Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX: Edu: Unlawfully Jailed Black Texans Discuss Injustice With Students
Title:US TX: Edu: Unlawfully Jailed Black Texans Discuss Injustice With Students
Published On:2004-04-16
Source:North Texas Daily (TX Edu)
Fetched On:2008-01-18 12:33:29
UNLAWFULLY JAILED BLACK TEXANS DISCUSS INJUSTICE WITH STUDENTS

'Tulia 46' Tell Social-Work Class About Their False Cocaine Charges

The man sitting in the front row of Syl Flores's diversity in the human
services class Thursday afternoon was supposed to be serving out a 90-year
prison term.

Joe Moore is one of the "Tulia 46," a group of people, 43 of whom are
black, arrested in the small Texas town of Tulia for dealing cocaine. After
serving four years of his sentence, Moore and 35 others were released from
prison after receiving a pardon from Gov. Rick Perry.

An FBI investigation is underway to determine how a lone police officer
with a checkered history in law enforcement could have possibly put so many
people in prison without producing any evidence to corroborate the allegations.

Tom Coleman, the undercover police officer who conducted the sting,
received a Texas Lawman of the Year award after making the arrests. But,
the "gypsy" police officer, who made his way through small Texas towns
picking up contract law enforcement jobs, may now face charges of perjury.

"It's a tragic story," Flores said. "But, unfortunately it's something
that's real." Three members of Friends of Justice, an advocacy organization
started to offer help to the Tulia 46, accompanied Moore to the class.

"We formed [Friends of Justice] out of necessity," said Thelma Jackson,
president of Friends of Justice and a Tulia resident. "We could see what
was wrong, but nobody seemed to care."

The group gave a short presentation that included speeches and a British
Broadcasting Corp. documentary about the events surrounding the incident.
Students in the class participated in an active discussion during the
question-and-answer session that followed the presentation.

"I thought it was a great class," said Ashley Crawford, Arlington junior.
"What they've experienced really shows how unjust the justice system is."

The story of the Tulia 46 first came to light almost a year after the first
arrests were made. The news made international headlines with specials
airing on the BBC and ABC's 20/20.

Sammie Barrow, also a Tulia resident and a member of Friends of Justice,
said that the events in Tulia highlight a much larger systemic problem that
plagues blacks throughout Texas. "It's a system built to run amok," he
said. "When the charge is drugs and the defendant is black, evidence is
optional. That's just the way it is."

Moore, a hog farmer who has lived in Tulia most of his life, was the first
of the 46 to be put on trial and one of the first in the group to be released.

"I've been in Tulia since 1956," he said. "Back in my day, I always used to
help people -- they really railroaded me."

Flores met the Friends of Justice at a conference on the drug war in
Houston where he invited the group to come and speak to his class.

"I hope that there's something [the students] will take away from it," he
said. "This, to me, is better than any lecture I could give."
Member Comments
No member comments available...