Welcome Home Celebration for Rev. Pinkney

Celebrate with Rev. Pinkney

Saturday, July 8, 2017

2 PM – 6 PM

St. Matthews St. Joseph Episcopal Church
8850 Woodward Ave., Detroit, MI

Food and Entertainment – Donation suggested

Rev. Edward Pinkney was freed from prison on June 13, 2017, after an unjust conviction and incarceration. Join supporters at a celebration where we welcome Rev. Pinkney home.

Welcome Home Fund

Supporters are raising money for a Welcome Home Fund for Rev. Edward and Dorothy Pinkney. The goal is to raise $3000 by July 8.  Please mail your donation to Moratorium NOW Coalition, 5920 Second Ave., Detroit, MI 48202.  Make the check or money order out to Moratorium NOW Coalition and write Rev. Pinkney in the memo line.   Or, if you prefer, you may donate online at https://www.youcaring.com/pinkney_welcome_home_fund.

Latest news:

Rev. Pinkney is free!

By David Sole, posted on June 13, 2017
http://www.workers.org/2017/06/13/rev-pinkney-is-free/#.WU3DDFGQzDc

Exactly two years and six months after being locked up, Michigan’s political prisoner, the Rev. Edward Pinkney, walked out from behind the bars. His spouse, Dorothy Pinkney, waited for him at the Brooks Correctional Facility in Muskegon Heights, Mich., on the morning of June 13, ready to drive him to their home in the small town of Benton Harbor in southwest Michigan.

Two nights before his release, Workers World asked Pinkney whether he was “packed and ready to go.” He replied, “I’ve been packed and ready for two-and-a-half years.” Those familiar with the case cannot believe that this 68-year-old African-American community leader could have been charged, tried and convicted on no evidence.

Pinkney faced a white judge, a white prosecutor and an all-white jury on frame-up charges of having altered some dates on a recall petition against Benton Harbor’s then-mayor, James Hightower. There were no confession, no forensic evidence and no witnesses against him.

All activists are threatened by his conviction, which was upheld last year by the Michigan Court of Appeals. That court ruled that Rev. Pinkney had the greatest animosity to the mayor and therefore could be assumed to have committed the crime. The case is now headed for the Michigan Supreme Court. Even if that court were to exonerate Rev. Pinkney, they cannot give him back the hard 30 months he has already served.

Detroit area supporters are holding a “Welcome Home Rev. Pinkney” dinner on Saturday, July 8, at which Rev. Pinkney will speak. It will be at the St. Matthew – St. Joseph Church, 8850 Woodward Ave., Detroit, and will run from 2 to 5 p.m.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*