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Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

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Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘maurice clemmons’

Some in Clemmons Family Did Right Thing

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

In my posts about the Maurice Clemmons murder story, I took those of his family members who aided him in evading police to task for their stupid behavior.  I may even have spread a report I read that was not true that his aunt was one of those.  With this post, I want to correct the record and note two important stories about close relatives who acted humanely and even bravely in their interaction with him.

First, when Clemmons’ aunt, who lives in Leschi a few blocks from my home, received a call from the killer, she actually turned him in to the police:

“He trusted me,” Chrisceda Clemmons said. “He trusted that I wouldn’t turn him in.”

But she did. And she was the only one…

“I was in shock,” Chrisceda Clemmons said. “That’s when we gathered the kids up and sent them away. I believed Maurice when he said he had killed people. I knew he was very angry and frustrated. He was paranoid, and he was very frustrated and sick of the police.”

“Tired of these bitches,” is how he put it. He told her he had shot the officers intentionally, and believed that they were trying to charge him with rape, which would have given him “three strikes” and sent him back to prison for life.

Unfortunately, Seattle police did not catch him if he did actually go to her house, as he told her he planned to do.  But she did the right thing.  It’s astonishing that with three young children in the home, Clemmons felt no compunction about putting them all in danger.

She said something quite insightful also about Clemmons’ death:

“I was actually relieved,” she said. “That he died was the best thing for him. He would rather die than go back to prison.”

Still, “I felt it was a terrible tragedy that he had to lose his life because of his mental disability,” she said.

And she feels awful about the Lakewood officers. Their families. Their children. “It’s a terrible tragedy for anyone to lose their lives this way, and I’m sorry.”

The police siege turned the woman’s home into a pigsty with every window and furniture broken, and tear gas canisters everywhere, and the pall of smoke still lingering.  Undoubtedly, it will costs thousands of dollars for her to repair the damage and return her home to livable standards.  And the city will not provide restitution till she completes a review process.  Can you imagine losing your home for weeks if not longer because you’re so unlucky as to have a murderous nephew?  It seems unfair.  I hope the city does right by her as she has done right by the city.

The Seattle Times also profiles Clemmons’ uncle who is an Arkansas corrections officer.  This is a decent man, torn up by his cousin’s rampage and deeply sorry to the families of the victims.  Though one can never explain, defend or justify such behavior, reading these stories at least allows you to understand to a limited degree where all the paranoia and bitterness came from in his life:

“I think all of this just piled up,” Ray Clemmons said. “The rape charge was going to cost him his wife. He was looking at going to prison again, maybe for life. He got taken to the brink, and he snapped.”

There is a truly bizarre development in this case: apparently one of the city personnel in the ambulance in which Clemmons’ corpse laid, took a photograph of the dead, partially clothed body.  I’ve seen the picture and you won’t see it here.  I hope whoever took and released this picture on the internet either loses their job or gets severely disciplined.  Even a serial killer like this deserves a shred of human dignity.  Or would people prefer to drag his body through the streets like they did to the U.S. Marines in Mogadishu?  Would that be sufficient vengeance for his horrible crimes?

It’s Feet to the Fire Time, Mike

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Maurice Clemmons' commutation petition

Mike Huckabee has some explaining to do.  He commuted Maurice Clemmons 95-year prison sentence after the man petitioned for reconsideration of his case.  Clemmons’ letter was, in retrospect masterfully manipulative and catered to Huckabee’s homespun belief in Christian values and the notion of repentance and redemption from sin.  In other words, Clemmons played Huckabee for a fool, using every cliché in the book:

I come from a very good Christian family and I was raised much better than my actions speak.  (I’m still ashamed to this day for the shame my stupid involvement in these crimes brought upon my family name.)

He also asks for mercy:

Since that [parole] hearing the angel of death has visited and taken away my dear sweet mother and this more than anything has effected change for the good in my heart.  Because now I have to live with all that I put her through I wasn’t able to be with her and make her proud of me before she passed.

I’ve never done anything good for God but I’ve prayed for him to grant me in his compassion the grace for a start…

I think my institutional adjustment has been exemplary…and the ends of justice have been achieved because I am no longer the same misguided youth I was  11 years ago.  I know I can, if given the opportunity lead a productive life in society.

…God bless You for Your time and consideration.  It is so prayed.

I have no problem that Mike Huckabee commuted sentences of three times as many prisoners as the three previous governors.  I have a problem with the fact that he introduced purely religious considerations into the commutation process substituting Christian dogma for good, hard-heated penal-oriented evaluation.  The governor wanted to believe that these prisoners could change through faith in Jesus or whatever.  But he did so in cases like this with almost no other evidence to back up such faith.  That was his mistake.

And the reason this is relevant to his presidential aspirations is that there is no reason to assume he won’t use the same considerations in formulating national policy.  Just look at his rabid support for the most extreme of settler groups, which follows his Christian Zionist principles that the Jews shouldn’t give up a single inch of divinely bestowed land to the Palestinians.  I don’t want a preacher or evangelist in the White House.  I want a president.

In the Comment is Free piece published today I forgot to mention the clear connections to Willie Horton.  Let this be a political cross that Mike Huckabee has to bear going into the 2012 primary race.

Huckabee is clearly attempting to do damage control with his statement released today which blamed errors of the “Washington State and Arkansas criminal justice systems.”  What he omits of course is that the governor is also a partner in that system.  In his case, he provided the signature on the commutation.  That’s his error.  He wants you to forget that in a blizzard of finger-pointing.

Don’t good Christians believe in accepting responsibility for their actions and their mistakes?  When will you do that, Mike?  There are four police officers dead and nine children without fathers or mother.  Don’t they deserve better from you?  Or is a pro forma statement preserving your political ass the best you can do.

On a related subject, Seattle police have accused family and friends of Clemmons of aiding him in his escape and possibly misleading police about his whereabouts.  Several individuals have been taken into custody and may be charged with violations.  This is a massive manhunt costing the taxpayers millions of dollars and wasting resources and diverting police from their normal job of protecting the city.  And Clemmons’ accomplices are acting like fools.  Does this sound like the good Christian family the convict boasted about in his petition to Gov. Huckabee?

But lest anyone think there’s no more blame to go around, get a load of this comedy of errors between Arkansas and Washington State prosecutors which reminds me of the Keystone Cops.

Huckabee in Hot Water over Clemency for Tacoma Police Killer

Monday, November 30th, 2009

All night long we’ve been hearing helicopters buzzing overhead and believe me this is not typical of Seattle.  We wondered what was going on and it seemed clear that there must be something serious happening nearby.

Police search the area of the police killings this morning (Kevin Casey/NYT)

Searching area of police killings this morning (Kevin Casey/NYT)

Independently, but almost at the same time, an astonishing series of events had taken place in western Washington today, practically in my own backyard.  Typical of this digital age I first learned about them in the online N.Y. Times, which revealed that four Lakewood (a town halfway between Tacoma and Olympia) police officers were gunned down in cold blood at a coffee shop this morning.  One of the officers got off a shot before he died, which apparently wounded the shooter.

The article revealed that police were looking for a suspect, Maurice Clemmons, who was alleged to have raped a 9 year old girl and assaulted a police officer.  Astonishingly, Clemmons had an earlier string of crimes when he lived in Arkansas where he was serving a 95-year sentence when then Gov. Mike Huckabee, offered him a clemency release.  Clemmons promptly relocated to Seattle where he went from being Huckabee and Arkansas’ problem to being our own.

Oh yeah, the first thing I thought of was how this is going to sink his next presidential campaign and we ought to keep his toes to the fire on this one.  Huckabee released this semi-obtuse statement:

“Should he be found responsible for this horrible tragedy, it will be the result of a series of failures in the criminal justice system in both Arkansas and Washington state,” Huckabee’s office said in a statement Sunday night.

What does that mean?  That Huckabee f(&#ed up or not?  Well, as CNN reports there is so much potential ineptitude revolving around this case that Huckabee may just be able to weasel out of it:

…Huckabee’s office said Clemmons’ commutation was based on the recommendation of the parole board that determined that he met the conditions for early release.

Huckabee cited Clemmons’ young age — 17 at the time of his sentencing — when he announced his decision to commute the sentence, according to newspaper articles.

“He was arrested later for parole violation and taken back to prison to serve his full term, but prosecutors dropped the charges that would have held him,” the statement said.

CNN could not immediately confirm the account. But the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette newspaper reported that soon after his release in 2001, Clemmons was arrested for aggravated robbery and theft.

He was taken back to prison for parole violation. But, said the paper, he was not served with the arrest warrants for the robbery and theft charges until he left prison three years later.

His attorney argued the charges should be dismissed because too much time had passed by then. And prosecutors dropped the charges.

You’re a better man than I Gunga Din if you can follow those last few sentences.  But if Huckabee can jumble the case up half as well as this, chances are this may not impact his future presidential bid as much as it should.

Huckabee can legitimately try to spread blame as far as Washington State as well.  Apparently, after his arrest for rape a judge ruled him ineligible for bond, but a second judge overruled the first and released him on $150,000 bail.  That was two weeks ago.  Ironically, one of the conditions was that he not use a firearm.

King County Bearcat tank at scene of Leschi standoff (@jseattle via Central District News)

King County Bearcat tank at scene of Leschi standoff (@jseattle via Central District News)

According to a local TV newscast, Clemmons wife said he had been “talking crazy” lately and that he believed he was Jesus and that the world was coming to an end.  Little did she know what this would mean for these police officers, whose world would come to an end this morning.  They leave behind a total of nine children who have lost a father or mother.

This news struck even closer to home when my wife visited a hyperlocal news site which revealed that the helicopter overflights in our neighborhood (continuing as I write this) are due to the siege of a home only 10 blocks or so from my own, where the wounded Clemmons is believed holed up.  The Seattle Times reports that the home is that of his aunt.  There are SWAT teams and hundreds of police officers camped out at the scene.  Astonishing in this usually calm placid city, where big news is sometimes an old lady’s cat getting stuck in a tree and being rescued by the fire department.

Even more astonishing is that the scene of the siege, which is at 32nd Yesler is only three blocks from the scene of another brutal police murder which happened only four weeks ago (the incidents are not related).  I feel like I’m walking through an episode of the Twilight Zone.