This testimony about Abu-Jamal’s shooting at the defenseless policeman
execution-style solidified the prosecution’s portrayal of Abu-Jamal as a
cold-blooded assassin.
There was however, always the lingering question, never raised at
trial, or even during the subsequent nearly three-decades-long appeals
process, of why, if Abu-Jamal had fired four bullets downward at
Faulkner, only hitting him once with a bullet between the eyes on the
morning of December 9, 1981, there was no evidence in the surface of the
sidewalk around the officer’s body of the bullets that missed.
Now ThisCantBeHappening! has raised further questions
about that troubling lack of any evidence of missed shots by doing
something that neither defense nor prosecution ever bothered to do,
namely conducting a gun test using a similar gun and similar bullets
fired from a similar distance into a slab of old concrete sidewalk
similar to the sidewalk at the scene of the original shooting on the
south side of Locust Street just east of 13th Street in Center City,
Philadelphia.
Our test conclusively demonstrated it is impossible to fire such a
gun from a standing position into a sidewalk without the bullets leaving
prominent, unambiguous and clearly visible marks. Yet, the
prosecution’s case has Abu-Jamal performing that exact miracle, missing
the officer three times without leaving a trace of his bad marksmanship.
So where are the missing bullet marks? The police crime-scene photos
presented by the prosecution don’t show any, and police investigators in
their reports don’t mention any bullet marks on the sidewalk around the
slain officer’s body.
The results of this test fundamentally challenge the prosecution’s
entire case against Abu-Jamal since they contradict both eyewitness
testimony and physical evidence presented by the prosecution about the
1981 murder of Officer Faulkner in a seedy section of downtown
Philadelphia.

Further, this test reignites questions about how police handled
and/or mishandled their investigation into the murder of Officer
Faulkner, quickly targeting Abu-Jamal as the killer.
Impact marks in the test are clearly visible, especially for the Plus-P metal-jacketed bullets
For example, police failed to administer the routine gunpowder
residue test on Abu-Jamal’s hands to determine if he had recently fired a
gun. Such a test has long been standard procedure for crimes involving
gun shots. Oddly, police did perform this routine residue test on at
least two persons initially suspected of being at the crime scene,
including one man who fit the description of a man numerous eyewitnesses
told police had shot Faulkner and then fled the scene. Police, finding a
critically-wounded Abu-Jamal at the crime scene, arrested him
immediately, but never bothered to do a test of his hands--or if they
did, never reported the results.
While appellate courts – federal and state – have consistently upheld
Abu-Jamal’s conviction, no court has considered the contradiction
between prosecution claims of Abu-Jamal having fired into the sidewalk
and the complete lack of any evidence of bullet impacts, or even of an
explanation for the missing marks. Last week, the Philadelphia District
Attorney’s Office curtly dismissed results of this test, which shows
such marks would have been impossible to miss, as yet another instance
of the “biases and misconceptions” regularly presented by persons who
have not “taken the time to review the entirety of the record…”
For this experiment, veteran Philadelphia journalist Linn
Washington, who has investigated the Abu-Jamal case since December 1981,
obtained a Smith & Wesson revolver with a 2-inch barrel, similar to
the 2-inch-barrel, .38-caliber Charter Arms revolver licensed to
Abu-Jamal which was marked as evidence at the trial as being the weapon
which was used to shoot and kill Officer Faulkner.
Meanwhile, journalist Dave Lindorff, who spent two years researching and writing Killing Time
(Common Courage Press, 2003), the definitive independent book about
this case, procured the concrete test slab, a 200-lb section of old
sidewalk, about two feet square, five inches thick and containing a mix
of gravel and a steel-reinforcing screen, that had recently been ripped
up during construction of a new high school in Upper Dublin, PA. He then
constructed a protective shield using a wooden frame and a section of
galvanized, corrugated-steel roofing material purchased from Home Depot.
A small one-inch-diameter hole was drilled through the steel
sheet about 18 inches from ground level, to enable Washington to point
the pistol barrel through and fire at the concrete without risk of being
injured by flying shrapnel or concrete fragments. Washington also wore
shatter-proof military-surplus goggles for the experiment, so he could
safely aim through the hole. During the test a total of seven bullets,
including Plus-P high-velocity projectiles similar to the spent
cartridges police reported finding in Abu-Jamal’s gun, were fired
downward at the sidewalk slab from a standing position, replicating the
prosecution’s version of the murder. (A Penn State history professor
knowledgeable about firearms and ballistics including the construction
of bullets, observed the experiment from start to finish.)
After each shot was fired into the concrete, the resulting impact
point was labeled with a felt-tipped pen. Still photographs were taken
showing all seven bullet impacts.
The entire experiment was also filmed using a broadcast-quality video camera.
What is clear from this experiment is that the bullets fired at
close range into the sidewalk sample all left clearly visible marks. The
three bullets that had metal jackets produced significant divots in the
concrete, one of these about 1/8 of an inch deep, and two shallower,
but easily observed visually and easily felt with the fingertip. The
other four bullets, lead projectiles only, left smaller indentations, as
well as clearly visible gray circular imprints, each over a half inch
in diameter, where the lead from the bullets appears to have melted on
impact and then solidified on the concrete. Police crime scene reports
list investigators recovering fragments of at least two jacketed bullets
at the scene (Faulkner’s police-issue Smith & Wesson revolver was
firing non-jacketed ammunition).
When a photo image of these seven prominent impact sites from the
bullets is compared to detailed police crime-scene photos, the absence
of similar such marks at the crime scene is obvious. Even the
higher-quality photos of the shooting scene that were taken by Pedro
Polokoff, a professional news photographer who arrived at the shooting
scene within 20 minutes of hearing about it on his police radio scanner
(well ahead of the police photographer and crime-scene investigation
technicians), show no bullet marks.
The bizarre lack of any sign of other bullets having been fired
down at Faulkner raises a grave question about the truthfulness of the
two key prosecution witnesses, prostitute Cynthia White and taxi driver
Robert Chobert. As recorded in the trial transcript, Prosecutor Joseph
McGill made a big point of having Chobert, a young white man, describe
during the June 1982 trial exactly what he allegedly saw Abu-Jamal do in
shooting Officer Faulkner. He asked, “Now, when the Defendant was
standing over the officer, could you show me exactly what motion he was
making or what you saw?”
Chobert replied, “I saw him point down and fire some more shots into him.”
McGill asked, “Now you’re indicating, for the Record, a
movement of his right arm with his finger pointed toward the direction
of the ground and moving his wrist and hand up and down approximately
three, four times, is that right?”
Chobert replied, “Yes.”
Cynthia White, for her part, testified that Abu-Jamal “came over
and he came on top of the police officer and shot some more times.”
If there are no bullet marks around the spot where Faulkner was
lying when he was shot in the face, neither of these testimonies by the
two prosecution witnesses are remotely credible.
And there is another question. When the protective steel
sheet was checked after this gun test, there were deep dents in the
metal which were produced by either concrete fragments blown out of the
sidewalk or by bullet fragments. Such debris, large and small, would
have been embedded in Faulkner’s uniform and/or in exposed skin, such as
the sides of his head, or underneath his clothes, and yet the coroner’s
report and a report on the analysis of his police jacket make no
mention of concrete, rock or bullet fragments.
One can additionally speculate about why, if there were in fact
bullet marks in the sidewalk, police investigators at the scene never
identified and marked them off with chalk, and never photographed them,
as would be standard procedure in any shooting, not to mention a
shooting death of a policeman. Even more curious, investigators did
note, and even removed as possible evidence, a bullet fragment found in a
door jamb well behind Faulkner’s fallen body, as well as gathering up
three other minute bullet fragments. These actions show that on the
morning of the 1981 shooting investigators were combing the crime scene
looking for evidence of bullets. Had there been impact marks in the
vicinity of where Faulkner’s body was lying, they would surely have
noticed them and marked them for evidence.
We provided our gun test result photo, as well as a crime-scene
photo showing the spot on the sidewalk where Faulkner’s body was found,
and where there should have been bullet marks in the pavement, to Robert
Nelson, a veteran photo analyst at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena, California who is on the team that enhances and analyzes the
photos sent in from the Cassini Saturn probe. Employing the same
technology and skill that he uses in working with those photos from deep
space, Nelson subjected the Polokoff photo to analysis and compared it
to the gun test photo. Nelson offered the following comment:
“When one shoots a bullet into solid concrete, the concrete
shatters at the impact point and creates a lot of scattering surfaces.
It contains many micro-cracks that scatter the light more and make the
impact area appear to be more reflective. This is apparent in the white
circular areas in the test image.
“When the police photograph image is brightness adjusted for
comparison with the test image, no obvious reflective zones
(shatter-zones) are detected in the concrete surrounding the bloodspot.
This result is inconsistent with the argument that several gun shots
were fired into the concrete at close range, missing the body of the
police officer and impacting the concrete. There are no lighter-colored
circular areas suggesting shattering in the crime scene image.”

Dr. Michael Schiffmann, a University of Heidelberg professor and
author of Wettlauf gegen den Tod. Mumia Abu-Jamal: ein schwarzer
Revolutionär im weißen Amerika (Promedia, Vienna, 2006)), a detailed
book about Abu-Jamal released in Europe, questioned a number of experts
about the missing bullet marks including the longtime head of ballistics
in the medical examiner’s office in Tübingen, Germany. This medical
examiner told Schiffmann that the notion that police investigators might
have somehow overlooked the bullet impact sites around Faulkner’s body,
or might have failed to recognize them as bullet marks, is “absolute
nonsense.” That medical examiner says the marks would have been evident
and identifiable as being caused by bullet impacts even if Faulkner’s
blood had flowed over them.
Dr. Nelson at JPL found no similar bullet marks like those in the test in a crime-scene photo
There are, moreover, other good reasons to doubt that White and
Chobert were telling the truth, or even that either one of them was
actually a witness to the shooting.
Chobert claimed at trial to have pulled his taxi up directly
behind Officer Faulkner’s squad car, which itself was parked directly
behind the Volkswagen Beetle owned by Abu-Jamal’s younger brother
William Cook, whom Faulkner had supposedly stopped for a traffic
violation. Though the trial judge, Albert Sabo, withheld this
information from the jury, Chobert at the time of the shooting admitted
to the court that he was driving his cab illegally on a license that had
been suspended following a DUI conviction. He was also serving five
year’s probation for the crime of felony arson of an elementary school.
Under such circumstances, one has to ask if such a driver would have
deliberately parked his cab behind a police vehicle, where there was a
risk he could have been questioned, arrested by the officer, and
possibly even jailed for violating conditions of his probation.
In any event, there also are no crime-scene photos that depict a
taxi parked behind Faulkner’s squad car. Indeed, the official police
crime photos, as well as those taken even earlier by Polokoff, show no
taxi behind Faulkner’s car. Chobert’s cab’s absence from crime scene
photos raises an inescapable issue: either Chobert did not park behind
Faulkner’s patrol car as he claimed in sworn trial testimony, or police
removed his car less than 20 minutes after arriving on the scene and
before investigators and a department photographer had gotten there...an
action constituting illegal tampering with the crime scene.

Further raising questions about whether Chobert was actually where he
claimed to have been during the shooting, a diagram of the crime scene
drawn by Cynthia White, plus a second one drawn by a police artist
following her instructions, show no taxi, though they do show, in front
of Cook’s VW, the extraneous detail of a Ford sedan that played no role
at all in the case.
There is no taxi behind the squad car in any photo of the crime scene from the morning of Dec. 9, 1981
No other witness at the trial except for White ever
testified to having seen Chobert’s taxi. Furthermore, if Chobert had
witnessed the shooting while sitting at the wheel of his cab behind
Faulkner’s squad car, as he testified, his view of the shooting, which
took place on the sidewalk on the driver’s side of the parked cars,
would have been blocked by both Faulkner’s and Cook’s parked vehicles.
Making his alleged view even more problematic, it was dark at the time,
Faulkner’s tail lights were on, and his glare-producing dome lights were
flashing brightly.
As for Cynthia White, though she claimed to have been standing on
the sidewalk by the intersection of 13th and Locust, just feet from the
shooting, no witness at the trial, including Chobert, claimed to have
seen her there. Furthermore, White’s story about the shooting changed
dramatically over time, as she was repeatedly picked up for
prostitution, and each time, was brought down to the Philadelphia Police
Homicide Unit, where she was questioned again and again about what she
had seen. In her first interview with detectives, she said she saw
Abu-Jamal shoot the officer several times before Faulkner fell to the
ground. A week later, she said it had been one or two shots that were
fired before the officer fell to the ground. A month later, in January,
1982, she was talking about only one shot being fired before Faulkner
was on the ground--the version of her account that she eventually
presented at trial.
Given the already problematic nature of both Chobert’s and
White’s sworn testimony, this new gun test evidence demonstrating that
there certainly should have been obvious bullet marks located around
Faulkner’s body if, as both these “eye-witnesses” testified under oath,
he had been fired at repeatedly at point blank range by a shooter
straddling Faulkner’s prone body, the whole prosecution story of an
execution-style slaying of the officer by Abu-Jamal would appear to be a
prosecution fabrication, complete with coached, perjured witnesses,
undermining the integrity and fairness of the entire trial, as well as
the subsequent death sentence.
Told about the results of the their gun test, and asked four
questions to explain the lack of photographic evidence or testimony
about bullet impact marks in the sidewalk around Faulkner’s body, the
Philadelphia DA’s office offered only a non-response, saying, “The
murderer has been represented over the past twenty plus years by a
multitude of lawyers, many of whom have closely reviewed the evidence
for the sole purpose of finding some basis to overturn the conviction.
As you know, none has succeeded, and Mr. Abu-Jamal remains what the
evidence proved - a murderer.”
Robert R. Bryan, lead attorney for Abu-Jamal, informed of the results
of the gun test, and shown a copy of the resulting marks on the
concrete, said, "Wow. This is extraordinarily important new evidence
that establishes clearly that the prosecutor and the Philadelphia Police
Department were engaged in presenting knowingly false testimony to a
jury in a case involving the life of my client. The evidence not only
demonstrates the falsity of the prosecution's story about how the
shooting occurred, and of the effort to portray the shooting to the jury
as an execution-style slaying. It raises serious questions as to
whether either of the two key witnesses actually were witnesses to the
shooting."
Courts – federal and state – have over the years rejected all
evidentiary challenges and all but one procedural error in the Abu-Jamal
case, despite granting legal relief on the same issues as those raised
by Abu-Jamal in dozens of other Pennsylvania murder cases--including a
few cases involving the murder of police officers.
In contrast to these consistent court rulings declaring Abu-Jamal’s
trial to have been fair, the respected organization Amnesty
International and other entities and legal experts contend Abu-Jamal did
not receive a fair trial in part due to improprieties by police and
prosecutors. AI’s seminal February 2000 investigative report on this
case stated, “The politicization of Mumia Abu-Jamal’s case may not only
have prejudiced his right to a fair trial, but may now be undermining
his right to fair and impartial treatment in the appeal courts.”
The Abu-Jamal case, which has garnered international attention, is
currently back before the federal Third Circuit Court of Appeals after a
remand order by the US Supreme Court to re-examine an earlier ruling
eliminating Abu-Jamal’s death penalty. It is also back in the news with
two new documentary films being premiered this Tuesday (9/21) in
Philadelphia--one, “The Barrel of a Gun,” which concludes Abu-Jamal is
guilty, and another “Justice on Trial: The Case of Mumia Abu-Jamal”,
which argues his innocence.