by Black August Los Angeles

It’s happening this Saturday, Dec. 12, 6:30 p.m., at Leimert Park’s Kaos Network, 4343 Leimert Blvd. Let’s support this brotha!

For more info, check out ‘Operation Small Axe’ trailer.
Police don’t want to be tried in Oakland for murder of Oscar Grant; the OPD and the DA have no case against JR, and the judge says JR is “reckless” for maintaining his innocence. Imagine that!
Contact Black August Los Angeles at blkaugustla@gmail.com.
‘Oakland DA ain’t nothin’ but a liar; she knows JR didn’t start no fire’
Protesters demand: Drop charges against JR Valrey!
by Chris Kinder

The demonstrators chanted, “Oakland DA ain’t nothin’ but a liar; she knows JR didn’t start no fire,” to rhythmic percussion provided by the Brass Liberation Orchestra, which provided some music to call attention to the event – as they have done at protests of hearings on the SF 8 case earlier this year.
Signs read, “Defend JR Valrey,” and “Drop All Charges Against Protesters of the Police Murder of Oscar Grant.” Many attended the hearing, in which a discovery motion was discussed. The beginning of JR’s trial was put over to Feb. 22.
Starting at just after 8 a.m., protesters passed out information on the case and got a good reception from many going into court. South Bay friends of death row political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal came up from San Jose for the protest, while others represented Critical Resistance and All Of Us Or None. Still more responded to flyers and emails put out by the Labor Action Committee to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal.
Raised in East Oakland, JR Valrey courageously pursues a dangerous career in the inner city – that of honest journalist. While the mainstream media is fully “embedded” in a racist and corrupt capitalist system, reporters like JR seek out the truth about the murderous brutality that accompanies the police occupation of the Black community.

Oscar Grant was a young Black retail grocery worker and father of a young daughter. He was shot in the back at point blank range by a BART cop as he lay face down on the Fruitvale station platform on New Years Day. Strikingly clear cell-phone videos were taken of the incident by numerous witnesses on the station platform, and this is the only reason that the cop, Johannes Mehserle, has been charged with murder. In hundreds of police shootings of young Black males in California, only one other cop has faced murder charges.
Outrage over this blatant execution of an innocent man – who was not resisting arrest – spread through the community. Protesters closed three BART stations, attacked police cars, and a thousand protesters marched on City Hall. As JR reported, the march was composed of “an almost equal number of Blacks, Latinos, Asians and whites. In a phone call that evening, he said he’d never seen such solidarity. ‘Everybody’s got everybody’s back,’ he said” (SF Bay View, Jan. 9, 2009).
Over 100 protesters were arrested in police actions that tried to paint the people, rather than killer cops, as the problem. Meanwhile, BART officials failed to interrogate Mehserle for a whole week after the incident, while Oakland Mayor Dellums seemed much more concerned about street protests and broken store windows than he did about police brutality and shootings of young Black men.

Still, one killer cop facing a jury composed of members of the community he was supposed to “protect and serve” is more than the system can bear. Mehserle’s trial has now been moved to Los Angeles.
The vital role of the witnesses with the cell phones at the shooting of Oscar Grant can’t help but remind us of how the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense got started. Acting in the tradition of Robert F. Williams, Deacons for Defense and Justice, and other heroes of armed self defense of Black communities, Huey Newton and Bobby Seale stood armed nearby police actions in the Black community to warn people of their rights and protect them from serious abuse by their presence as witnesses. The cell phone witnesses couldn’t save Oscar Grant, but they did use the weapons they had to provide unavoidable evidence of a police crime as it happened.
JR Valrey, the minister of information of the Prisoners of Conscience Committee (POCC), continues the same tradition with his journalism. The similarities between JR’s case and that of Mumia Abu-Jamal – who was known as the “voice of the voiceless” – are striking. Jamal was fingered for a cop killing by police, who knew him for his earlier struggles against the notoriously racist Philadelphia police, in particular his biting exposure on local radio of a brutal assault on the living compound of MOVE, a local Black community group.
Chris Kinder, a member of the Labor Action Committee to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal, can be reached at CStephenKinder@aol.com. This story originally appeared on Indybay.org.

