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News & Letters, July 2001


Fight for freedom for the Angola 3

Chicago--Albert Woodfox and Herman "Hooks" Wallace, two members of the "Angola 3," remain in the notorious Angola Prison in Louisiana after almost 30 years of solitary confinement. They are serving sentences of natural life in a cell the size of a small bathroom 23 hours a day, seven days a week. The other member, Robert King Wilkerson, finally gained his freedom after 29 years at Angola Penitentiary for a crime he did not commit.

The Angola 3 are unique according to Mumia Abu-Jamal, who calls them "political prisoners of the highest caliber," and longtime political prisoner Geronimo Ji Jaga (Pratt) (now freed), who calls them "the kind of soldiers who never cried out to anyone for help, even though they were facing life imprisonment. Understand that being in that situation for so long, I can personally attest to the highly disciplined and dedicated nature of these ASKARIS. They endured, and they survived, over all the years, with very little help from the outside."

All three were originally imprisoned for unrelated crimes 30 years ago. Substantial evidence carefully organized by their legal team confirms that they were framed in the murder of a prison guard in 1971, by authorities intent on crushing their political organizing. Their cases are still alive in the courts; however, Woodfox's appeal to the Louisiana Supreme Court was denied the week of June 25. A hearing on Wallace's case is scheduled for June 28 in Baton Rouge.

Like 85% of the population warehoused at Angola, the three are African American. Angola Penitentiary is named after the homeland of the slaves who worked the land, which was once a plantation. The prison has earned notoriety for violence, the plantation-style forced labor in the fields by inmates, and more recently, via the documentary "Angola: The Farm," which was nominated for an Academy Award.

In King 's case, the witness who originally testified against him was threatened with the electric chair if he supported King 's claim to innocence. At trial, King was shackled and his mouth was taped shut. King 's confinement continued even after another man confessed to the crime. He was finally released in February, whereupon he stated that, "I may be free of Angola but Angola will never be free of me."

Angola 3 Support Committees are already active on both coasts, supplementing efforts in Louisiana to secure Woodfox and Wallace's freedom. Activists in Chicago are meeting in July to organize a speaking tour by King to publicize, among other things, the inhumanity and injustice of the American penal system and the innocence of the two still confined in what some call "the belly of the beast."

For more information, call (504) 940-6756 or (504) 484-7131.

--Beth Shaw

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