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The
Bomb
On August 17, 1970, Omaha patrolman Larry Minard was killed
by a bomb planted in a suitcase while he was searching an abandoned house.
The police were responding to a 911 call that claimed a woman was being
taken into a house against her will, possibly to be raped. Soon after
the death of Minard, Duane Peak, a fifteen-year-old Black youth, who
had been a member of the NCCF, was terrorized into confessing to planting
the bomb and making the 911 call. Peak made a series of sworn statements
to the police that he acted alone. He did not implicate or mention Mondo or
Poindexter.
However,
after the police interrogated him and threatened him with the electric
chair, he changed his story and Mondo and Poindexter were soon after charged
with murder. Peak himself was allowed to plead to a lesser charge of “juvenile
delinquency” in exchange for his testimony.
But Peak would prove to be an unreliable witness for the prosecution. Under
police pressure he told at least six different stories about the bombing, and
at a key moment in the trial he blurted out the truth, only to be bludgeoned
back into lying. At Mondo and Poindexter's 1971 trial, the prosecuting attorney
asked Peak if they had anything to do with the killing.
Peak responded
by saying no, at which time the prosecutor asked for a recess. When the
trial reconvened, the prosecutor once again asked Peak if Mondo and Poindexter
were involved and he responded yes, they were involved.
Peak was
wearing dark sunglasses when he returned to court after the recess. When
he was asked to remove the glasses by the defense counsel, many of those
present in the courtroom couldn't help but notice that he appeared to have
been beaten and was crying. Ernie Chambers, who was present in court that
day and later became one of the few Black state senators in Nebraska's
unicameral legislature, told the BBC that, “a noticeable gasp” was heard
from the courtroom audience who were shocked at Peak's condition.
Dynamite and other bomb-making material was found during an illegal search
of Mondo we Langa's home while he was out of town, but Mondo has always maintained
that the material was planted. The police could not find Mondo or Poindexter's
fingerprints on the dynamite and were not clear as to the exact location of
the dynamite in Mondo we Langa's house. The Omaha Police claimed that after
Mondo and Poindexter were arrested, the clothes they wore were tested and were
found to have dynamite particles in the shirt and pants' pockets. Yet, Mondo's
and Poindexter's hands were tested for dynamite particles and none were found
there or on the rest of their clothing. The forensic tests were so faulty,
according to the defense, that they could have easily tested positive for such
items as kitchen matches or phosphorous detergents, among other household products
used for cleaning. Mondo's home mysteriously burned down after their trial
was over.
The only
other evidence was a tape recording of the 911 call that police claim Peak
made, but then claimed was destroyed by accident. Peak testified that he
made the 911 call, but since the police claimed that no recording existed,
jurors had to take Peak at his word that he made the call. The whole case
ultimately rested on that tape recording. In an interview with the Washington
Post on January 8, 1978, County Prosecutor Art O'Leary admitted that
without Peak's testimony, Mondo and Poindexter would not have been convicted.
Also, Peak was never tested for dynamite particles.
The trial
judge, Donald A. Hamilton, overruled the defense motions to suppress the
alleged “evidence” found in the home of Mondo and on the clothing of both
of them. They were found guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced to
life in prison. The lone Black juror later said that he voted to convict Mondo
and Poindexter on the condition that the death penalty was not imposed. Peak
was sentenced to four years at a juvenile facility and released in 1974. After
his release, he promptly disappeared for more than two decades.
Mondo and Poindexter appealed their convictions to the Nebraska Supreme Court,
which denied their requests for a new trial and upheld their convictions. A
Federal court later overturned Mondo's conviction, ruling that the search of
his home and clothing violated his rights against unreasonable search and seizure.
But their hopes for a new trial were dashed in 1976 when the U.S. Supreme Court
overruled the lower court's decisions in favor of the prosecution. Mondo and
Poindexter have remained in prison ever since, despite the efforts of Amnesty
International, which has called for their immediate release or a new trial,
and the support of such prominent individuals as the recently deceased former
governor of Nebraska, Frank Morrison.
Two decades after their arrest, Jack Swanson, an Omaha Police Department detective
and one of the key figures in the persecution of Mondo and Poindexter, starkly
revealed to the BBC the political agenda behind the case. “We feel we got the
two main players in Mondo and Poindexter, and I think we did the right thing
at the time, because the Black Panther Party... completely disappeared from
the city of Omaha... and it's... been the end of that sort of thing in the
city of Omaha—and that's 21 years ago.”
Since 1993, the Nebraska Parole Board has voted unanimously and repeatedly
to commute both men's sentences to time served. However, the Nebraska Board
of Pardons (made up of elected officials—the governor, the attorney general,
and secretary of state) has refused to grant a pardon or commutation for Mondo
or Poindexter. One member of the Board of Pardons has even declared that there
are “no circumstances” under which he would consider commutation.
Suppressed Evidence
It has been known since the late 1970s that the Black Panther Party and its
supporters were victims of political repression spearheaded by the FBI working
with local police departments across the country during the 1960s and 70s.
Mondo and Poindexter were repeatedly harassed and under surveillance from the
FBI and the Omaha police, but it was only after their trial that the role of
the FBI in suppressing key evidence was revealed. For supporters of Mondo and Poindexter,
the role of Duane Peak in the bombing death of Minard has always been a point
of contention.
Did Peak
really make a bomb and plant it? Did he, in fact, make the 911 call that
brought Minard and police officers to the house, where the bomb exploded?
How would a troubled fifteen-year-old get the knowledge to build a bomb
and detonate it? Why would he do it? The prosecution tried to argue that
Poindexter provided the bomb-making skills because he was a veteran, but
he was a medical aide and mechanic in the military, not an explosives expert.
The prosecution's case rested on the recording of the 911 call that they
claimed had been destroyed.
While we may never know exactly who destroyed the original tape
recording, we do know that the FBI and the local police knew what
was on it and made every effort to prevent the defense from getting
it. According to an FBI memo dated October 13, 1970, “Assistant COP
[Chief of Police] GLENN GATES, Omaha PD, advised that he feels that
any use of tapes of this call might be prejudicial to the police murder
trial against two accomplices of PEAK and, therefore, has advised that
he wishes no use of this tape until after the murder trials of PEAK
and the two accomplices has been completed.” When we
translate the bureaucratic language of the FBI into plain English, the memo
clearly reveals that the Omaha Police felt that the real contents of
the call didn't help their case. The FBI memo continued, “no further
efforts are being made at this time to secure additional tape recordings
of the original telephone call.”
In 2005, a copy of the tape of the 911 call was uncovered. On January
23, 2006, Bob Bartle, Ed Poindexter's attorney, obtained a ruling
from Douglas County, Nebraska, District Court Judge Richard Spethman
to compel Duane Peak to give a voice sample for examination and comparison
to the 911 caller.
Duane Peak,
who had been living under the name of Gabriel Peak in Washington state,
complied with the court's request in February and gave a sample of his
voice. Tom Owens, one of the leading audio analysts in the country, has
testified for the prosecution and the defense in twenty states. In a written
opinion in April, Owens stated that “the voice of Duane Peak from 2006 is NOT
the same voice” on the 911 tape. Is this enough to get Ed Poindexter a new
trial? “We have a shot,” says Bob Bartle. Hearings will be held in December
and January to determine whether this will happen. But after three decades,
this is an important development in a case that too few people are aware of
and exemplifies the legacy of political repression in 1960s and 1970s.
Legacy of Repression
“There are hundreds, perhaps even thousands of people I would call political
prisoners” in the United States, declared Andrew Young in 1978, when he was the
U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Young's indiscreet remarks ignited a hailstorm
of attacks from newspapers and politicians across the country. That same year,
Amnesty International published a report that found that criminal activities
of the FBI's COINTELPRO operations had undermined the trials of a number of political
activists during the 1970s, the most prominent of whom was American Indian Movement
activist Leonard Peltier. It has been decades since a major political figure
in the United States has so publicly spoken about political prisoners in this
country.
In 1980,
former FBI Director L. Patrick Grey and Edward S. Miller, one-time head
of the FBI's domestic counterintelligence unit in New York, were convicted
of having “conspired to injure and oppress the citizens of the United States,” for
their involvement in COINTELPRO. They served no time in prison and were pardoned
in 1981 by President Reagan. Yet their victims remain in prison.
Currently,
Black journalist and Pennsylvania death row inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal and
Ed Poindexter have the possibility of new trials. A victory in one or both
cases could have an enormous impact in unlocking the doors of the American
gulag.
Letters of support can be written to:
Wopashitwe Mondo Eyen we Langa
(s/n David Rice) # 27768
P.O. Box 2500, Lincoln, NE 68542-2500
Ed Poindexter #27767
P.O. Box 2500, Lincoln, NE 68542-2500
NYC Jericho Movement, P.O. Box 670927, Bronx, NY 10467
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