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Panel Blasts Panther Case Dismissal

More news stories on Elections

Jerry Seper, Washington Times, August 4, 2009

The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights is demanding that the Justice Department explain why it recently dismissed a civil complaint against members of the New Black Panther Party who disrupted a Philadelphia polling place during last year’s election, saying the department has offered only “weak justifications.”

Commission Chairman Gerald A. Reynolds, a former deputy associate attorney general under President George W. Bush, said he fears the legal precedent set by the department in its May decision to drop the case might encourage “other hate groups” to act similarly at polling locations in the future.

Mr. Reynolds also charged that other groups might not have been treated so leniently.

“If you swap out the New Black Panther Party in this case for neo-Nazi groups or the Ku Klux Klan, you likely would have had a different outcome,” he told The Washington Times in a telephone interview Monday.

“A single law, a single rule should be applied across the board. We are communicating with the department in hopes of gaining a better understanding of just what happened.”

{snip}

In January, the Justice Department filed a civil complaint in Philadelphia against the New Black Panther Party after two of its members in black berets, black combat boots, black shirts and black jackets purportedly intimidated voters with racial insults, slurs and a nightstick. A third party member was accused of managing, directing and endorsing their behavior. The incident was captured on videotape.

Four months later, Justice officials dropped the charges because, they said, “the facts and the law did not support pursuing” them. {snip}

But before the charges were dropped, a federal judge in April ordered default judgments against the Panthers after the party members refused to respond to the charges or appear in court. The Justice Department was also in the final stages of seeking sanctions when a delay in the proceedings was ordered by Loretta King, acting assistant attorney general.

The ruling was issued after she met with Associate Attorney General Thomas J. Perrelli, the department’s No. 3 political appointee, who approved the decision, according to interviews with department officials who sought anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the case.

{snip}

In a June 16 letter, the commission told the Justice Department that {snip} even after the case had been won, the department “took the unusual move of voluntarily dismissing the charges,” which, it wrote, sent “the wrong message entirely—that attempts at voter suppression will be tolerated and will not be vigorously prosecuted so long as the groups or individuals who engage in them fail to respond to the charges leveled against them.”

{snip}

[Editor’s Note: Earlier stories on this case are listed here.]

Original article

(Posted on August 4, 2009)

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Comments

1 — phasedout wrote at 12:36 PM on August 6:

In my voting district, the polling place was relocated to a black school in the black community. I don’t know how many white people didn’t vote at all because of this. Pre-voting at the court house was flooded with older white people every day. I just wonder what this next election is going to bring. When I’ve tried to talk to White people about this, they actually act like it’s all ok!!!! And that I’m just paronoid.

2 — Quiet Professional wrote at 5:38 PM on August 8:

To phasedout:

Great name - it’s exactly what’s being done to us. Also, your mentioning of the relocation of your polling place is a move that not only did I not see coming, but one that will have a tremendously negative effect on white voters.

What a spectacular way to keep whites away from the voting booth, one that’s not only highly effective but “unspeakable” as well. How many average white citizens would lodge a complaint, as the truth of the matter - fear of injury or assault - is a subject that will quickly bring screams of “Racist!”

I watched that YouTube video of the Panthers at the polling place when it was posted here within a previous article. As a cop, the first thing I wondered was why nobody called the police? No matter what the perpetrator’s race, carrying a stick in the fashion the one Panther did easily amounts to an arrestable misdemeanor.


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