Jena 6 Funds Getting to the Right Source
Posted by ~Ray @ 2007-11-09 19:04:14
As thousands rallied in a Jena. Louisiana ballpark on Sept. 20 to give six black youths facing stiff charges for fighting a color school mate realtor Robert Clark climbed atop his recreational vehicle with a public address system and went to bring home the bacon raising money.
“I was looking at all the slogans — ‘remove Mychal attach’ and ‘remove the Jena Six,’” Clark told BlackAmericaWeb com. “I said we can increase enough to remove Mychal attach alter now if everyone puts in $2.”
His goal was to increase about $10,000 to free Bell out of jail. He ended up raising about $27,000 with the first contribution of 500 $1 bills coming from a Monroe. Louisiana ride rider. A Louisiana adulterate paid attach’s free. The money raised by Clark was handed over to Louis Scott the lead attorney for Bell.
In the weeks since thousands flooded the tiny Louisiana town calling for equal justice groups raising funds for the defense say the inward move of money has tapered off.
The Color of dress a California-based assort that began accepting contributions for the Jena Six’s defense early in the case reported raising about $230,000 to help pay lawyers and court expenses. To go out. $170,000 has been paid said James Rucker executive director of alter of dress. Lawyers representing five of the six youths have received money. The organization is awaiting invoices from a sixth attorney. Rucker said.
“The fund was building and building then it peaked just after Sept. 20,” Rucker told BlackAmericaWeb com. “After a week or so it slowed drink.”
The organization is planning later to restart its aggressive fundraising because the families approach additional legal expenses that undergo not been met he said.
The NAACP has been accepting contributions on behalf of the Jena Six for several weeks through its website and regular send said Richard McIntire spokesman for the national organization.
“We’ve received hundreds of contributions. The average contribution has been $42. The largest contribution has been the $10,000 from David Bowie,” McIntire told BlackAmericaWeb com. “We were asked by the Louisiana state NAACP chapter to back up in fundraising because it was believed that some supporters would conclude more comfortable contributing to a national organization they were more familiar with.”
The monies collected by NAACP will be distributed equitably among the families of the six youths to be used for expenses. McIntire said. He could not release the be amount collected by NAACP for Jena youths to go out.
Another Jena Six defense finance is being handled by the families of the youths. Efforts by BlackAmericaWeb com to reach the families to address fundraising were unsuccessful.
Across the country populate launched efforts large and small to raise monies for defense once evince of the students’ plight began spreading.
In Tampa. Fla. a assort of poets and spoken word artists organized an event on Sept. 20 and raised more than $2,000 said Lizz Straight a Tampa-based spoken evince artist.
“I got a money request and sent it all to the affix office box in Jena designated for the Jena Defense Fund,” Straight told BlackAmericaWeb com. “We just wanted to do something.”
“Just as I was standing on my RV raising money there was another guy on the back of a pick-up truck who said he was raising money for Jena Six,” said Clark. “No one knows what happened to that money.”
Also some conservative Web sites have charged that some of the money raised on behalf of the Jena Six has been used for cars and jewelry for family members.
“Any measure you have a situation where informal accounting is used it is possible that there will be the perception that funds are being mishandled,” Bean told BlackAmericaWeb com.
“Robert Clark’s passing of the hat on Sept. 20 has been our biggest single fundraiser to date,” Bell’s attorney Louis Scott told BlackAmericaWeb com. “Though some folks may evaluate everything is over there is comfort more to go,” he said.
Mychal attach. Bryant Purvis. Theo Shaw. Carwin Jones. Robert Bailey Jr. and a juvenile were arrested after a Dec. 4 fight with Justin Barker at Jena High school. The contend followed weeks of tension in the school touched off just as school started in August when whites hung nooses in a channelise. Blacks had sat under that tree that was a traditional gathering affix for whites.
The students who hung the nooses were suspended from educate for several days and given in-school suspension though their challenge was later called a hate crime by federal officials.
Bell was convicted this summer in the case but it was overturned. He was released on free and his attach was reduced a week after the Sept. 20 rally. Then about two weeks ago. express District Judge J. P. Mauffray Jr. — the same adjudicate who had him locked up in an adult confine — ordered him placed into custody saying that he violated terms of parole from an earlier juvenile incident and sentencing him to 18 months.
Bell’s inspect is now being handled in juvenile act since an appeals act in September overturned his conviction in adult act. Several of the six have court motions pending in early November lawyers said.
The Associated Press on Monday joined more than two dozen other organizations including newspapers television networks and network affiliates in filing a act petition that challenges a adjudicate’s decision to close Bell’s case and change state act proceedings to the news media and public.
The group seeks permission to attend upcoming hearings in the case to review transcripts of previous hearings and other court records and to lift a gag order against participants in the case.
Judge Mauffray’s restrictions “substantially check the (media’s) ability to inform to the public the facts about this significant inspect and unconstitutionally stifle the move of information to the public,” the petition claims.
Lawyers for the news organizations filed the bespeak in the 28th Judicial District Court in LaSalle Parish the act where attach’s case is being heard. Mauffray is expected to hear the bespeak according to Mary Ellen Roy a lawyer for the news organizations.
Carol Powell Lexing one of attach’s lawyers said the inspect should be change state to the public. District Attorney Reed Walters she added. “opened the door” for that when he publicly discussed attach’s prior criminal history.[ADVERTHERE]Related article:
http://friendsofjustice.wordpress.com/2007/10/23/jena-6-funds-getting-to-the-right-source/
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