Bartle Bull couldn’t believe his eyes. The former civil rights
lawyer had been arrested in the South during the 1960s. He once
forced local officials in Mississippi to remove nooses that were
hanging from tree branches outside polling places.
But until Election Day 2008 in Philadelphia he had never seen a
man brandishing a weapon blocking the entrance to a polling place.
He now can’t understand why the Obama Justice Department has
dropped its case against the New Black Panther Party, the hate
group the thugs he saw in front of the polling place belonged
to.
Bull, who was once Robert Kennedy’s New York presidential
campaign manager and is a former publisher of the left-wing Village
Voice, has moderated his politics, going so far as to join
Democrats for McCain last year. It was in that capacity that he
traveled to Philadelphia on Election Day. When he visited a polling
place at 12th and Fairmount he found two men dressed in black
combat boots, black berets, and black uniforms blocking the door.
One was brandishing a large police-style nightstick.
McCain volunteers called the police and media, which filmed the
whole incident. The police ordered the armed man to leave, but did
not take away his weapon. But one of his colleagues didn’t go
quietly. Minister King Samir Shabazz, head of the New Black Panther
Party in Philadelphia, yelled at onlookers: “You are about to be
ruled by the black man, Cracker!”
In March, Bull got a call from Christian Adams, an attorney with
the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, who asked him to
provide an affi- davit about the incident to support a Justice
civil rights lawsuit against the New Black Panther Party and three
of its supporters. Bull said he would, provided that Justice
followed through on the lawsuit to the very end.
The lawsuit was filed, but none of the defendants answered it.
That allowed a federal court in Philadelphia to render a default
judgment against the defendants.
But Bull was astonished that the government then filed a notice
of voluntary dismissal. Charges against the New Black Panther Party
and two of the defendants were dropped completely. Shabazz was
enjoined from carrying a weapon to a polling place until 2012.
A Justice spokesman issued a statement saying that the
department made its decision “based on a careful assessment of the
facts and the law.” He refused to provide any other explanation or
comment. Bull says that a Justice attorney told him, “The decision
to drop the case against the other defen- dants came as a surprise
to all of us working on it.” The attorney worried that this abject
failure to enforce the Voting Rights Act would “embolden” others to
intimidate voters in the future. The Southern Poverty Law Center
and the Anti-Defamation League have labeled the New Black Panther
Party a hate group, and many original Black Panthers have denounced
it, yet somehow the new administration couldn’t bring itself to
accept a victory that it was being handed on a legal silver
platter.
So why did the Obama Justice Department punt? Bull has no
specific knowledge but notes that the original Justice complaint
had aimed at enjoining all 28 of the New Black Panther Party’s
chapters around the country from certain activities. He believes
the decision was politically motivated: “They’re protecting the
environment of what the party might do. And it’s going to give them
a lot more authority in the next election.” He notes that signals
may now have been sent that “intimidation at the polls against poll
watchers challenging the fraudulent voters registered by ACORN is a
possibility.”
With Justice refusing to provide any further explanation,
suspicions are bound to linger. One of the defendants, Jerry
Jackson, is an elected member of Philadelphia’s 14th Ward
Democratic Committee and was a credentialed poll watcher for the
Democratic Party last Election Day. The Obama Justice Department
dropped all charges against him.
Hans von Spakovsky, a former official in Justice’s Civil Rights
Division under President Bush, told me he was shocked by Justice’s
turnaround in the Philadelphia case: “Imagine if the defendants had
been white and been intimidating voters and Justice had dropped the
case. There would have been a political earthquake.” In the wake of
Justice’s action, how ever, there has been little outcry or media
notice. Bull plans to keep the issue alive. “When he took office,
Attorney General Eric Holder stated that America was a nation of
‘cowards’ when it comes to race and that he was going to make civil
rights cases a top priority,” he told me. “But who are today’s
‘cowards’ on race? This kind of double standard is not what Martin
Luther King and Robert Kennedy fought for.”
DOUGLAS| 7.28.09 @ 10:36AM
AND YOU DON'T SAY OR DO NOTHING ABOUT THE 8 MONTHS SUSPENSED SENTENCE THAT 2 WHITES MALES GOT FOR THE DRAGGING DEATH OF A BLACK MALE IN BUSH HOME STATE OF PARIS,TEXAS; DO YOU REALLY LOVE THE WHITE GOP WOLF IN SHEEP CLOTHING THAT MUCH YOU PEOPLE SHOULD MAKE FAIR BOTH HUMANS SIDES RATHER THAN WHITES OUTLAW THUGS VS BLACK SHEEP!!!
weight | 11.12.09 @ 2:06PM
hi
Lelani J | 6.5.11 @ 9:41AM
An interesting article and one worth noting.UTI Treatment