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July 31, 2007 2:19 PM PDT

Story of 'Jena 6' ignites alternative newscape

by Josh Wolf
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If you search the New York Times or the LA Times for "Mychal Bell" you won't find a single article, but the 17 year-old African American is currently facing up to 22 years after being convicted by an all-white jury for aggravated battery and conspiracy to commit aggravated battery. Bell and five others were originally charged with attempted murder for their role in a fight with a white high school student.

Known as the "Jena Six," their story has all the characteristics of what you would expect to find in a high school history text profiling the racial tension in the South during the 1950s, but as a current event it has been completely ignored by the mainstream press though it has been covered by many independent media outlets.

Why is this? Does the mainstream media not want to acknowledge the grim reality that racism continues to plague our country? Or has our news media collectively decided that celebrities are the ones worth covering?

According to While Seated:
In September 2006, a group of African American high school students in Jena, Louisiana, asked the school for permission to sit beneath a "whites only" shade tree. There was an unwritten rule that blacks couldn't sit beneath the tree. The school said they didn't care where students sat. The next day, students arrived at school to see three nooses (in school colors) hanging from the tree.

The boys who hung the nooses were suspended from school for a few days. The school administration chalked it up as a harmless prank, but Jena's black population didn't take it so lightly. Fights and unrest started breaking out at school. The District Attorney, Reed Walters, was called in to directly address black students at the school and told them all he could "end their life with a stroke of the pen."

Black students were assaulted at white parties. A white man drew a loaded rifle on three black teens at a local convenience store. (They wrestled it from him and ran away.) Someone tried to burn down the school, and on December 4th, a fight broke out that led to six black students being charged with attempted murder.
How is it that Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan's drunken escapades rule the evening news while the details of this injustice are left to independent journalists and video bloggers to spread the word? Both Collateral and Radar have done an admirable job capturing the story of this injustice, but with less than 5,000 views between both videos it's obvious that much of the country is completely unaware of the 'Jena Six' and the DA who boasted he could "end their life with a stroke of the pen" before charging them with murder.

It is stories like these that demonstrate the flaws and weakness of our news media. The story of the 'Jena Six' deserves far more attention in newspapers and on television. The only explanations for its limited coverage is the fact that racism was supposed to have been suffocated years ago and the realization that it's ugly mug still walks our streets just doesn't inspire advertisers. When companies are faced with the decision to satisfy sponsors or deliver unpopular news, they frequently choose the sponsors and as a result the public suffers.
Josh Wolf is a journalist, an activist, and a life-long troublemaker. Having spent 226 days in jail to protect his work product, he knows first hand that a free press doesn't come cheap. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET.
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In all fairness
by AndrewJC August 1, 2007 5:58 AM PDT
True, you may not get any results if you search for this story on the NYT or LAT websites, but I did just hear a story about it on NPR the other day. I also heard about it back when it first happened, though I couldn't tell you where I originally read about it.
Reply to this comment
You missed this story.
by howardwitt August 1, 2007 7:57 AM PDT
www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-jena_bdmay20,0,4342867.story?coll=chi-newsnationworld-utl

chicagotribune.com
NATION
Racial demons rear heads
After months of unrest between blacks and whites in Louisiana town, some see racism and uneven justice
By Howard Witt

Tribune senior correspondent

May 20, 2007

JENA, La.

The trouble in Jena started with the nooses. Then it rumbled along the town's jagged racial fault lines. Finally, it exploded into months of violence between blacks and whites.

Now the 3,000 residents of this small lumber and oil town deep in the heart of central Louisiana are confronting Old South racial demons many thought had long ago been put to rest.

One morning last September, students arrived at the local high school to find three hangman's nooses dangling from a tree in the courtyard.

The tree was on the side of the campus that, by long-standing tradition, had always been claimed by white students, who make up more than 80 percent of the 460 students. But a few of the school's 85 black students had decided to challenge the accepted state of things and asked school administrators if they, too, could sit beneath the tree's cooling shade.

"Sit wherever you want," school officials told them. The next day, the nooses were hanging from the branches.

African-American students and their parents were outraged and intimidated by the display, which instantly summoned memories of the mob lynchings that once terrorized blacks across the American South. Three white students were quickly identified as being responsible, and the high school principal recommended that they be expelled.

"Hanging those nooses was a hate crime, plain and simple," said Tracy Bowens, a black mother of two students at the high school who protested the incident at a school board meeting.

But Jena's white school superintendent, Roy Breithaupt, ruled that the nooses were just a youthful stunt and suspended the students for three days, angering blacks who felt harsher punishments were justified.

"Adolescents play pranks," said Breithaupt, the superintendent of the LaSalle Parish school system. "I don't think it was a threat against anybody."

Yet it was after the noose incident that the violent, racially charged events that are still convulsing Jena began.

First, a series of fights between black and white students erupted at the high school over the nooses. Then, in late November, unknown arsonists set fire to the central wing of the school, which still sits in ruins. Off campus, a white youth beat up a black student who showed up at an all-white party. A few days later, another young white man pulled a shotgun on three black students at a convenience store.

Finally, on Dec. 4, a group of black students at the high school allegedly jumped a white student on his way out of the gym, knocked him unconscious and kicked him after he hit the floor. The victim -- allegedly targeted because he was a friend of the students who hung the nooses and had been taunting blacks -- was not seriously injured and spent only a few hours in the hospital.

But the LaSalle Parish district attorney, Reed Walters, opted to charge six black students with attempted second-degree murder and other offenses, for which they could face a maximum of 100 years in prison if convicted. All six were expelled from school.

To the defendants, their families and civil rights groups that have examined the events, the attempted murder charges brought by a white prosecutor are excessive and part of a pattern of uneven justice in the town.

The critics note, for example, that the white youth who beat the black student at the party was charged only with simple battery, while the white man who pulled the shotgun at the convenience store wasn't charged with any crime at all. But the three black youths in that incident were arrested and accused of aggravated battery and theft after they wrestled the weapon from the man -- in self-defense, they said.

"There's been obvious racial discrimination in this case," said Joe Cook, executive director of the Louisiana chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, who described Jena as a "racial powder keg" primed to ignite. "It appears the black students were singled out and targeted in this case for some unusually harsh treatment."

That's how the mother of one of the defendants sees things as well.

"They are sending a message to the white kids, 'You have committed this hate crime, you were taunting these black children, and we are going to allow you to continue doing what you are doing,'" said Caseptla Bailey, mother of Robert Bailey Jr.

Bailey, 17, is caught up in several of the Jena incidents, as both a victim and alleged perpetrator. He was the black student who was beaten at the party, and he was among the students arrested for allegedly grabbing the shotgun from the man at the convenience store. And he's one of the six students charged with attempted murder for the Dec. 4 attack.

The district attorney declined repeated requests to be interviewed for this story. But other white leaders insist there are no racial tensions in the community, which is 85 percent white and 12 percent black.

"Jena is a place that's moving in the right direction," said Mayor Murphy McMillan. "Race is not a major local issue. It's not a factor in the local people's lives."

Still others, however, acknowledge troubling racial undercurrents in a town where only 16 years ago white voters cast most of their ballots for David Duke, the former Ku Klux Klan leader who ran unsuccessfully for Louisiana governor.

"I've lived here most of my life, and the one thing I can state with absolutely no fear of contradiction is that LaSalle Parish is awash in racism -- true racism," a white Pentecostal preacher, Eddie Thompson, wrote in an essay he posted on the Internet. "Here in the piney woods of central Louisiana ... racism and bigotry are such a part of life that most of the citizens do not even recognize it."

The lone black member of the school board agrees.

"There's no doubt about it -- whites and blacks are treated differently here," said Melvin Worthington, who was the only school board member to vote against expelling the six black students charged in the beating case. "The white kids should have gotten more punishment for hanging those nooses. If they had, all the stuff that followed could have been avoided."

And the troubles at the high school are not over yet.

On May 10, police arrested Justin Barker, 17, the white victim of the Dec. 4 beating. He was alleged to have a rifle loaded with 13 bullets stashed behind the seat of his pickup truck parked in the school lot. Barker told police he had forgotten it was there and had no intention of using it.

----------

hwitt@tribune.com

Copyright © 2007, Chicago Tribune
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jena6' GOD HAS YOUR SIDE
by fortheloveofGodKim September 17, 2007 12:42 AM PDT
This is why all Blacks NEED to ENTER the Gates of HEAVEN! We as an people need to WAKE UP! And arouse to the EVER So FRIGHTNING CRYS OF THE CHILDREN. THEY TO HAVE EVERY RIGHT TO STAND TALL WITH THERE HEADS LIFTED HIGH AND CHINS STRAIGHT AS OUR GRANDPARENTS TOUGHT US THESE BABY DON'T DESERVE THIS. I AM ONLY AN TINY GRAIN OF SAND SO SMALL AND EASY TO BE IGNORED. AS I SAT HERE READING THIS STORY OF WIT BITS AND PEACES HAD BEEN BROUGHT TO ME BY MY CLIENTS . I HAD TO GO ONE ON ONE WITH THE ARTICLE. THIS IS AN STORY AN FACT THAT OUR PEOPLE HAVE NO OTHER CHOICE BUT TO TAKE AN STAND FOR OUR CHILDREN THEY NEED US MORE NOW THEN EVER. I LIVE IN AN CITY WERE WE HAVE BLACK ON BLACK CRIME EVERY DAY AND TO HAND DELIVER THIS STORY TO THE CORNER BOYS WILL ALLOW THEM TO SEE WHAT THERE BROTHERS ARE DEALING WITH SOUTH SHOULD THICKEN THEIR TONGES. AND SOFTEN THEIR HEARTS. THEY HAVE NO LEADERS. WHEN WILL I HEAR THOSE RUMBELING SOUNDS OF GOD' UNITING US CHIDREN OF COLOR TO PROTECT WHATS OURS,THEY ARE WHATS LEFT OF OUR FUTURE AND THEY ONLY CAN TURN TO US. WHEN WE COME TOGETHER WE ARE BLACK AND BLACK DONT CRACK. I KNOW THAT JESUS IS HOLDING THE HANDS OF THESE JENA 6 CHILDREN AND WILL DELIVER THEM HOME TO THEIR FAMILIES,UNTOUCHED AND FREE! GOD HAS CONTROL OF THIS AND ITS SEALED AND DELIEVERED.GOD DON'T LIKE UGLY AND UGLY SHALL BE DEALT WITH.ON THE DAY OF THE HEARING FROM PHILDELPHIA TO THE TOWN OF JENA LOUISIANA THE DAY WILL BE SUNNY AND CLEAR SO ALL OF OUR UNITED PRAYORS WILL BE SHARED. THE TOWN WILL BE OVER FLOWN! BY THE BEATS OF OUR ANCESTOR'S DRUMS WE WILL RUN TO FIGHT THIER BATTLE AND DEFEND, TO WHILE STANDING TALL, WITH ARMOR BUILT FROM SOLID LOVE, AND HELMITS MOLDED FROM MELTED STONE AND TEARS. THE VOICES UNITED SO LOUD FOR JENA TO BERE. JUST LET OUR CHILDREN GO AND WILL LEAVE RIGHT OUT OF HERE. THE TIME HAS COME TO LIGHT. AND OUR CHILDREN HAVE TO SEE OF HOW ONCE BLACK UNITED USE TO BE. SO IF YOU READ THIS CHILDREN OF JENA 6' YOU ALL MADE AN DIFFANCE AFTER THIS, I ONCE THOUGHT THAT OUR GREAT LEADERS WERE GONE! SO STAND TALL WITH YOUR HEADS UP HIGH AS WE DEROGATE THAT TREE DOWN WITH YOUR VICTORY. THE 6 OF YOU HAVE JUST KICKED THE DOOR OPEN THAT WAS JUST ABOUT TO CLOSE. JESUS HOLDS YOUR HANDS AND GOD HAS HEARD YOUR CRY! BY PLANE,BY BUS,BY TRAIN,AND CAR. JENA 6 CHILDREN YOUR FAMILY IS ON THEIR WAY. WE PRAY FOR YOU AND SEND OUR LOVE MS.K IN PHILADELPHIA
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Hate Crime
by Pete155 September 20, 2007 7:05 AM PDT
It amazes me to see that a white student is attacked by six black students, but because some other white students hung some nooses from a tree he must have been asking for it. If your inferring that racism is a live and well in the U.S. I would agree, but it is the black community that is racist. Tell me, what should the six black students have been charged with. Why weren't they charged with a hate crime? Why weren't they charged with federal civil rights violations. The attack took place on school grounds, didn't this prevent the white student from receiving schooling. Doesn't the white student have a right to attend school. And please don't refer to six people (regardless of race) attacking one person as a "fight".
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About Media Sphere

Josh Wolf first became interested in the power of the press after writing and distributing a screed against his high school's new dress code. Within a short time, the new dress code was abandoned, and ever since then he's been getting his hands dirty deconstructing the media every step of the way. Wolf recently became the longest-incarcerated journalist for contempt of court in U.S. history after he spent 226 days in federal prison for his refusal to cooperate. In Media sphere, Josh shares his daily insights on the developing information landscape and examines how various corporate and governmental actions effect the free press both in the United States and abroad.

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