Today, despite a decades-long war fought by Oregon AG Ellen Rosenblum to preserve a KKK-law silencing Black voices on juries, the OR Supreme Court ruled against her.

She applauded the decision: “It has been a long & winding road to get here." Thread on her spectacular hypocrisy.
First, a history: Most think of the KKK in terms of physical violence. But they also used legislative/legal process to pass laws exacting legal violence. In Oregon they pushed a law to silence jurors. "Non-unanimous juries."

Here's a thread w/ more.
Impact: Black people are already less likely to be selected to be on a jury. More likely to be accused of crime. Non-unanimous juries led to disproportionate convictions. *They wouldve never been convicted & sent to prison anywhere else in the country.*

The KKK got their way.
Current Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum was once a state judge. Presided over countless non-unanimous juries. Sentenced Terrence Hayes to 13 years prison in 2004.

"While I was not kidnapped by white men in hoods, I was caged because of their law."usatoday.com/story/opinion/…
Finally in 2019, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case to end non-unanimous verdicts.

Most of Oregonian's significant leaders past & present joined a powerful brief asking the Supreme Court to topple this law.

*But not Oregon AG Ellen Rosenblum!*
Instead of joining Oregon's most powerful leaders to petition the Supreme Court to finally topple the racist stain on Oregon's past/present:

*Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum joined LOUISIANA* to argue to keep the racist law alive & thriving.
Fortunately, the Supreme Court didn't listen to Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum. In April 2020, they finally acknowledged what was long obvious: This racist law was unconstitutional.

Even Justice Kavanaugh couldn't deny how racist the law was & rejected Rosenblum.
Despite her fight in the Supreme Court to maintain the racist status quo Oregon AG Ellen Rosenblum still claimed to be happy about the ruling in Ramos.

Stated, that Oregon would finally be able to move past "embarrassing stain on our progressive state."

But she kept fighting.
Ramos v. Louisiana only applied to future cases. Not those unlucky enough to be convicted too long before the decision.

Ellen Rosenblum fought *every person convicted in the past from having the opportunity to have a new, fair trial.*

Then fought AGAIN in the Supreme Court.
Ellen Rosenblum went back to the Supreme Court & got Justice Kavanaugh to prohibit the rule in Ramos from reaching hundreds of people still in prison in Oregon. She wanted all those still burdened by the racist law to remain that way.

One of the worst decisions in history.
Imagine having power to end the impact of a KKK-passed law that still imprisons hundreds. Oregon AG Ellen Rosenblum had power, but used it to perpetuate racism.

Human Rights Watch (@hrw) called her failure to act “inconsistent w/ international human rights standards." Just wow.
Faced w/ pressure of a local & national coalition of advocates & orgs, Oregon AG Rosenblum finally spoke out publicly about *why* she was fighting to maintain the KKK juries.

Wrote an oped w/ this dangerous claim: Obligated to “uphold & enforce” any law. This is wrong:
Imagine having the power to right systemic racism. Imagine knowing & acknowledging a law you control was racist in origin. Then imagine instead of using your power to right this systemic racism, you instead use your power to defend it. And argue you're just following orders.
After she got her way in the Supreme Court, Oregon AG Ellen Rosenblum continued to block every effort in the courts to give relief to those still imprisoned by the KKK law. While on Twitter she memorialized Juneteenth & George Floyd's death.

She pretended to care.
Finally, despite Oregon AG Ellen Rosenblum's crusade-as a trial judge, as Attorney General, in the US Supreme Court & local courts—to defend a Jim Crow era law to silence Black jurors--the Oregon Supreme Court ruled against her.

She's out here now exclaiming "justice was done!"
It's hard for me to describe the feeling of knowing how hard the movement for basic freedom from a KKK law fought for years against the ardent opposition of one person--Ellen Rosenblum--& then, once a court forces her to act, see quotes like this from her in press:
For literal decades, Oregon AG Ellen Rosenblum defended a Jim Crow era law to silence Black jurors. To perpetuate white supremacy. Rejected reason. Claimed she was obligated to enforce the law as written (even if by KKK).

But *she* laments a "long & winding road to get here."
For literal decades, Oregon AG Ellen Rosenblum defended a Jim Crow era law to silence Black jurors. To perpetuate white supremacy. Rejected reason.

Now that a Court rules against her, claims she's "committed to eradicating inequalities & ensuring fairness."
It is important for all of us, but also any media writing on this historic moment, to not let leaders like Ellen Rosenblum grandstand & pretend to care. When at best, they refuse to use their power to do good, & at worst -- like Rosenblum -- fight w/ everything against it.
One of the most powerful parts of the Oregon Supreme Court’s decision to allow new trials for all those still imprisoned by a KKK law a new is the concurrence. Delves deeply into “that troubled aspect of our history lest we repeat it.”

Feels like he's writing to Ellen Rosenblum:
For more on the long fight against the KKK & then “progressive” Oregon Attorney General, Ellen Rosenblum, to topple a legal monument to racism, watch this powerful film my org produced. On Calvin Duncan. The great jailhouse lawyer who fought for decades.

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More from @ScottHech

Dec 30, 2022
NEWS. A historic day. 3 years after the Supreme Court ruled non-unanimous juries unconstitutionally racist, the Oregon Supreme Court today: All those still in prison are entitled to a new trial!

This fight started w/ a jailhouse lawyer named Calvin Duncan.
A short history: Most think of the KKK in terms of physical violence. Lynchings. Intimidation. They also used legal & legislative process. In Louisiana & Oregon they pushed laws to silence Black jurors. To convict who they wanted.

"Non-unanimous juries."
Every juror’s voice is supposed to matter. In every other state in the country *every juror* has to vote that prosecution proved guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. KKK-influenced Oregon & Louisiana allowed up to 2 jurors to be disregarded & silenced.

“Minority voices.” Image
Read 39 tweets
Dec 28, 2022
I was curious why Waffle House was trending. I figured it was a fight. But after going down the rabbit hole, watching various clips, I’ve come to the conclusion that this was no fight.

This was the global coronation of a new superhero. “Waffle House Girl.”
Don’t worry about me, I’ll just be reading replies and commentary about “Waffle House Girl” for the rest of 2022.
I’m telling y’all. The comments are even better than the videos.
Read 8 tweets
Dec 26, 2022
Important reporting by @Salon. Democrats must stop running right & center on crime. Instead put forward a bold agenda. Good news: It's not only a moral imperative.

"It can be a winning issue if Democrats can successfully cut through the hysteria." Thread: salon.com/2022/12/26/how…
Salon cited extensively from my most recent commentary w/ @DyjuanTatro. On how dems lost bc they made themselves indistinguishable from Republicans on crime.

"The panic over ... bail reform in New York was pure political bullshit."nbcnews.com/think/opinion/…
Democratic pundits & strategists tell their candidates to run from successful policies bc opinion polls tell them constituents don't like them. But people they don't like them bc all they hear are lies about them.

In NY, candidates who told the truth about bail reform, won.
Read 8 tweets
Dec 26, 2022
THREAD: Always a good time to remember that the $11 billion NYPD: *Orchestrated an attack* on 100s of protestors in June 2020 in the Bronx. Used the curfew to trap, assault & arrest. Mass human rights atrocity.

NYPD called it “restraint. More:
hrw.org/news/2020/09/3…
Human Rights Watch (@hrw) conducted an investigation. Based on videos, mapping tech, hundreds of interviews. Found NYPD planned a coordinated assault. Trapped them 10 minutes before curfew to justify attacking them for being out past curfew. All on film.
"About 10 minutes before curfew scores of NYPD surrounded & trapped protesters–tactic called “kettling”–as they marched peacefully. W/o warning, they moved in, wielding batons, beating people from car tops, shoving, firing pepper spray into faces before arresting more than 250."
Read 17 tweets
Dec 24, 2022
🚨What the Texas snow & power outages mean for incarcerated people. 2 years ago from a man caged pretrial in Houston:

"No power since Sunday night/early Monday. We didnt get dinner last night. Its freezing. They put on a movie instead of dinner. How does that make any sense?"
“We asked for extra blankets. They said no. We got a PB & J at 4:30 a.m. today. Not sure if we will get any lunch. Commissary orders go in on Thursday for Friday delivery. No hot water either.”
"Can you please deposit some funds so we can buy food? We'll be praying for y'all. I know it's bad out there."

The cruelty with which we allow our leaders to treat human beings who happen to be incarcerated is constant & perpetual in this country. In a pandemic. In the cold.
Read 4 tweets
Dec 23, 2022
As a deep freeze descends in Texas, I’m terrified for those locked up. During the last freeze in 2021, a 24-year-old man was jailed for being *40 minutes late for his curfew.* His fiance called:

"It’s been over 72 hours he’s been sleeping on the floor."
"He was doing okay about 6 days ago. Living at a halfway house. Went for a walk. The time for him to return passed about like 30/40 minutes. He asked if he could go back. They said no.

He was crying to me and I told him to just call your parole officer. They locked him up."
I called up there & said "Can he at least get a mat? It’s been over 72 hours sleeping on the floor." They said: "I don’t have any mats & I’m not going to move him until a bunk becomes available.

You know there’s nothing you can do about it so that’s just what’s gonna happen."
Read 9 tweets

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