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African American Mississippi Man Starts Record Sixth Murder Trial
An African American man, Curtis Flowers, made history this week when he became the first person in U.S. history to ever go on trial for murder six times for the same crime. Mr. Flowers has been in jail in Mississippi since 1996, accused of the murder of four people at a furniture store. Jury selection started this week in tiny Winona Mississippi, population 5,482.
Mr. Flowers has been in jail since 1996 awaiting trial and was previously tried for these murders in 1997, 1999, 2004, 2007 and 2008. All either ended in hung juries or overturned convictions. The five previous trials have already cost the State of Mississippi over $300,000.
Winona, known as the “Crossroads of Mississippi,” is a small town in a small poor rural county 120 miles south of Memphis and about 100 miles north of Jackson Mississippi. Winona is in Montgomery County. The total population of the county is just over 12,000. The county is 45 percent African American. The median home value in Winona is $51,000.
A 1997 conviction of Mr. Flowers was reversed by the Mississippi Supreme Court because the prosecution improperly used theatrics and irrelevant evidence of other crimes to inflame and prejudice the jury. A 1999 conviction was reversed because the prosecution used hearsay evidence and twisted the facts before the jury.
A 2004 conviction was reversed after the prosecutor exercised all fifteen of his peremptory strikes on African Americans. The Mississippi Supreme Court said that trial “presents us with as strong a prima facie case of racial discrimination as we have ever seen…”
The fourth and fifth trials ended in mistrials when the juries were not able to reach a unanimous verdict.
In the 2007 trial, five African American jurors voted to acquit and the seven white jurors voted to convict. In the 2008 trial, a retired African American teacher held out for acquittal. The prosecutor later charged that juror with perjury, only to drop the charge.
On Monday, because the trial is in such a small county, nearly all the prospective jurors had some relationship to the case through family, school or work. Four white prospective jurors were law enforcement officers and admitted they had guarded or transported Mr. Flowers -- but they said they could consider the case impartially. Prospective African American jurors spoke about their association with the Flower’s family through work, family, church, and a popular gospel group headed by Curtis’ father Archie Flowers. One juror spoke of his moving experiences with Curtis Flowers after meeting him through his church group’s prison ministry.
On Tuesday, Lajuanda Williams, an African American law student from the Mississippi College of Law, was followed and then stopped by Montgomery County law enforcement as she drove to Mr. Flowers’ trial.
Ms. Williams drove from Jackson Mississippi to Winona to start her first day observing the murder trial. She is spending the summer as an intern in the Mississippi Office for Capital Defense. As she was approaching Winona, a Montgomery County police car followed her for about a mile then turned on his lights and pulled her over.
When she rolled down her window, the officer instructed Ms. Williams to place her hands on the steering wheel and not look at him, look directly ahead. She complied. She knew she had not been speeding and had broken no laws.
He asked Ms. Williams where she was going. She asked him, “Have I broken any laws?” He responded, that’s not the question I asked you. What I asked is where are you going? Ms. Williams said “There should be some reason why you pulled me over.” The deputy said, I’m going to ask you again. Where are you going? She told him, “I’m going to the courthouse.” He then asked her, what is your business in Winona? She told him, “It is not any of your business why I am here in Winona.” He said, if that’s where you’re going, you need to drive straight to the courthouse and stay out of trouble.
The police car then followed Ms. Williams for about 500 feet and then turned off.
During the entire exchange, Ms. Williams recalled many stories from African Americans in her home state of Mississippi who had been tasered and injured by officers during stops just as this. She fully complied with deputy’s order to look directly ahead. The deputy never gave her any reason for the stop. She was not asked for her license. She was not warned. She was not ticketed. Unfortunately, because she was ordered to look straight ahead, Ms. Williams was not able to identify the deputy.
Ms. Williams then drove to the courthouse to begin the first day of her internship. She was angry but not surprised. “I know the reality of being African American in a place like Winona”, she said. Two white interns, second year law students at the University of San Francisco, were not stopped when they drove into Winona on Wednesday.
In court on Wednesday, defense counsel sought to bring up the incident with law enforcement to the attention of the judge. The prosecutor angrily objected. Defense counsel asked permission to put Ms. Williams on the stand. The Judge said “We’re entering the theater of the absurd here” and that he was not interested in hearing about what happened to Ms. Williams. He said that he could not control everything and the stop, if it occurred, which he did not believe, didn’t have anything to do with the case. He ordered the jury questioning to continue and refused to take any evidence of the stop of Ms. Williams.
Ms. Williams told Alan Bean of Friends of Justice why she thought she was stopped. “I think it came from the trial and the injustice that has been permeating this town for years. You can cut the tension in Winona with a knife.” Why bring it up and risk the anger of the judge and prosecutor? “I could not sleep last night,” she explained, “I kept thinking about my daughter, she’s three years old. I kept thinking I had to do something so that she doesn’t have to go through what I just went through.”
While jury selection continues, the U.S. Department of Justice has been asked to investigate the Mississippi law enforcement harassment of Ms. Williams.
Despite all this, when asked how Curtis Flowers was holding up during the trial, his mother Lola Flowers replied “Well, he’s got the faith.”
For the criminal justice system in Winona Mississippi, as in many other places, William Faulkner said it best. Faulkner, Mississippi native, author, and Nobel Prize winner, wrote, “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”
For more information and updates on the case of Curtis Flowers, see http://friendsofjustice.wordpress.com
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22 Comments so far
Show AllGoing by the information presented in the article, the prosecution is desperate to convict *someone* for these murders. They have chosen this man, and are doing their best to arrange the evidence to suit the case, rather than prove any possible guilt.
I am not saying he is innocent, but after five trials, all ending in much the same way, isn't it time for an outside independent investigation of both the crime *AND* the prosecution?
The chief prosecutor sounds like a Quebecois Separatist, just keep on trying another vote until you get the answer you like.
The guy has been in jail for 14 years. Hasn't been convicted of anything yet, but he's already served more time than most bank robbers and some murderers do...
That sure is some system...
Pardon the digression, but isn't Quebec the only province left in Canada that is even a little bit left and progressive (semi-privatization of its healthcare notwithstanding). In the PM debates in the last election, the Bloc Quebecois seemed to be the only party (except the tiny Greens) that had a genuinely left program.
At least they aren't suspemding parlaiment when they dont get the results they want like the Tories.
My brother and his Lousianna-Acadian partner are getting rather tired of Toronto, which in many ways it is to the right of Pittsburgh where they emigrated from. They want to move to Montreal.
The problem with Toronto is that it is Canada's imperial centre. (No, not Ottawa, which is a bureaucratic backwater compared with Toronto.)
If your brother wants to move to Montreal, he'll need to apply for separate immigration to Quebec, and he'll need French...can he deal with the chauvinism?
"If your brother wants to move to Montreal, he'll need to apply for separate immigration to Quebec, and he'll need French...can he deal with the chauvinism?"
If he's reading your comment, then he can obviously deal with a certain amount of chauvinism.
My brothers long-time parner is a member of the Acadian diaspora which was caused, if you remember your Canadian history, by forcible ethnic-cleasning of their homeland (renamed "New Brunswick") by racist English-speaking protestant chauvinsits like yourself.
Yes they speak French. Why don't you?
I find the anti-French racism of English-speaking Canadians pretty breathtaking. They even refused to support the Habs when they were the only Canadian team in the Stanley Cup playoffs.
Every day there's something more that makes it seem as if the entire planet has fallen down the rabbit hole. So much insanity!
Wonder what will happen if the current jury brings in an innocent verdict.
It is cases like this that makes one curse the legacy of the Old South.
Why stop at just cursing its legacy?
The most amazing thing in this article is the fact that the Mississippi supreme court actually enforced legal standards in the trial of a black person.
It's a little progress from the handling of the trials of the murderers of the civil rights workers in the sixties.
q
So, they've spent $300,000+ on five trials, plus room and board for Mr. Flowers, courtesy of the State. That money could have been used for the school system, maybe even the County Health Department. I guess those things don't matter when there's a chance to execute a black man.
Should the jury hand in an innocent verdict, Mr. Flowers would not likely survive the summer. Unless he leaves the state.
Winona Mississippi is where Fannie Lou Hamer ("I'm sick and tired of being sick and tired") was beaten almost to death by the cops in '63.
Some things apparently don't change much over time.
This older black man just was telling me i should move to Atlanta so i can buy a house. Im in LA right now, and I enjoy having these basic rights. The entire South has dispoportionate conviction rates for blacks, so shit Id rather say here and keep renting.
The only news here is that they didn't just convict him yet. Seriously if your black the South is a shit hole designed to keep you in your place. LA is only better since there's a lot of Latinos and Asians bigoted whites are a minority. And Ive never experience any racism from those 2 groups, in fact I don't think Ive had all that much racism directed at me at all.
Lets hope he can get an aquttal and a plane ticket out of that horrible place.
"This older black man just was telling me i should move to Atlanta so i can buy a house. Im in LA right now, and I enjoy having these basic rights."
Er... Don't you west-coasters ever travel anywhere?
Metropolitan Atlanta is just a bit more cosmopolitan a place than Winona, Mississippi. Most of its city government has been black and reasonably progressive for many years. I'd never live there becaue of its intolerable summer heat and humidity and incredible car-clogged suburban sprawl, but like many larger southern cities, it has a good bit more more racial economic equality than other parts of the US.
"Most of [Atlanta's] city government has been black and reasonably progressive for many years."
Black, yes. Progressive, no.
Atlanta has been the biggest corporate whore among metropolitan areas in the US. The city has been shutting down parks and recreational facilities and has some of the worst schools in the country. Its police and fire departments are understaffed.
q
I agree that the Atlanta city government isn't progressive - no city government is (Maybe Burlington, VT or Olympia, WA?. Everything on your list is happening in every large US city. The business-run neoliberal program hits the smallest providers of public services - the cities the hardest.
But keithsoulasa was questioning whether Atlanta is a good place for a black person or family to move to. Compared to other US cities, it is. But of course, that's not saying too much.
For too long the 'land of the free and home of the brave' has been anything but free if you're challenging fascists who are intent at guarding their hold on the reigns of power...whether the fascists are small town cops intimidating and inhibiting the constitutionally protected rights journalists or power hungry 'prosecutors'.
-"Mr. Flowers has been in jail since 1996 awaiting trial and was previously tried for these murders in 1997, 1999, 2004, 2007 and 2008. All either ended in hung juries or overturned convictions. The five previous trials have already cost the State of Mississippi over $300,000."
I suppose it is not "double jeopardy" because he was never found not guilty. But the the "pre-trial" time in jail (fourteen years) and the number of attempts at conviction seem overly ridiculous. If Americans can abide this, small wonder they don't get worked up about the Guantanamo military commissions.
Missed again (damn!).
q
This small sh*thole of A town doesn't want A "Not Guilty" verdict. Why hell, that might break the town hall's budget if this man counter-sued...That dutiful police officer that pulled the lady over for no "probable cause" might have to go without A new patrol car next year if the town's budget were depleted...Fourteen years of A mans life certainly can't Justify that...
It's A hell of A lot more "cost effective" to convict an innocent man, after all he is Black isn't he???
Only in America.