Jamil Al-Amin (H. Rap Brown) Trial in Richmond Film Reel #04, 1968 February 23

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Title on Reel (transcribed from original)

February 23, 1968, Friday, Trial of H. Rap Brown, Post office Bldg., Federal Court; (1) #25, H Rap Brown, 2-23-68

Date Created

1968-02-23

Reel Format

Super 8mm

Reel Description

This reel contains footage filmed outside of the Richmond City Courthouse (known as the United States Post Office and Customhouse) from H. Rap Brown's hearing in regards to his $10,000 bond in Virginia on February 23, 1968. At the February 23 hearing, Brown's bond was revoked and he was ordered to return to New Orleans to face federal charges. This reel contains footage of individuals approaching, entering, and leaving the courthouse. This appears to be a group of majority Black participants.

Timestamp Description

00:00:10 Footage begins. Footage of several individuals standing on the sidewalk across from the courthouse, one crosses the street towards the camera.
00:00:15 Footage filmed from the steps of the courthouse facing east on Main Street. A large crowd approaches the courthouse, and the camera zooms in on him. An individual with a film camera is visible walking backwards at the front of the crowd.
00:00:17 The crowd pauses and stands in front of the courthouse steps. Several individuals are visible speaking with one another.
00:00:22 The crowd continues to walk west on Main Street. Several individuals, likely members of the press, take photographs and film from the steps of the courthouse. More news crews are visible walking and recording behind the crowd.
00:00:42 Footage on individuals entering the courthouse.
00:00:46 Footage of individuals standing at the top of the courthouse steps, a film camera is visible.
00:00:53 Footage filmed from the courthouse steps of individuals gathered on the other side of Main Street. Cars and other vehicles drive by. Footage zooms in and pans right to left.
00:01:03 Zoomed in footage of a crowd walking west on Main Street towards the courthouse. Several individuals with film cameras are visible.
00:01:09 Zoomed in footage of individuals across the street from the courthouse. Camera zooms in and out as cars pass on the street.
00:01:15 Footage of a uniformed police officer on horseback speaking with four individuals standing on the sidewalk in front of the courthouse. Footage zooms in on individuals standing across the street watching the courthouse.
00:01:24 Zoomed in footage of two individuals walking west on Main Street towards the courthouse, they maneuver through crowds of individuals standing on the sidewalk and appear to hold hands.
00:01:27 Footage taken from the courthouse steps of individuals on the sidewalk with cars passing in the background. The camera zooms in to an individual in the backseat of a car, the individual leans forward and looks at the camera as the car drives away. Its rear license plate is filmed.
00:01:36 Footage zoomed in on an individual walking west on Main Street away from the court house.
00:01:38 Footage of individuals standing on the sidewalk outside the courthouse, camera is facing west on Main Street.
00:01:47 Footage of the press setting up cameras and waiting on the sidewalk in front of the courthouse.
00:02:03 Footage on a crowd of individuals in front of the courthouse steps. Camera zooms in and pans side to side.
00:02:20 Footage of individuals walking up a ramp into the courthouse.
00:02:37 Zoomed in footage of individuals across the street from the courthouse. Camera zooms in and out as cars pass on the street.
00:02:51 Footage of film crews/news crews set up on the sidewalk, zoomed in and panning left to right.
00:02:58 Footage of individuals on the sidewalk in front of the courthouse and two uniformed officers on horseback.
00:03:09 Footage of journalists on the sidewalk.
00:03:23 Footage looking east on Main Street filmed from the courthouse steps, with cars driving west. The camera zooms in on a car stopped in the second lane from the left, with the hood open and two individuals standing in front of it.
00:03:29 Footage ends.

Event Description

This series of reels centers around various court hearings in Richmond, Virginia related to Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) chair Jamil Al-Amin (H. Rap Brown) from 1967 to 1969. Read more about Al-Amin via the SNCC Digital Gateway. During his incarceration from 1971-1976, Al-Amin converted to Islam and changed his name from H. Rap Brown to Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin. For the narrative below, and materials related to these events, the name Jamil Al-Amin will be used.


According to a August 22, 1967 article in the Richmond Times-Dispatch, Al-Amin did not need to appear in person for an extradition hearing in Virginia, where officials had charged him on July 26th of "unlawful flight from Maryland." Maryland sought him on charges of "incitement to riot and arson" in Cambridge, Maryland. More information on the Cambridge incident is available via Wikipedi here and here. Virginia Assistant Attorney Reno S. Harp III told the paper that the hearing was requested by Al-Amin's attorneys. The following day, the RTD (August 23, 1967) reported that the hearing had been delayed by request of Al-Amin's attorneys due to another legal situation in New York. The hearing was postponed to September 5 (per the RTD, September 5, 1967), and Al-Amin would not be in attendance. His attorneys William M. Kunstler, Philip J. Hirschkop, and Charles Mangum represented him at the hearing. Al-Amin remained in New York. Kunstler argued that Al-Amin's arrest in July in Alexandria was unlawful, and his federal fugitive warrant was "a direct derivative...of the Fugitive Slave Act." (RTD, September 6, 1967.) His lawyers also argued he would not receive a fair trial in Maryland, where he was shot by a police officer after giving a speech on the evening of July 24th. On September 7, Virginia Governor Mills E. Godwin Jr. signed the extradition order (RTD, September 8, 1967). It was believed his attorneys would file habeas corpus proceedings to block the extradition. On September 13, Al-Amin was transferred from Alexandria city jail to Richmond City jail as Judge Franklin P. Backus on the habeas corpus petition believed he could not set a bond for Al-Amin. However, Judge Backus was not made aware of the transfer (RTD, September 14, 1967). On September 15, Al-Amin was transferred from Richmond to a state prison farm in Powhatan County, and Richmond Mayor Morrill M. Crowe stated the city requested the transfer "based upon the desire of the City of Richmond to maintain tranquility within our community by avoiding all circumstances potentially disruptive to that tranquility." Three individuals protested in front of the jail on September 15. (RTD, September 16, 1967). An emergency habeas corpus hearing was held on September 16 (RTD, September 17, 1967). On September 18, Al-Amin was released on a $10,000 bond and ordered to not leave New York other than for court appearances. A full habeas corpus hearing was scheduled for October 3 (RTD, September 19, 1967). On October 3, the Corporation Court judge Backus turned down the motion for a writ of habeas corpus, but the decision was appealed to the Virginai Supreme Court (RTD, October 4, 1967). In February 1968, Al-Amin was ordered to appear in Richmond on charges of breaking the bond, allegedly having given two speeches in California, per the testimony of three FBI agents. (RTD, February 20, 1968). Al-Amin arrived at Hanover County jail on February 22 (RTD, February 23, 1968). At the February 23 hearing, Al-Amin's bond was revoked and he was ordered to return to New Orleans to face federal charges (RTD, February 24, 1968). His lawyer William M. Kunstler stated that he believed Al-Amin was allowed to travel to meet with him in California, and that his speeches were coincidental (Film Reel #8). On March 1, 1968, the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals upheld the previous granting of extradition of Al-Amin to Maryland (RTD, March 2, 1968). Just days after the assassinations of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Al-Amin had another hearing in Richmond on April 8, 1968 (RTD, April 8, 1968). Judge Robert R. Merhige denied bond at this hearing (RTD, April 9, 1968). The U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the bond request on April 11 (RTD, April 12, 1968). On March 10, 1970, the Bel Air, Maryland courthouse where Al-Amin was to be tried on the incitement charges was bombed. The previous day, two SNCC officials (Ralph Featherstone and William “Che” Payne) died in a car bombing--some activists believed it was an assassination attempt on Al-Amin, police claimed a bomb was being transported to the court house and went off accidentally (RTD, March 11, 1970). After the bombings, Al-Amin disappeared for 18 months, ending up on the FBI's Most Wanted List. After being arrested in 1971, the charges in Maryland were dropped on November 6, 1973 due to lack of evidence. (RTD, November 7, 1973).

Runtime

00:03:35

Personal Name Subject

Al-Amin, Jamil, 1943-; Kunstler, William M. (William Moses), 1919-1995; Merhige, Robert R.; Hirschkop, Philip J.; Godwin, Mills E. (Mills Edwin), 1914-1999;

Corporate Name Subject

Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.); United States. Court of Appeals (4th Circuit)

Topical Subject

Al-Amin, Jamil, 1943---Trials, litigation, etc.; Students--Political activity; Extradition; Trials; Civil rights movements; Civil rights movements--United States; Civil rights demonstrations; Civil rights workers; Student protesters; African American student movements; Student movements; Demonstrations; Black power; Black power--United States; Black militant organizations; Courts; Courthouses; Mounted police; Police horses; Animals in police work; Police; Police patrol--Surveillance operations; Electronic surveillance; Video surveillance

City/Location

Richmond (Va.)

Genre

color films (visual works)

Local Genre

moving image

Type

Moving Image

Digital Format

video/mp4

Language

eng

Rights

This material is in the public domain in the United States and thus is free of any copyright restriction. Acknowledgement of Virginia Commonwealth University Libraries as a source is requested.

Collection

Richmond Police Department Surveillance Collection

Source

Jamil Al-Amin (H. Rap Brown) Trial in Richmond Film Reel #04, 1968 February 23

File Name

VCU_M571_073.mp4

Jamil Al-Amin (H. Rap Brown) Trial in Richmond Film Reel #04, 1968 February 23

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