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24 de Febrero, 2007
Free Chip Fitzgerald
Categorized under Acción , Chinga la Chota , El Malestar Pálido | Tags: Black Panthers, Political Prisoners
UPDATE: IF you are interested in freeing Chip Fitzgerald, please visit this site and sign the petition. Here is a recent message from a compa on the Free Chip Fitzgerald mission:
We are asking that he be released...not arguing his innocence...he should be free by the law which put him there. He has served his time.
Please continue on to read the post below which was written over a year ago, but know that the address supplied is out of date, as are any numbers provided. Again, for current information you can act on, see the freechip.org site.

1969 WAS A TIME OF GREAT TURMOIL, and very much so for Black people in America. The hatred held for The Brown™ by mainstream society was much less disguised or sublimated than it is today, and oppression and violence was the life they were expected to take in stride. The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense disagreed. They mobilized to protect their neighborhoods, to feed their people, to arm themselves against the corrupt police who would do them harm given the chance, and like Robert Franklin Williams, did not believe that they should go fight in Vietnam to help their own oppressors kill and oppress other non-Whites.
ROMAINE "CHIP" FITZGERALD was a member of the Black Panther party, as were the two other Black men in the vehicle with him when they were pulled over by the police at Compton Blvd and Van Ness Ave in Gardena, CA, on September 7th, 1969. The police claimed later, in court, that they had pulled over these three Black men for a "faulty taillight." (We know about these types of taillights, don't we?) The "traffic stop" ended up in a shootout, wherein the CHP officer was wounded, and Chip Fitzgerald shot in the head, as well. All three Black men escaped the scene, yet Fitzgerald's license was left behind. Later, during the trial that would see Fitzgerald given a death sentence, that very same police officer admitted he had been given orders to "to shoot members of the Black Panther Party" (of which all three men were members) but the Judge ordered the jury to ignore this statement.
The jury also, it seems, ignored the statements made by two women who shared the apartment with Fitzgerald (Doris Haughton and her sister, Janice Sadle) who testified that Chip did not leave the house 22 days later, the night Barge Miller, a security guard at Vons Shopping Center (El Segundo and Avalon Boulevards in Los Angeles) was killed. Mr. Miller was shot and killed while in his car at 1:42 a.m., and a witness, James Cole, claimed he saw two black men fleeing the scene. Mr. Cole claimed that he could not get a good look at the men due to the dim lighting at the nighttime scene, yet was confident that it was Chip, whom he could only identify while looking at him in court. This confident witness was shown several photographs of different men, including Fitzgerald, yet could not identify him in the photo. Nor did he mention seeing a white gauze bandage of the type that Fitzgerald was wearing since being shot in the head by the CHP officer. This "confident witness" could not even describe the courtroom judge without looking at him.
Despite Fitzgerald's witnesses and his own denial of involvement with the Barge Miller shooting; despite the flimsy testimony of the eyewitness to Barge Miller's shooting; despite the Police admitting they had orders to kill Black Panthers, Fitzgerald was sentenced to death. This sentence was later commuted to a life sentence with the possibility of parole. Romaine "Chip" Fitzgerald was 20 years old when he entered prison in 1970. He is the longest held political prisoner in the United States of America, and serving 2 life sentences for the murder of Barge Miller, and the attempted murder of the CHP officer. In 1998, he suffered a massive stroke and during his time in prison has been denied proper medical care for both this, and a degenerative spinal condition.
In 1969 the FBI special agent in San Francisco wrote Hoover that his investigation of the Black Panther Party revealed that in his city, at least, the Black nationalists were primarily feeding breakfast to children. Hoover fired back a memo implying the career ambitions of the agent were directly related to his supplying evidence to support Hoover's view that the BPP was "a violence prone organization seeking to overthrow the Government by revolutionary means".
J. Edgar Hoover wrote in a memo that the "[p]urpose of counterintelligence action is to disrupt the Black Panther Party and it is immaterial whether facts exist to substantiate the charge." Clearly, he got his wish, and to this day, the remnants of Black men who felt they had the same rights to live, eat, and defend themselves from hate and violence are being ground down into the grimy floors of prisons and the dark depths of early graves.
Romaine Chip Fitzgerald is not a legend, not a history lesson, not a cause. He is a man. He is an elderly, ailing, man locked away from the light of day for almost forty years. In a letter he wrote on January 23, 2007 he tells us that he is "...still on lockdown. They are dragging this nonsense out. They don't respond to adminstrative appeals because they investigate themselves, and turn a blind eye to each others violation and corruption." Prison is bad enough. Being on lockdown is punishment within punishment, keeping prisoners restricted in movement, activity, and not allowing them many basic needs, such as giving them a shower every 72 hours. This—on lockdown 24/7—for an almost 60 year-old man who has undergone major back surgery while in prison and who now walks with a cane and a limp.
Chip Fitzgerald is scheduled to re-appear before the California Parole Board on March 29, 2007.
Many support factions, such as the Watsonville Brown Berets, the Anarchist Black Cross Federation, and the National Jericho Movement are calling on supporters of Fitzgerald and other political prisoners to write the Board of Prison Terms, requesting them to grant Fitzgerald¹s parole. All letters should be sent to his attorney's office, and not the Board of Parole.
Ms. Linda Buchalter
Attorney-At-Law
1011 5th Street, #6
Santa Monica, CA 90403
Tel: (310) 393-7033
To write directly to Chip Fitzgerald:
ROMAINE CHIP FITZGERALD
#B27527
CSP-LAC, FD 3-231 P.O. Box 4670
Lancaster, CA 93539-4670
If you want to lend your hand toward Chip Fitzgerald's possibility of parole, please act now. "Soon" may be too late to make your voice and heart heard.
• www.abcf.net/la/pdfs/chip.pdf
• breakallchains.blogspot.com
• Brown Berets
• The Jericho Movement
• Anarchist Black Cross Federation
• Wikipedia

In 1969 the FBI special agent in San Francisco wrote Hoover that his investigation of the Black Panther Party revealed that in his city, at least, the Black nationalists were primarily feeding breakfast to children. Hoover fired back a memo implying the career ambitions of the agent were directly related to his supplying evidence to support Hoover's view that the BPP was "a violence prone organization seeking to overthrow the Government by revolutionary means".



Comentarios (10)
Sylvia dijo:
Strangely enough, I think Fitzgerald's story may have been told in popular culture. I never knew who inspired the narrative, but if you watch the last episode of The Boondocks, and Huey's dedication to the life and works of Shabazz K. Milton Berle -- a Panther incarcerated falsely for years and years that Huey's working alone to save from death row -- it parallels what's here.
I'll post a closed comment entry from my site linking people here so they can take action.
Palabras por Sylvia spat forth on el 24 de Febrero, 2007 at 09:26 AM
nezua limón xolagrafik-jonez dijo:
thanks, sylvia. i wonder if the comic was about Geronimo Pratt, tho. He finally saw justice and was freed. Not so for Fitzgerald.
Palabras por nezua limón xolagrafik-jonez spat forth on el 24 de Febrero, 2007 at 09:31 AM
Sylvia dijo:
Possibly...it was never clear that Berle was freed, and of course there are ample artistic liberties. But either way, cases like these need a lot more attention beyond soundbytes.
Palabras por Sylvia spat forth on el 24 de Febrero, 2007 at 09:35 AM
nezua limón xolagrafik-jonez dijo:
absolutely. and it's the same story anyway. time and time again. so each time, it should be told.
Palabras por nezua limón xolagrafik-jonez spat forth on el 24 de Febrero, 2007 at 10:39 AM
Arcturus dijo:
appreciate the timely headsup
this too, needs attention:
Legacy of Torture & the San Francisco 8
& for anyone in northern CA:
Palabras por Arcturus spat forth on el 24 de Febrero, 2007 at 03:47 PM
Arcturus dijo:
Info on how to support the SF 8 at the Committee for the Defense of Human Rights
Palabras por Arcturus spat forth on el 24 de Febrero, 2007 at 03:49 PM
Kai dijo:
I'm embarrassed to say I was not aware of this case. Thanks, Nezua, for pointing me to it.
Goddamn did Cointelpro ever cut loose with the violence of white supremacy upon Brown folk...firebombing apartments, shooting POC in their sleep, raiding reservations, countless stories like this one...and what's even more amazing is that so many white folks these days think the Black Panthers were the violent ones...
Palabras por Kai spat forth on el 24 de Febrero, 2007 at 04:39 PM
nezua limón xolagrafik-jonez dijo:
my pleasure, man. yeah. COINTELPRO is a domestic terrorist outfit if ever there was one. the BPP party were just humans with pride who got sick of being beat up and killed by cops and treated like the scum that mainstream society thought they were. i have the utmost admiration for them. when you think of how recent all the abuse of Blacks was....i mean, well, aside from the "typical" cop shootings of Blacks today, etc....it just blows your mind.
i guess when i was younger i bought into the whole "wow, we're making such good headway putting racism behind us" bullshit. but looking at the persecution today of Mexicanos, and the Blacks shot down for no reason but being Black and the way so many justify the mass murder of Iraqis...we ain't got nowhere, man. nowhere.
Palabras por nezua limón xolagrafik-jonez spat forth on el 24 de Febrero, 2007 at 07:41 PM
Cero dijo:
OK, I wrote. Weirdly, I miss those bad old days because people were fighting and we weren't told things were improving or that they were over. That gave me the impression that things would actually improve ... but they did not.
Palabras por Cero spat forth on el 24 de Febrero, 2007 at 08:09 PM
mikefromtexas dijo:
The FBI got very good at doing this thing to many others. Currently reading 'In The Spirit of Crazy Horse', concerning AIM and the Leonard Peltier case. They're probably much better at it today.
Palabras por mikefromtexas spat forth on el 26 de Febrero, 2007 at 11:16 PM