Is the World Crazy? Or is it me?

Friday, September 21, 2007

The Jena 6: Exposing the Crazy Injustice System of America



Fifty years ago, national guards were called to escort nine African- American students into an all Caucasian high school. The integration of American schools marked a major civil rights milestone for people of color. It is rather unfortunate that on this very anniversary we are reminded that the undercurrent of the Jim Crow era has not disappeared. Demonstrations are being held all over the country, to protest the unjust prosecution of six young black men dubbed, “The Jena 6".

The chain of events that took place in Jena, Louisiana, exposed the inadequacies plaguing America’s criminal “justice” system. A system that has allowed black students to face life in prison for a campus brawl, while the acts of aggression initiated by their white counterparts go unpunished and are largely downplayed by authorities, is flawed. The case of Jena 6 not only reveals the racial based preferential nature of our justice system, but also shows how the lack of economic privilege can leave one extremely vulnerable to being engulfed by the prison industrial complex. Mychal Bell is a prime example of this. His family was unable to fund a lawyer, forcing him to rely on the assistance of an apathetic public defender. The assigned defender offered Mychal no solid defense; he failed to call any witnesses and allowed the trial to proceed with an all white jury. Mychal didn’t stand a chance. At 16 years old, he was tried as an adult, convicted of aggravated battery and faced up to 22 years in prison.

Not until the national attention and scrutiny of Mychal’s court handlings, was it determined that he should have in fact been tried in a juvenile court and that his initial conviction should be overturned. Although these new findings have been established, Mychal remains in an adult prison facility until his juvenile court hearing. He has remained unable to pay his $90,000.00 bail.

I do not believe that cases such as the Jena 6 exist in a vacuum, but are rather symptomatic of a society that we belong to. A society that is discriminatory based on race and socioeconomic background. It is crazy to think that 50 years after the integration of school campuses, battles for racial equality are still being fought.