-
Liverpool's Isak faces two months out after 'reckless' tackle: Slot
-
Thailand-Cambodia border meeting in doubt over venue row
-
For director Josh Safdie, 'Marty Supreme' and Timothee Chalamet are one and the same
-
Kyiv's wartime Christmas showcases city's 'split' reality
-
Gazans fear renewed displacement after Israeli strikes
-
Locals sound alarm as Bijagos Islands slowly swallowed by sea
-
Markets mostly rise as rate cut hopes bring Christmas cheer
-
Cambodia asks Thailand to move border talks to Malaysia
-
In Bulgaria, villagers fret about euro introduction
-
Key to probe England's 'stag-do' drinking on Ashes beach break
-
Delayed US data expected to show solid growth in 3rd quarter
-
Thunder bounce back to down Grizzlies, Nuggets sink Jazz
-
Amazon says blocked 1,800 North Koreans from applying for jobs
-
Trump says US needs Greenland 'for national security'
-
Purdy first 49er since Montana to throw five TDs as Colts beaten
-
Australia captain Cummins out of rest of Ashes, Lyon to have surgery
-
North Korea's Kim tours hot tubs, BBQ joints at lavish new mountain resort
-
Asian markets rally again as rate cut hopes bring Christmas cheer
-
Australian state poised to approve sweeping new gun laws, protest ban
-
Trapped under Israeli bombardment, Gazans fear the 'new border'
-
Families want answers a year after South Korea's deadliest plane crash
-
Myanmar's long march of military rule
-
Disputed Myanmar election wins China's vote of confidence
-
Myanmar junta stages election after five years of civil war
-
Ozempic Meals? Restaurants shrink portions to match bite-sized hunger
-
'Help me, I'm dying': inside Ecuador's TB-ridden gang-plagued prisons
-
Australia's Cummins, Lyon out of fourth Ashes Test
-
US singer Barry Manilow reveals lung cancer diagnosis
-
'Call of Duty' co-creator Vince Zampella killed in car crash
-
Top Gold IRA Companies 2026 Ranked (Augusta Precious Metals, Lear Capital and More Reviewed)
-
Karviva Announces Launch of Energy and ACE Collagen Juices at Gelson's Stores This December
-
MindMaze Therapeutics: Consolidating a Global Approach to Reimbursement for Next-Generation Therapeutics
-
Decentralized Masters Announced as the Best Crypto Course of 2025 (Courses on Cryptocurrency Ranked)
-
Trump says would be 'smart' for Venezuela's Maduro to step down
-
Steelers' Metcalf suspended two games over fan outburst
-
Salah, Foster take Egypt and South Africa to AFCON Group B summit
-
Napoli beat Bologna to lift Italian Super Cup
-
Salah snatches added-time winner for Egypt after Zimbabwe scare
-
Penalty king Jimenez strikes for Fulham to sink Forest
-
Kansas City Chiefs confirm stadium move
-
Liverpool rocked by Isak blow after surgery on broken leg
-
Liverpool rocked by Isak blow after surgery on ankle injury
-
US stocks push higher while gold, silver notch fresh records
-
Deadly clashes in Aleppo as Turkey urges Kurds not to be obstacle to Syria's stability
-
Is the United States after Venezuela's oil?
-
Trump admin halts US offshore wind projects citing 'national security'
-
Right wing urges boycott of iconic Brazilian flip-flops
-
From misfits to MAGA: Nicki Minaj's political whiplash
-
Foster grabs South Africa winner against Angola in AFCON
-
Russia pledges 'full support' for Venezuela against US 'hostilities'
From US death-row cell, he turns to music for salvation
Music has helped Keith LaMar survive the mind-numbing sameness of nearly 30 years on death row in a maximum-security prison in the US state of Ohio.
Now he hopes his love and involvement in jazz -- along with the intervention of musicians drawing public attention to his case -- will help him escape execution for a murderous crime he insists he did not commit.
LaMar, who turns 53 on Tuesday, is accused of killing or ordering the killing of five fellow inmates during an 11-day prison riot in 1993.
His execution is already scheduled -- for November 16, 2023.
LaMar said he has spent the past 30 years preparing himself psychologically, morally and legally for whatever comes next.
"So, if and when the time comes, and I am an unfortunate victim of the state ... it won't be because I didn't try to do everything in my power to prevent that," he told AFP by telephone.
During those decades behind bars, though, he has become a huge jazz buff.
"Music is a big part of my life," he said.
He is particularly a fan of the music of John Coltrane, saying iconic albums like "A Love Supreme" have helped him cope with his anger and isolation.
The very first thing he does when he wakes up in the morning in a cell "the size of a closet" is to put on a CD, he said -- that, and write.
- Jazz concert from behind bars -
LaMar pleaded guilty for the crime he was originally arrested for at 19: the murder of a childhood friend -- an addict who had tried, at gunpoint, to steal drugs LaMar was selling.
He says he tried to turn his life around during the early years of his original 18-year sentence, completing a high-school equivalency degree before enrolling in university classes from his cell.
But he wants his case around the Lucasville Prison Riot to be reopened, contending that trial was gravely tainted by judicial irregularities.
In that regard LaMar is no longer alone. In addition to a team of lawyers working to reopen his case, several jazz musicians -- including the Spaniard Albert Marques -- have come together to demand "Justice for Keith LaMar" and raise awareness of his case.
Last weekend Marques's group gave a concert at New York's Jazz Gallery to celebrate release of the CD "Freedom First," composed jointly by LaMar and Marques. Some of the proceeds will cover LaMar's legal expenses.
During the concert, the firm but seductive voice of LaMar himself could often be heard over the speaker system.
Marques said LaMar, who wrote several of the song lyrics, narrating his life and commenting on his fate, "is part of the band and earns the same as the musicians."
"The idea is not to play for Keith, it's to play with Keith," Marques told AFP.
But how could LaMar participate from a death-row cell hundreds of miles away?
"He can make calls from jail, for which he has to pay," Marques said, adding with a touch of sarcasm that the guards "can't prohibit something that they can't imagine happening."
Marques said the band wants to "raise awareness" about a case involving one of his "best friends," whom he has visited in maximum-security Ohio State Penitentiary in Youngstown.
- 'Meaningful, purposeful things' -
LaMar says in his book "Condemned" -- written in his cell, then dictated by phone to a friend -- that he has been "trying, with all my might, to redeem myself." And he explains his version of what happened during the riots, which changed his life forever.
According to LaMar, prosecutors wrongfully withheld interviews with 13 inmates who witnessed or took part in the riots; evidence was destroyed; and prosecutors failed to disclose information that might have proved his innocence.
Prosecutors and appeals court judges, however, have insisted LaMar's guilt is proven.
"When you (are) poor, Black and in a racist country, you plead guilty," he said, referring to limited recourse he believes African Americans have in the justice system.
In a country which has seen stunning cases of wrongful conviction, "the truth can only set you free when you have enough money," LaMar said.
But music can also deliver truth. Musician Marques has been "one of the blessings of my life," LaMar says, and his last, best hope of drawing wider attention to his case.
Above all, he says, he has gained a "friend."
"I'm trying to stay caught up with meaningful, purposeful things," LaMar said, because that gives some sense to his life -- and ensures those who believe in his innocence also "believe in me as a human being."
J.Gomez--AT