Posted by
Tracy Robertson on Saturday, September 15, 2007 2:42:38 PM
For the past month I have been attempting to bring to national attention the blatant injustice that is being perpetrated upon six black, high school boys in Jena, Louisiana.
Anyone who knows me would ask, “Tracy, why do you have to point out the fact that they are black?” I am not one to focus on the color of skin when making a point. However, in this case it is very important because the injustice is being perpetrated, I believe, strictly because these teenagers ARE black.
If you are not familiar with the story allow me to give you the highlights or should I say “low lights”:
v In September of 2006, during a school assembly, a black student asked the principle if it was ok for blacks to sit beneath a tree that had an unwritten rule of being a “whites only” shade tree. The principal said he didn’t care where students sat.
v The next day when students arrived to school they found three nooses hanging from the tree. The boys who hung the nooses were suspended from school for a few days and the administration chalked it up as a “prank”.
v Racial tensions flared. Fights began breaking out among the black and white students at the school. The DA, Reed Walters, was called to address the black students. It is alleged that he made the statement that he could end their lives with the stroke of a pen.
v On December 4, 2006, a fight broke out on campus between black and white students. During this fight, one of the white students was punched in the face, which caused him to fall and hit his head on the concrete. He was taken to the hospital and released the same day and attended a school function that night.
v The DA charged six black boys with attempted second-degree murder and conspiracy stating that the tennis shoes one of the students was wearing constituted a dangerous weapon. If found guilty they could serve up to 100 years without parole. A white student who, in a previous fight, hit one of the six over the head with a beer bottle was only charged with misdemeanor battery.
v The DA has since reduced the charges of two of the students to aggravated second-degree battery and conspiracy. This charge could carry a sentence of 10 years.
v The first student on trial, Mychal Bell, was found guilty on all counts by an all-white jury (Jena is 85% white). His court appointed attorney called no witnesses. His sentencing hearing will be held on September 20, 2007. Mychal Bell could be sentenced to serve as much as 10 years in prison for a school fight that had no serious injuries.
It is hard to believe that in this day and age there are still towns in this great nation that adhere to the old Jim Crow laws. Those laws may not be on the books but they are still in the minds of the citizens. Though people have the freedom to believe what they choose to believe. They do not have the right to dispense justice based soley on the color of a person’s skin.
What is happening in Jena, Louisiana should be an embarrassment to all American’s but especially to those Americans who believe that racism does not exist.
I believe a majority of American’s want to live in a country where people are not judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. As such, the majority of Americans, not just black Americans, should stand up for the Jena 6 and demand equal justice under the law.
It would be the American thing to do.
NOTE: Since writing this blog, the Louisiana 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the aggravated second-degree battery conviction of Mychal Bell stating that he had been improperly tried as an adult. The DA has said he intend to take an appeal of the reversal to the Louisiana Supreme Court.
The injustice continues.