Limit search to available items
Record 5 of 59
Previous Record Next Record
Streaming video

Title Say brother. A case for justice. Part 1 / directed by Brian Clarke
Published Boston, MA : WGBH Boston Video, 1979

Copies

Description 1 online resource (59 min.)
Series Black studies in video
Summary This program is the first in a two-part segment discussing the harsh sentencing of African Americans in the Massachusetts court system using the Paplo case, the Hakim Jamal case, and the Willie Saunders/Brighton rape case as studies in injustice. Host Barbara Barrow-Murray speaks with individuals involved with the cases, including Frank Neisser (Secretary to the Citywide Coalition for Justice and Equality), Mary Harris (mother of Edward Soares, one of the defendants in the Paplo case and member of Family and Friends of Prisoners and the Citywide Coalition for Justice and Equality ), Larry Gaines (Chairman of the Citywide Coalition for Justice and Equality), Professor Alan Dershowitz (with Harvard Law School), Saundra Carney (Coordinator for Brown, Johnson, Clinkscales Support Committee), and Undrey Sanders (brother of Willie Sanders, who was arrested for the rapes in Brighton, and representative for the Willie Sanders Defense Committee). Program includes interview footage with Dinizula Kamau (Efrid Brown, Jr.) and Abdullah Khalil Sabree (both convicted in the Hakim Jamal case) from Say Brother's visit to the Walpole correctional facility and viewer calls related to the cases
Notes Title from resource description page (viewed May 14, 2015)
In English
Subject African American criminals.
Criminal justice, Administration of.
Discrimination in criminal justice administration.
African American criminals
Criminal justice, Administration of
Discrimination in criminal justice administration
Genre/Form Documentary television programs
Documentary television programs.
Documentaires télévisés.
Form Streaming video
Author Barrow-Murray, Barbara, producer
Clarke, Brian, director
WGBH Video (Firm), production company.
Other Titles Case of justice, Part 1