That is absolutely horrific. I'm not Jewish, but I will certainly send it to a few Jewish friends who can alert others. I thought cruel and unusual punishment was against your rights?Would Amnesty Internatinal or any of those type organizations help?
We take care of homeless dogs in the SPCA better than that. Then we want to preach "human rights" to the rest of the world.
Give me a break!
: An Unusual Snapshot of American Justice
: Esther Pollard
: 08 March 2001
: Text of Esther Pollardīs Remarks to The National Council of
: Young Israel 89th Annual Dinner - March 4, 2001
: I want to share with you tonight a story that I think will
: give you a quick and unusual snapshot of American justice
: as seen through the lens of the Pollard case: It was 3:00
: am when the prison guards came and shook Jonathan awake.
: "Get up!" they ordered. "What is going
: on?" Jonathan asked, "Get dressed,!" he was
: told, "You are going home!" "What!?"
: said Jonathan. "The Israelis have made a deal for your
: release," replied the guards," We have orders to
: get you to Andrews Air Force Base. A plane is waiting there
: to take you home."
: Jonathan dressed quickly, overjoyed that Israel had finally
: kept its word and he was going home. The guards shackled
: his wrists and ankles and led him to a prison van waiting
: outside.
: From the window of the van Jonathan watched the highway flying
: by as they sped up I-95 towards Washington. All the way
: there, the guards talked and laughed with Jonathan and
: asked him about his plans for when he got home.
: After some time, Jonathan saw a sign indicating that the next
: exit was Andrews Air Force Base. When the van sped past the
: exit, Jonathan nearly jumped out of his seat.
: "Hey!" he cried, "Stop! You guys just missed
: the exit for Andrews Air Force Base!"
: The guards started to laugh at Jonathan. "You fool!"
: they sneered, "Did you really think that you were
: going home? The only place youīre going is to another
: prison!" And the van sped on - to Lewisberg,
: Pennsylvania.
: They arrived at USP Lewisberg. It was December and it was
: cold. Jonathan was thrown into a dungeon cell in the
: basement. His clothes and his glasses were taken away. He
: was left naked. No bedding, no blankets, - no bed at all -
: just a hard metal slab to sleep on. Other than that the
: cell was empty except for an open toilet that could not be
: flushed from the inside. No diversions, no books, no paper
: or pens, no television, radio or newspaper - just the
: bitter cold chilling him to the bone.
: Periodically the guards would take Jonathan out of his dungeon
: cell "to shower". They chained him to the shower
: stall, and in the dead of winter turned on the cold water
: full blast. They left him there, chained to the shower
: stall with the ice cold water beating down upon him for
: what was perhaps an hour, but what felt to Jonathan like an
: eternity. Jonathan said it took every ounce of strength he
: possessed to will himself to stay alive.
: Jonathan was held at Lewisberg - incommunicado - for a month.
: No one knew where he was. His attorneys filed in court to
: find him. The sentencing judge, Aubrey Robinson, shocked by
: Jonathanīs sudden disappearance, issued a court order to
: force the Justice Department to return him to Washington.
: When I told Jonathan that this was the story that I wanted to
: share with you tonight to provide an unusual snapshot of
: "American Justice", Jonathan said, "But
: Esther that episode pales in comparison to what I
: experienced at Springfield!"
: Jonathan was referring to the the year and a half that he
: spent in a prison facility for the criminally insane in
: Springfield Missouri. He was not there as a patient. At
: Springfield as well he was deprived of his clothes and his
: eyeglasses and held in conditions so appalling that to this
: day he breaks out in a cold sweat when he talks about it.
: Once a month, Jonathan was hauled out of his cell at
: Springfield, a blanket thrown over him to cover his
: nakedness. He was given a pencil and shown a list of
: prominent American Jews. His government interrogators told
: him that putting an "x" beside any one of the
: names as his co-conspirator would be his ticket out of
: Springfield. Jonathan of course refused.
: Again, this is not your usual American justice story. But in
: fact, there is nothing "usual" about the Pollard
: case. And the treatment that Jonathan Pollard has
: experienced at the hands of the American Justice system for
: the last 16 years has been anything but "just".
: Jonathan Pollard did not spy against the United States.
: Jonathan is a Jew who spied for Israel, Americaīs closest
: ally. He warned Israel that Saddam Hussein was planning to
: scorch the Jewish State. This vital information was being
: withheld from Israel by her American ally. Because of
: Jonathan, Israel was ready with gas masks and sealed rooms
: during the Gulf war.
: Yes, Jonathan broke the law to warn Israel. He deserved to be
: punished. But the punishment has to fit the crime. The
: usual sentence for spying for an ally is 2-4 years.
: Jonathan is now serving his 16th year of a life sentence,
: with no possibility of parole. He received the life
: sentence, as the result of a broken plea bargain.
: Ladies and Gentlemen, I ask you, who plea bargains for a life
: sentence?
: Since its inception, the Pollard case, has been riddled with
: judicial inequities which include the following: a grossly
: disproportionate sentence a broken plea agreement the use
: of secret evidence totally ineffective assistance of
: counsel a lack of due process, as well as other judicial
: flaws which prompted Appellate Court Justice Steven
: Williams to describe the Pollard case as "a complete
: and gross miscarriage of justice."
: The Constitution grants the President of the United States
: special powers to intervene in such cases as Jonathanīs
: where a clear injustice is evident and the circumstances
: demand special intervention to safeguard the integrity of
: the American justice system. The presidentīs powers of
: clemency allow him to remain above the fray of interested
: parties and to act swiftly to rectify legal and judicial
: issues that might otherwise take years to wend their way
: through the courts and run the risk of being subverted in
: the process.
: There were strong legal and moral reasons why the American
: Jewish community expected that Jonathanīs life sentence
: would be commuted to time-served when President Clinton
: left office on January 20, 2001.
: In brief: Jonathanīs new legal case which is now before the
: American courts: It documents a travesty of justice that
: has gone unchallenged for 16 years.
: Jonathanīs grossly disproportionate sentence: He has now done
: 16 years of hard time in prison.
: Jonathanīs failing health, as a result of unusually harsh
: conditions of incarceration makes a strong humanitarian
: case for his release.
: Jonathanīs release was promised to Israel by President
: Clinton, as an integral part of the Wye accords.
: On January 20, 2001, Jonathan and I were deeply disappointed
: that his name did not appear on the list of 176 clemencies
: and pardons granted by President Clinton in his last hours
: in office. As it now appears, those pardons had little to
: do with compelling legal and moral issues and much to do
: with political favors and payoffs.
: The deep involvement of the American Jewish leadership and the
: Government of Israel in those tainted pardons has become a
: source of embarrassment and shame for the Jewish community.
: The Jewish leadership and the Government of Israel lobbied
: more convincingly to obtain a pardon for Marc Rich - a man
: who was not in prison nor in mortal danger - than they did
: for Jonathan Pollard, who stares Death in the face every
: day (G-d forbid) and dares not blink.
: What troubles Jonathan the most is all the finger-pointing
: that is now going on in the Jewish community. The Jewish
: leadership is so preoccupied with scapegoating one another
: that they appear to have forgotten that he is still in
: prison, still in mortal danger and urgently needs help.
: There is much that can be done to secure Jonathanīs immediate
: release, and much that needs to be done. So far, with the
: exception of Young Israel in the person of Rabbi Pesach
: Lerner, Jonathan and I are carrying on the fight for
: justice virtually alone.
: For example, Jonathan has an new legal case that is before the
: Courts. He is represented pro bono by two outstanding
: American attorneys, Eliot Lauer and Jacques Semmelman. But,
: there is not a single American Jewish Defense organization
: that is willing to stand with us or to assist our attorneys
: in any way - let alone to lobby on Capitol Hill, which is
: the sine qua non of Jonathanīs release.
: The ADL, for example, claims that it has no position on the
: Pollard case because it cannot see any anti-Semitism in the
: case. Would someone please tell me where the ADL, which
: interceded with the President on behalf of Marc Rich, found
: anti-Semitism in the Rich Case?
: The Jewish community is blessed with talented attorneys,
: legislators, and well-connected individuals with access to
: people and places where the decisions are made. Where are
: they on the Pollard case? We need them now more than ever
: to take our case to Washington!
: Where are Jewish social action committees, Jewish lobbyists
: and Jewish lobby groups? The Conference of Presidents, for
: example can open doors on Capitol Hill. We invite them to
: work with our attorneys to move beyond "humanitarian
: appeals" and onto compelling legal grounds.
: Where are the bold opinion-makers - the William Safires, the
: A.M. Rosenthals, the Charles Krauthammers, the Richard
: Cohens, the William Kristols and the Cal Thomases - to
: sound the alarm about the gross injustice of this case?
: Even if they choose not to meet with our attorneys, as has
: largely been the case, Jonathanīs new legal documents are
: publicly available on the Justice for Jonathan Pollard web
: site. No one can read these documents and remain silent, in
: good conscience.
: In a few days it will be Purim. My namesake is Queen Esther
: and I have a wonderful tradition to follow. But I want to
: remind you that when Queen Esther went before the king to
: plead for her people, she did not do it alone. She cried
: out to her people to work with her, to act from below to
: bring salvation from above.
: And that is what I ask of you tonight. I appeal to you to get
: involved, to get the leadership involved. NOT JUST YOUNG
: ISRAEL, BUT ALL JEWISH LEADERS MUST ANSWER TO THE PEOPLE.
: The American Jewish community must act intensively and at
: once to secure the release of Jonathan Pollard, and in that
: way - equal justice for all.
: For more information: www.jonathanpollard.org