
Elena Herrada and Efren Paredes, Jr.
Elena is co-chair and founding member of the Committee for the Political Resurrection of Detroit, which focuses on domestic human rights. She is a member of the Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice, she has worked at a SEIU local, and was the president of a RWDSU (Retail, Worker, Department Store Union) local. Elena is a contributor to the newspaper The Michigan Citizen, and is also a longtime advocate for Detroit's Latino Community.
This fall Elena will begin her quest for a degree in the Chicano/Latino Studies doctoral program at Michigan State University. A member of Latinos Unidos, in 2001 Elena produced a documentary film entitled Los Repatriados: Exiles from the Promised Land, about the depression-era deportation of Mexicans from Michigan. She also recently founded a new Latino Workers Center in Detroit, the Centro Obrero.
During Elena's visit with Efren she pledged to assist him, as well as his family and supporters, by joining The Injustice Must End (TIME) committee and combining their efforts to get justice for Efren. The visit went very well and was productive for all those present. Efren and Elena took a photograph during the visit which appears in this post.
On February 4, 2007 Elena disseminated an e-mail to her extensive list of e-mail contacts stating the following:
I wish to direct you to the web site of Efren Paredes, Jr., from St. Joseph, Michigan, who was sentenced to three life terms at age 15. I have joined his family in their efforts to get him a new trial or a commutation this year, in 2007. There are several reasons I am assisting in this effort, but I ask you to read the materials and sign his online petition.
Please share this information with your lists who may be willing to help get this young man out of prison. We will all benefit from his freedom. He is a valuable asset to those of us in the human rights struggle. Read some of his writings and see the person he is.
Regardless of these facts, Efren has been wrongly incarcerated as a child and is now 34-years-old. He has been in prison for 18 years and his family and friends have not give up on him. We, in the rest of the state, are being asked by Efren and his family to add our voices and resources to this case.
Thank you for your assistance in this matter.
Elena Herrada
Co-Chair
Detroit Committee to Free Efren Paredes, Jr.
Please read Efren's web site at www.4efren.com and sign his online petition at http://www.petitionspot.com/petitions/4Efren.
On February 8, 2007 Elena dispatched an e-mail to Efren's family informing them of her intention to gather 1,000 signatures to submit along with a commutation to Governor Granholm's office requesting Efren's release.
Elena will be fervently working to gather the necessary signatures in the Detroit area at various meetings and functions she will be attending. We are grateful for Elena's efforts and wish her much success with her with these endeavors. Please support Elena and our campaign to restore Efren's much deserved freedom.
UPDATE
August 22, 2007
Elena has been visiting Efren with family nearly every month since she began assisting Efren's family and The Injustice Must End (TIME) Committee with their efforts to free Efren and get justice in his case.
Since signing on to assist Elena has made numerous contacts and disseminated information about Efren's case. Elena also initiated a meeting between a journalist and photojournalist with Efren on Friday, August 17, 2007 to discuss his wrongful conviction with the hopes of having a favorable article published in a periodical.
Elena is presenting working on constructing newspaper articles and doing radio interviews to assist Efren's campaign. She also held a meeting at her home on Sunday, August 26, 2007 with community leaders from the Detroit area and the TIME Committee to generate additional support for Efren's campaign.
October 23, 2007
This morning at 11:00 AM Elena appeared on the show "Detroit Today" which is broadcast on WDET 101.9 FM. It is a National Public Radio show at Wayne State University. She had the opportunity to discuss Efren's case for approximately 20 minutes. People called in to the show with questions and comments. Two notable callers were Terry Kelly, editor of The Michigan Citizen newspaper and Paul Ciolino, a world renowned private investigator and wrongful convictions expert working to free Efren.