[Ppnews] Ruchell Cinque Magee, Sole Survivor of August 7 1970 "Courthouse Slave Rebellion"
PPnews at freedomarchives.org
PPnews at freedomarchives.org
Fri Aug 5 08:38:52 EDT 2005
(published in San Francisco Bay View newspaper, www.sfbayview.com)
RELEASE RUCHELL CINQUE MAGEE, Sole Survivor of the August 7, 1970
Courthouse Slave Rebellion!
by Ruchell Cinque Magee with Kiilu Nyasha
Shortly after August 7, 1970, photos of whats become known as the
Courthouse Slave Rebellion, hit the front pages of the nations dailies
showing four Black men emerging from the Marin County Court with guns and
hostages, including a judge, prosecutor and three jurors -- provoking panic
in some and pride in others.
In the historical context of aggressive, official violence against Black
prisoners, Magee appeared in court that fateful morning to testify for
fellow prisoner, James McClain, defending himself against the charge of
assaulting a guard in the wake of the murder by racist San Quentin guards
of Fred Billingsley, beaten and tear gassed to death in his cell earlier
that year.
Magee was on the witness stand when Jonathan Jackson (17), younger sibling
of Soledad Brother George Lester Jackson, burst into the courtroom courage
in one hand, assault rifle in the other, and took charge. The plan was to
release McClain and William Christmas, use hostages to make it to a radio
station to expose the virulent prison conditions, and demand the immediate
release of the three Soledad Brothers facing capital charges in the death
of a prison guard -- following the murder of three Black prisoners at
Soledad State Prison. The Soledad Brothers were ultimately acquitted,
Jackson posthumously.
What the rebels failed to anticipate was the total disregard for human life
of the San Quentin guards who arrived in time to riddle the van with
bullets before it could leave the parking lot.
In this barrage of gunfire, Christmas, Jackson, McClain and Judge Harold
Haley were killed, the prosecutor was seriously wounded (remains
paralyzed), a juror slightly injured, and Magee was critically wounded and
lay unconscious.
Professor Angela Y. Davis was captured and imprisoned for having purchased
the guns (legally) and was later acquitted of all charges in a separate trial.
The following statements were written by Ruchell Magee with some editing by
yours truly:
I was charged with kidnap to rob for $10 in the Los Angeles prosecution
which commenced March 1963. A life sentence from L.A.still goes on 42 years
later. The Board turned 7 years to life, into life without possibility of
parole. I was also charged with kidnap out of Marin County Courthouse,
August 7,1970, in addition to murder and conspiracy charges. I was
acquitted of the more serious kidnap charge (PC 209), although the jury
verdict was not honored, but convicted of the simple kidnap charge (PC
207). You will find the murder and conspiracy charges were dismissed.
In an affidavit signed by the elected Jury Foreman in Magees trial
(#68668, Superior Court of San Francisco County), Bernard J. Suares stated
on August 6, 2001, That at the end of the jurys deliberations (commenced
on March 26, 1973 and terminated April 3, 1973) all 12 jurors found Mr.
Magee not guilty of violating P.C. 209 (kidnapping for the purpose of
extortion)....I have appealed to the Court and have presented proof of
acquittal, which is being concealed by the court in violation of the Rico
Act and Mr. Magees Constitutional right to a fair trial. I have been
ignored for more than 23 years and demand that I be heard in a court of
law....I declare under penalty of perjury the foregoing is true and correct
to the best of my knowledge and belief.
In a letter to Public Defender Richard Such, dated May 2, 1975, Juror David
F.Smith stated: The State presented no evidence to indicate that Mr.
Magee knew in advance that an escape attempt would be made....Most of the
jurors thought that Magee was a person who felt strongly that he had been
wrongfully imprisoned, who felt morally entitled to be free under the
Constitution and the laws of the land...who sensed a momentous possibility
of immediate freedom and who grasped at it.
Citing failure to comply with Penal Code 1170.2 (Determinate Sentence Law)
requiring the Board of Prison Terms to set a release date for prisoners not
doing life without the possibility of parole: On May 10, 2000, one Mr.
Albert M. Leddy released a declaration, which read in part:
I was attorney at law, currently retired... Between 1983 to 1992, I served
as a commissioner and then as Chairman for the Board of Prison Terms (BPT)
. .At one point I became concerned enough about the no parole policy that
I wrote a nine-page brief about how we were not complying with the laws. I
gave a copy to each Board member, pointing out that we could be
sued Such a no-parole policy is contrary to Penal Code § 3041 which
requires that BPT Shall normally set a parole date in most cases,i,e,
unless the prisoners is shown to pose a threat to public safety...
It has been clear to me that there is a general conspiracy to prevent life
prisoners from paroling, especially those whose offenses include murder...
If you can deny a prisoner suitability solely on the basis of the crime,
you can deny him forever. The crime wont change. The parole law is based
on the idea that prisoners do change, and become no danger to public
safety...
There is no rational explanation for the Boards conduct, which is in
violation of Penal Code 1170.2 (Determinate Sentence Law). In fact, some
prisoners held illegally have died inside unnoticed.
Moreover, do you recall the case of Dr. Bernard Fink? He was convicted of
the torture murder of his wife who was decapitated and did less than 15
years. There are many other cases of prisoners convicted of horrific
crimes, who came to prison after me, and have been released.
Magee poses no threat to the public if released. He is 66 years old, has
no mental problems, doesnt use drugs, smoke or drink alcohol, or allow
others to think for him. He believes he would be a mentor in the community
to help young folks turn away from negative behaviors that lead to prison
and senseless death.
In closing, I urge you to write to the Governor asking him to assign a
special Board for compliance with PC 1170.2 (DSL) that would bring relief
to countless prisoners suffering prolonged incarceration in prisons
throughout California.
Forty two years is enough! Free Ruchell Cinque Magee now! Free all
political prisoners!
You may write directly to Ruchell as follows:
A92051, 3C 02-127, Box 3471, Corcoran, Ca. 93212.
<br>
</blockquote></x-html>
The Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
(415) 863-9977
www.freedomarchives.org
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://freedomarchives.org/pipermail/ppnews_freedomarchives.org/attachments/20050805/9917ec9f/attachment.htm>
More information about the PPnews
mailing list