The Philadelphia City Paper and one of its senior staff writers have joined in a federal lawsuit against Philadelphia’s district attorney and the state’s attorney general over a controversial new law that greatly limits the free speech rights of criminal offenders.
“We filed the suit because the law is clearly unconstitutional, violating both free speech and due process rights,” Daniel Denvir, the writer at the City Paper, wrote on Thursday about why he joined in the lawsuit. “The law is frighteningly vague and pathetically tailored to scapegoat criminal offenders in an effort to bolster politicians’ law-and-order bona fides.”
In October of last year, outgoing Governor Tom Corbett signed the Revictimization Relief Act aimed at stopping former offenders from causing continued “mental anguish” of victims and their families by allowing victims and their families to sue offenders to keep them from making public statements that might cause the victims harm. Now, Denvir and the other plaintiffs are suing to overturn the law.
The Revictimization Relief Act was passed by a large majority in the state legislature and hinged almost entirely on silencing one man in particular: Mumia Abu-Jamal. Abu-Jamal was convicted in 1981 in the shooting death of Philadelphia Police Officer Daniel Faulkner. Originally sentenced to death, Abu-Jamal’s sentence was commuted to life in prison in 2011.
Abu-Jamal, a former journalist turned political activist, has become one of the most divisive figures in Philadelphia and the country, as he is reviled by many who view him as nothing more than a cop-killer, and celebrated by others who say he was wrongfully convicted by a notoriously racist judge and an all-white jury. His has become an international cause célèbre, garnering the support of various politicians, labor unions, non-profit and human and civil rights organizations.
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In the years since the killing, Abu-Jamal has authored several books from behind bars, including his 1995 opus, “Live from Death Row,” as well as countless essays and op-eds. But perhaps most controversially, Abu-Jamal has delivered commencement addresses and participated in various panel discussions via telephone and recorded message. He has also been a regular contributor to online radio programs and documentaries.
The Revictimization Relief Act was passed just days after a recorded speech by Abu-Jamal was played at a commencement ceremony at Goddard College in Vermont. In the speech, Abu-Jamal never uttered Officer Faulkner’s name or made any reference to his killing. Still, the playing of his largely hopeful and encouraging message of “Take what you know, and apply it in the real world” and “help be the change you’re seeking to make,” drew the angst of Faulkner’s family and the Philadelphia police union.









