Finding Justice Within The System

Finding Justice Within The System FRANKIE HARRIS DEATH ROW DENNIS PLAYER  VIEWS ON THIS CHARGE ROANLD HAMILTON JR. MENTAL ILLNESS UN-JUSTICE SYSTEM  news S.C.I. GREENE About MICHAEL PERRY

Finding the help that these innocent people need to get the research and testing done to prove their innocence is sometimes the hardest part.

i can say that if everyone ever read into more of the judicial system in our counrty and really read it, they would see it all for themselves just what are some of the problems that i see this country faces everyday in the unjustice it is doing to people in our own country. Tearing apart lives and families, and not always rightfully the truth.

they say the truth will set you free...but what if you find yourself telling the truth, and it doesnt set you free.. and you find yourself in prison or worse yet, on death row for a crime you did not commit at all. and yet they are able to falsely accuse you, sometimes get their unjust and unfair CONFESSION, coerced or threatened, there are many ways, and then they take you to court and somehow PROVE you are the criminal they say you are, and you are then in a system of neglect, mistreatment, and abuse. the people who are dying due to denial of medical service. and then you are ignored by the so called 'court appointed attorneys" and they dont answer your phone calls, the many many letters that you continue to write and they are just plain done with you. they did their so called job, maybe showed up at court that day on time, and seen you for 4 minutes or so before your trial, and there you are, a part of a system, and now ignored by all,. that is how you feel, and sooner or later. that is probably how it is...then what .. who's there........who's gonna listen???? who wants to hear it??? I DO!

I HAVE THREE CASES RIGHT NOW THAT I AM LOOKING TO FIND HELP FOR. THEY ARE INNOCENT AND WITHOUT ANYONE WANTING TO HELP THEM TO PROVE THEIR INNOCENCE. AND SHOW THAT THE JUSTICE SYSTEM HAS FLAWS. WE SEE IT EVERYDAY IN THE NEWS! THINK ABOUT IT.

FOR SOME I KNOW THEY DONT WANT TO ADMIT THERE ARE PROBLEMS. BUT THERE ARE. LETS FACE IT. YOU SEE IT IN THE NEWS. PEOPLE SET FREE EVEN FROM DEATH ROW. AFTER DNA TESTING, NEW EVIDENCE, NEW WITNESSES. RECANTED EVIDENCE, AND PEOPLE WHO THOUGHT THEY SEEN YOU, BUT LATER REALIZED THEY DIDNT.

PEOPLE WHO SET OTHERS UP AND FOR PERSONAL REASONS, OR EVEN ESPECIALLY FOR MARITAL PROBLEMS, THAT IS ONE WAY TO GET RID OF YOUR HUSBAND RIGHT. SET HIM UP, DONT LET HIM HAVE HIS LIFE, AND YOU GO ON WITH YOURS. ITS THE GREEDY ONES. AND NOT ONLY THE WIFE..BUT SOMETIMESE THE HUSBAND TOO.

ITS THE CHARGES THEY COME TO YOU AND ARREST YOU FOR, AND YOU CANT FIGURE OUT WHY..TILL YOUR SITTING IN A JAIL AND WONDERING WHAT IS GOING ON?? WHERE AM I GONNA GET THE MONEY TO PAY A LAWYER, OHHHHH THATS OK. THEY HAVE COURT APPOINTED ONES....

STUDIES SHOW THAT SOME OF THEM DONT COME TO SEE YOU BEFORE YOUR CASE, JUST WANT THE EASY WAY OUT, DONT GET PAID MORE TO GET YOU THE TRUTH, JUST WANT YOU TO SAY WHAT THEY SAY TO DO. AND THEN THEIRS THE MENTALLY ILL, AND THEY ARE THINKING HEY THESE LAWYERS THE LAW SAYS, IS LOOKING OUT FOR ME! AND FIND YOURSELF FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE AND THEY HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED...DID THEIR JOB. DONE WIHT COURT. YOUR ON DEATH ROW, THEY ARE OUT AND PROBABLY DOING THE SAME TO THE NEXT UNLIKELY CANIDATE.

THERE IS A LAW AGAINST THE DEATH PENALTY WITH MENTAL RETARDATION?? YES THERE IS ..AND YET THEY ARE THERE.!! DONT LET ANYONE LIE TO YOU. THEY ARE THERE. THERE ARE YOUNGER ADULTS. SENTENCED TO DIE, AND YET THEY SAY, "WE DONT PUT CHILDREN UNDER THE AGE OF 18 ON DEATH ROW" THEN WHY IS IT THAT THERE IS? WHY? I DONT KNOW.. THERE IS ALOT WRONG WITH OUR JUSTICE SYSTEM AND IT IS JUST NOT FAIR.

YOUVE GOT TO THINK ABOUT THIS. SOMEDAY IT COULD HAPPEN TO YOU.

Date: Apr 12, 2007 7:45 PM Posted on Thu, Apr. 12, 2007 Ex-prosecutor, freed inmates call for end to Pa. death penalty By MARYCLAIRE DALE Twenty people who have been exonerated after spending a combined 150 years on death row are calling Friday for a moratorium on capital punishment in Pennsylvania. More than a dozen other states have enacted bans or halted executions amid concerns about wrongful convictions, racial inequities, botched executions and other issues. Nationally, 123 people have been freed from death row after being exonerated, including at least six in Pennsylvania, advocacy groups say. "I try to give people food for thought, that this is something that can take someone's life and liberty," said Ray Krone, 50, of Dover Township, who was cleared of murder through DNA after spending 10 years in prison, including three on Arizona's death row. "I learned about it the hard way, during many years of contemplation in my jail cell," he said. Supporters of a ban, including Innocence Project co-founder Barry Scheck, planned a Friday afternoon rally at the Liberty Bell organized by a group called Witness to Innocence. The scheduled speakers include a former Texas prosecutor who now believes his office helped execute an innocent man and a once-condemned Philadelphia man, Harold Wilson, who was acquitted of a triple murder after a 2005 retrial. "The death penalty is something that polarizes people right away," said Krone, who once supported capital punishment. Then the postal worker was convicted not once, but twice, of killing a female bartender at a Phoenix lounge where he played darts. He was released in 2002, and later won a $4.4 million settlement for the decade he lost in prison. Krone now works for Witness to Innocence, campaigning and helping others who suffered his fate adjust to life after prison. Sixty percent of the 225 people currently on death row in Pennsylvania are black, compared to 10.6 percent of the state's population, according to state and Census Department figures. Five are women. In March 2003, a state Supreme Court committee on racial and gender bias called for a moratorium on executions until it could be assured the death penalty was being applied fairly. The group's 550-page report concluded that race appeared to play a major, "if not overwhelming" role in its use in some counties. Gov. Ed Rendell, who opposed the recommendation, has signed 64 death warrants. His aides have said he supports the death penalty but wants to ensure it is applied fairly. Only three inmates have been executed in the state since the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment in 1976. http://www.centredaily.com/129/story/67003.html