Burton, Fred "Muhammad"
Contact Information
In Prison 51 Years
Birthday: December 15, 1946
Fred is one of the Philly 5, a group of men accused of an alleged attack on a police unit that left one officer killed. The case stems from a highly racially charged period in Philadelphia history while the imfamous Frank Rizzo served as Police Commissioner.
Personal Background
Prior to his incarceration, Fred worked for a phone company, was a well-respected member of his community and his wife was preparing to have twins, his third and fourth child.
Legal Case
In 1970, Fred was accused and then convicted of participating in the planning of the murder of Philadelphia police officers. While the plan was allegedly to blow up a police station, what occurred was that a police officer was shot and killed, allegedly by members of a radical group called “the Revolutionaries.”
Only one witness, Marie Williams, who was the wife of co-defendant and primary actor, Hugh Williams, testified under duress as to the relationship between Fred and “the Revolutionaries.” Fred was not accused of being at the scene of the crime. At Fred’s trial, Marie Williams was compelled by order of the court to testify. Ms. Williams inculpated Fred by testifying that on one occasion, she had heard someone in her basement, a floor below her, say, “Let’s off some pigs.” She did not accuse Fred of making those statements. She only testified to Fred’s presence at that meeting. Ms. Williams also testified that besides the one meeting, she had no knowledge of the content of the meetings.
The testimony of the Commonwealth’s witness, Marie Williams, was marred by contradiction. Marie Williams initially claimed Fifth Amendment at the first two of three preliminary hearings and refused to testify. At Fred’s third preliminary hearing, Marie Williams completely exonerated Fred. She testified that she had no knowledge of “the Revolutionaries” or of Fred’s involvement with that group. After the third preliminary, the case was held for trial. Marie Williams was then subjected to a closed immunity hearing and compelled to testify at trial.
The Commonwealth intentionally struck every African-American from the active jury. The all white jury unanimously convicted Fred after being purposefully misled by the Commonwealth and Marie Williams. Fred was sentenced to a life term for murder. Burton has maintained his innocence since his arrest.
While searching through records that his family obtained in appealing his case over a decade later, Fred came across several items of exculpatory evidence that had been illegally withheld from the defense: 1) the transcript of Marie Williams’ previously undisclosed immunity hearing, 2) the two alleged original statements by Marie Williams given to the police after the murder, and 3) a pretrial letter authored and signed by Marie Williams to the prosecutor. This letter was submitted as evidence in the immunity hearing. It stated that the prosecutor and the police were intimidating Marie Williams and forcing her to lie in court. Most importantly, the same letter stated Marie Williams has no knowledge that Fred Burton participated in any meetings or crimes.
Legal Appeals
In 1983, his lawyer sued to have him released from indefinite solitary confinement where he spent 11 years. In September 2003, Fred brought a pro se Post Conviction Petition to vindicate his rights based on the newly discovered documents along with essential documents from the record that prove the occurrence of a fraud on the court, a gross miscarriage of justice, and his innocence. The PCRA trial court refused to address any substantive claims of Fred Burton, dismissing them only due to untimely filing. In early 2007, Fred’s lawyer filed a new PCRA brief to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed the lower court's decision.
Counsel for Burton then filed a writ of habeas corpus in 2009. Burton sought leave to amend his habeas petition to include a November 22, 2011 expert report by a forensic handwriting analyst. The report authenticates the signature of Marie Williams on the letter she sent to the District Attorney’s office to recant her statements to police. However, the habeas was also dismissed only on basis of timeliness in 2013. In June 2018, additional exculpatory evidence was obtained by the defense.
Life in Prison
Upon being sentenced to prison in 1972, Mr. Burton was automatically a target for the prison guards due to the racially charged atmosphere and the nature of the conviction. Mr. Burton became an organizer in prison and a teacher advocating for racial justice and religious freedom. Of the more than fifty years Mr. Burton has been in prison, thirty three of them have been in a maximum security facility. Eleven of those years have been spent in solitary confinement.
Fred Burton IV : My father should not have been sentenced in the first place 51 years ago ...There was no evidence against him and besides that he did not partake in any unfortunate killing of the police officer. And if you know the case, Marie Williams initially said my father had nothing to do with this crime , but changed her testimony to save her husband from the death penalty.