally registered .38 caliber Charter Arms revolver.

2. Pedro P. Polakoff, a Philadelphia freelance photographer who reports he arrived at least 10 minutes before the arrival of the Mobile Crime Detection Unit, took photos that show that officer James Forbes was handling the guns retrieved from the crime scene with his bare hands, which is not the appropriate protocol.

3. At the time of the trial the police and the District Attorney’s office failed to notify Abu-Jamal’s defense about a driver’s license application for Arnold Howard found in the front pocket of Officer Faulkner’s shirt, which may prove that a fourth person was involved. Later Howard said that he loaned his temporary, non-license ID to Kenneth Freeman, a business associate of Billy Cook, whom Cook said confessed. Freeman was found dead in 1985, reportedly naked and gagged.

Witness Tampering

4. After the 1982 trial, Veronica Jones, a police informant who was working as a prostitute at the crime scene, revealed that police had coerced her and Cynthia White, another informant who was called as a witness to testify to Abu-Jamal’s guilt. A third woman, Yvette Williams, submitted an affidavit in 2002 declaring that while she was in jail with White, White told her about the coercion.

Official Corruption

5. In the late 90’s, an investigation of the Philadelphia Police Department exposed many corrupt officers who violated civil rights and stole from suspects. Nearly 1,400 cases were reviewed and more than 100 people released. One of the officers investigated agreed that he and his girlfriend would cooperate in further efforts. His girlfriend was Pamela Jenkins, the informant who said she was coerced into testifying to Abu-Jamal’s guilt.

RELATED: 10 Things You Didn’t Know About Mumia Abu-Jamal

SEE ALSO: Is Obama Finally Seizing The Moment?