Not Ranked
This is how it started:
Two nooses were found hanging from a tree at Jena High after a black student asked in a “jocular fashion,” according to U.S. Attorney Donald Washington, if the black students could sit under the tree where white students sat. It was discovered who were the three students who placed the nooses, and the school principal recommended expulsion for the students. A committee of the LaSalle Parish School Board overruled the decision, and the students were suspended. Details of the suspension aren’t a public record. Washington said in none of the statements of the accused or the witnesses from the Dec. 4 incident included anything about the nooses. The “Jena Six” supporters and family contend that the noose incident is what precipitated the Dec. 4 incident.
December 4th 'event':
"Who was the victim? What happened to him?
Justin Barker was a student at Jena High. He was knocked unconscious and suffered several injuries to his face during the attack. Barker was transported by ambulance to a local hospital where he was treated for three hours. That evening he attended a ring ceremony at the high school.
Just a few days before the end of the school year, months after the Dec. 4 incident, Barker was expelled after a hunting gun was found in his car on the school grounds. He was charged as an adult for possessing a firearm in a firearm-free zone. His expulsion carried through to this
school year."
Was he involved in any of the previous incidents?
Barker wasn’t one of the three students disciplined for the noose incident, and he hasn’t been named in any of the fights in Jena leading up to the Dec. 4 incident.
Was the arson at Jena High School connected to the nooses or other incidents?
Police have no leads in the investigation into the November arson that destroyed the main building of the school.
Who are the “Jena Six?”
The six black Jena High School students charged in connection to the beating of a white student (Justin Barker) have been referred to as the “Jena Six” ever since a June rally at LaSalle Parish Courthouse where supporters were chanting “Free the Jena Six.”
Jesse Ray Beard, Mychal Bell, Robert Bailey Jr., Carwin Jones, Bryant Purvis and Theo Shaw were all originally charged with attempted second-degree murder and conspiracy to commit the same, according to LaSalle Parish District Attorney Reed Walters. Those charges came after Justin Barker was hit and then repeatedly kicked by a group of students at the high school on Dec. 4.
All of the students, but Beard who was 14 at the time, were charged as adults. Bell, who was 16 at the time of the incident, was convicted as an adult in June of aggravated second-degree battery and conspiracy to commit that crime. Walters reduced his charges just before the trial.
Since then, both of those convictions have been vacated and tossed back to juvenile court.
Charges against Bailey, Jones and Shaw have been reduced to aggravated second-degree battery. Details about Beard’s case are unknown as it is being handled in juvenile court, though he is back at Jena High and participating in athletics.
Was it really an all-white jury that convicted Bell?
Yes. There were 150 people summoned for jury duty, although only about 50 appeared. That ratio is normal for LaSalle Parish, court officials said. In those 50 who appeared, none were black. There was no effort to find the nearly 100 who didn’t appear, both black and white. That too, is common in LaSalle Parish. Punishment for dodging jury duty is at the discretion of the judge.
Community members have squabbled over how many minorities appeared on the list of 150 potential jurors with numbers ranging from four to more than 20. There is no entry in the juror database for race to ensure that bias isn’t used in jury selection, a court official said.
_____
I'd say the payback was unjustified, therefore the Jena 6 need to pay the price for whatever they did to an innocent party - Justin Barker.
|