AP. 9 March 2002. Former Black Power Activist Convicted in Shooting
Death of Sheriff's Deputy.

ATLANTA -- H. Rap Brown, the 1960s black power radical turned Muslim
cleric, was convicted of murder Saturday in the shooting of a sheriff's
deputy who tried to serve him with a warrant two years ago.

Jurors deliberated 10 hours over two days before finding the Muslim
cleric now called Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin guilty of shooting to death
Deputy Ricky Kinchen and wounding Deputy Aldranon English on a southwest
Atlanta street.

The trial now moves to a penalty phase, in which jurors will decide
whether to recommend execution or life in prison for the 58-year-old
Al-Amin.

He was found guilty of 13 counts, including murder, aggravated assault
on a police officer, obstruction and possession of a firearm by a
convicted felon.

The verdict came at the end of the third week of the trial, which was
postponed once after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks because the judge
feared anti-Muslim sentiment would taint the jury pool.

English testified that Al-Amin - a prominent Muslim iman in Atlanta's
West End community - pulled a high-powered assault rifle and opened fire
when he and Kinchen tried to serve him with a warrant on minor Cobb
County charges on March 16, 2000.

Prosecutors said Al-Amin shot Kinchen three times in the groin with a 9
mm as he lay bleeding in the street.

English picked Al-Amin out of a photo lineup from his hospital bed the
day after the shooting and identified him again in court.

Defense attorneys tried to convince jurors that English was mistaken in
his identification and that someone else shot the deputies.

They also suggested that Al-Amin was framed as part of a government
conspiracy they said had dogged him since his days as a prominent Black
Panther in the '60s.

Al-Amin was arrested four days after the shootings in White Hall, Ala.
The .223-caliber assault rifle and handgun were recovered in the woods
near the area where he was arrested. The defense suggested that the
weapons were planted by federal authorities.

Al-Amin leads one of the nation's largest black Muslim groups, the
National Ummah. The movement, which has formed 36 mosques around the
nation, is credited with revitalizing poverty-stricken pockets such as
Atlanta's West End, where Al-Amin owned a grocery store.

Al-Amin is better known as H. Rap Brown, who served as a leader of the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.

Brown changed his name when he converted to the Dar-ul Islam movement in
the '70s while serving a five-year sentence for his role in a robbery
that ended in a shootout with New York police.




-------------------------------------------
Macdonald Stainsby
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/rad-green
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international

"They are all Enron, we are all Argentina"
    --WEF protesters.
----
In the contradiction lies the hope.
                                     --Bertholt Brecht



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