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LEOLA MADDOX SPEAKS On Alton, On Life, On Being Black in America

 

LEOLA MADDOX SPEAKS 
On Alton, On Life, On Being Black in America

(Our Time Press, 1998

 

On the Trial:
 
I thought Alton was fantastic. Someone asked me earlier if I thought his closing remarks were his finest moment. I said no because although the summation was great, I would say his finest hour was the time he put himself on the witness stand and cross-examined himself in a Human Rights case. In the summation for this defamation trial he showed he had been paying attention. He wasn’t sleeping like Judge S. Barrett Hickman did through the trial at times. He brought out facts and evidence and discussed the issues. Stanton Steve Pagone’s attorney, didn’t. I thought it was key that he thanked the people who helped him in the case, including the people of the United African Movement. He said more than once in this case, “Had it not been for the United African Movement, the trial would have ended in November (1997).”

Pagones’ Wife:

 

 
She says she’s been suffering. I would like to tell her that if she thinks she’s suffering, she needs to know that I work two jobs. She works directly for her father-in-law. And I’m not saying this to be bitter. If Alton and I had to do anything over, we would do it the same way. As far as we’re concerned, when you go into a relationship and you know that that’s the kind of job that you want to do, you do what you have to do.

 

But her refusal to testify is interesting. She could have supported him. I feel she didn’t want to because she would have been caught in perjury. For her to say that she knew where he was, I believe is a lie! She would have committed perjury. And as a lawyer, that would have been a double whammy for her. As for this alibi — a photograph of his leg, he needs to go somewhere! Pagones worked as an assistant D.A. and he calls a photograph of his leg, an alibi?

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Defining a Power Marriage:

Alton went to law school before we got married. His thing was, “You know that I want to work with poor people and you know there is no money in a law firm whose clients are poor.” He asked me, “Would you be OK with that?” So all of this was discussed prior to marriage, and when you go into it knowing the truth, that you’re not going to be rolling in dough, it doesn’t bother you if you have to sell hotdogs; you just sell hotdogs.

Most trying time:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

How has it affected me? When he lost his license that meant I had to go out and get a second job. I had to contribute more to the household. As long as he knew and I knew that what he was doing was correct, you don’t look at it as something that is affecting me. It’s just trying to make a contribution to what he was doing. That is the kind of law he wanted to do, it was never about making money. For Alton, it’s always been about what kind of contribution he can make to his people, and what kind of contribution he can make to children. He feels that children need strong role models, not role models who say, “Yes, Sir!, No Sir!, How high should I jump, Sir?!” And that’s why he said when they tried to take his license, ‘We don’t have to go through a trial.’ He could have done like Jessie and apologized. Two or three judges asked Alton to just apologize (for not revealing to a Grievance Committee information about his client Tawana Brawley). Alton said, ‘How would it look to children if I apologize and I didn’t do anything to apologize for.’ So he refused. They told him if he wanted to have this case ended all he had to do was apologize. Now my granddaughter, Malaysia, wants to be a lawyer. She’s tired of people picking on her ‘dindad’. She wants to hurry up and grow up so she can help him. My grandson is sure to follow Malaysia since she, being older, is his role model.

And my son, Charles, sometimes can’t stand for people to pick on his father. His daughter, Malaysia is a lot like him. He works for my husband. He doesn’t want to see people abuse his father, and he watches as his father sits there and just smiles. Charles, says he will never go into law. First Meeting: It was a blind date. Two of my colleagues I worked with decided I was spending too much time alone, so they said, ‘Don’t you want to meet somebody?’ It happened to be Alton. We met, we dated and we were married in three months, 32 years ago. We came to New York for one year in 1973 and we’re still here. We were supposed to be here for one year. That’s the biggest change in our lives. I would like to go back to Georgia, not that I regret being here.

And now it really doesn’t matter as much as it did before because my mother and my grandmother are now deceased. I was a Mama and a Grandmama’s baby. I was very, very, very close to them. Whenever my son would get sick, I called my mother and my grandmother. And …well I haven’t told too many people but there was a time when I couldn’t cook. I was always around people who liked to cook, so I didn’t have to. So every meal I made I had to call my mother and grandmother to talk me through it.

African-centered Life:

Love of my race was instilled in me at an early age. The first time I had white teachers was in graduate school Up South in Boston, Mass. By the time I was in my 20’s, it was already instilled in me to be proud of who you are and you never met Can’t ‘cause Can’t died, according to my teacher, before they were born. We never had anybody who taught us anything different. Even in graduate school, I could see the difference. I could see that our children had a problem. Even in graduate school they would tell me I was doing “C,” “B” or “B-” work , when I knew I was doing “A” work. I was always taught to speak my mind and in graduate school I had a teacher who told me that the only black people who made contributions to our race were people with PHD’s like Dr. King. So I read him. I said to him in front of the class, “Have you ever heard of Fannie Lou Hamer?” He said, “No.” So I started to tell him about Fannie Lou Hamer. Needless to say that man gave me a “C” even though I did outstanding work — just because I embarrassed him in the class. I’m Black and he’s going to tell me who made a contribution to the race. Because he didn’t do any homework, the only Black leader he ever heard of was Dr. King.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

On Tawana Brawley:

Alton did give up his career for the Tawana Brawley case. They used Tawana as the case, but it wasn’t Tawana they wanted. I believe they wanted to get him for walking that Black kid out of the court for killing the priest. The press had convicted that kid in the newspapers before they had the facts, and then when the kid was set free, they didn’t know what to do.

Education:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

I have degrees in History and Education. I minored in Library Science. It didn’t take me long to know I didn’t want to teach. I went back to school and got my library science degree. (Note: Mrs. Maddox is a librarian at Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn.)

I attended the high school of Manchester, Ga.. I went to Fort Valley State College, Boston State University and Simmons College. By having black teachers, we got a little more black history back in Georgia. Even though it was not in the books, these black teachers taught us what they knew. Also, in Georgia, the Black Teachers Association owned everything. Adam Clayton Powell told us not to vote to merge with the white organizations. The whites did not have a building; we had a building. Powell told us he would give it 10 years. He predicted the South will be like the North. He gave us a warning. He said there would be fewer black teachers.

Right after the Black Teachers Association voted to merge, a National Teachers’ Exam was instituted. All of those great, older teachers had to go back and pass those exams, after they had been teaching a hundred years! They told the old teachers they had to pass the exam with high grades. Right away Black teachers started leaving the profession. How were they going to pass this exam when much of the material had never been taught to them when they were younger. We lost so much when we lost them, the least of which was a connection to everything that makes us strong.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

On the Frontline going to Court in Poughkeepsie, New YorkL to R: Attorney Michael Hardy, Attorney/Defendant Alton H. Maddox, Jr. Abdul., Graham Weatherspoon, Leola Maddox, unidentified man, Attorney Steven Jackson, Minister Clemson Brown (in back) Attorney/Defendant C. Vernon Mason

The Tawana Brawley Case: TIMELINE From Wappinger’s Falls, NY 1987 to Poughkeepsie, NY 1998

From Wappinger’s Falls, NY 1987 to Poughkeepsie, NY 1998
1987
Nov. 24 State Trooper Scott Patterson and Part-time policeman Harry Crist take
Patterson’s pickup truck to the Newburgh area.
Nov. 24 – Mrs. Buxton, mother of Tawana’s boyfriend, reports that she and Tawana
are followed in Newburgh by two white men in a pickup truck.
Nov. 24 – Patterson, son of the second in command of the New York State Police,
reports that he had driven Crist within a couple of blocks and within 15 minutes
of where and when 15 year old Ketcham High School honors student Tawana Brawley
would have been walking that evening.
Nov. 24 – Tawana Brawley got off a Shortline bus returning from Ms. Buxtons’
house. She later reports that she was kidnapped and raped over a four day
period.
Dutchess County Assistant District Attorney Steven Pagones, son of Judge Anthony
Pagones, gave the following as his whereabouts during the kidnapping. He
presented no witnesses to corroborate his story.
Nov. 24 – At work
25 – -At home
26 – Thanksgiving
27 – Family gathering
Nov 28 – Pagones, Part-time Police Officer Harry Crist, State Trooper Scott
Patterson, son of second in command of the New York State Police, and Gene
Branson allegedly drive to Danbury, Conn. mall to shop for their girlfriends
from 11am to 3-4pm. They use Crist’s car, a former police cruiser. Pagones has
testified that at 11:30am Harry Crist asked him, “Did you hear about the girl
they found in the bag of shit?” Pagones has testified that during the ride,
Crist pointed a gun at him and said, “I’ll blow your brains out.”
Nov 28 – Mailman Tim Losee sees a car with four white men driving slowly through
the area where Tawana Brawley was found. The description of the car was, “Like
an old trooper car.” Later he identifies a newspaper photo of Patterson as the
possible driver.
Nov 28 – 2:00pm Tawana Brawley is found near a dumpster in a plastic bag. Deputy
Sheriff Eric Thurston reports Ms. Brawley is half-naked, curled up in a fetal
position and without underwear She is covered with feces and has “KKK nigger
bitch” is written on her torso. The ambulance team finds no dilation of pupils
and no response to ammonia capsules. At St. Francis Hospital, the medical report
revealed masses of hair ripped from her head, she is, “unresponsive,
unconscious, shallow breathing” There is notation of a collection of blood
around her pubic area. It notes that the teenager’s severe injuries were the
result of “probable sexual assault.” Officer Tommy Young, Poughkeepsie’s only
Black cop, interviews Ms. Brawley. When asked to identify her attackers, she
grabs his badge. Later she writes, “white cop”. Sheriff’s office arson
investigator, Detective Brazelli is given the rape kit for transport. He
delivers the kit to the lab three days later. It is later learned that Detective
Brazelli is a friend of Steven Pagones.
Nov 30 – Tawana Brawley is interviewed at her home by Hilda Kolgut of the FBI in
the Southern District and a close friend of Steven Pagones. Other Pagones
associates present for the interview are co-workers Marjorie Smith, sex crimes
Assistant District Attorney from the Dutchess County District Attorney’s office,
and C. Otto Williams, an African American and Senior Assistant District
Attorney. A detective from the Dutchess County Sheriff’s office conducted the
interview. Also present were family members, neighbors, members of the NAACP and
the Human Rights Commission. Tawana describes a white cop with sandy blond hair
and a moustache. The family requests an artist to do a sketch, and pictures of
local police. Both requests were denied.
Dec. 1 – Pagones, Patterson and Crist allegedly spend time together lifting
weights at Crist’s home.
Dec. 1 – 11:00-11:30 Crist is shot dead at his home.
Dec 2 – Body of Police Officer Harry Crist is found by Scott Patterson.
Originally termed a suicide, now acknowledged to be a death by gunshot. There’s
no evidence found indicating a suicide.
Dec. 3 – Pathologist examines Crist’s body. No powder burns on hands. State
Police bring the body with no crime scene photos, no weapon and no “suicide
note.” The pathologist, says, “I can’t say it’s a suicide.” His Autopsy Report
for Crist, describes the body as “that of a young Caucasian male, with
moustache, measuring 70 inches and weighing approximately 190 lbs. The hair is
short, dark brown in color and the eyes are hazel.” The cause of death is listed
as “Massive brain injury and hemorrhage secondary to a single gunshot wound of
the head.” The word “suicide” does not appear anywhere in the report.
The New York State Police and the Press report Crist’s death as a suicide.
Dec. – State Trooper Scott Patterson refuses to answer questions about Crist’s
death.
Dec. 7 – Informant tells Asst. Dist. O’Neill that Crist was a racist, had
problems with women, and that “there was something about how this fellow Scott
Patterson, the trooper, had found Harry Crist and had retained the note for a
longer period of time than he should have. This information was in a
memorandum.” (DA Grady testimony)
Dec. 8 – District Attorney William Grady meets with Steven Pagones who is one of
his Assistant DA’s.
Dec. 12 – Demonstration in Poughkeepsie marks the beginning of The December 12th
Movement.
Dec. 23 – State Police and Sheriff’s office, w/consent of the District Attorney,
have Tawana’s boyfriend call Tawana and question her about the rape. They record
the conversation. “During the course of that phone call Tawana Brawley was heard
to have stated that the person who did this to her was the white cop who shot
himself in Wappingers.” (DA Grady testimony)
1988
Jan. 6 – Grady begins to present evidence to the grand jury. The Brawleys, who
are being advised by Maddox, refuse to cooperate. Maddox , in receipt of
information that a high official in the D.A.’s office was involved in the
matter, sees a conflict of interest with the local DA’s office, Attorney Maddox
demands that the current District Attorney of Dutchess County, WIlliam Grady,
recuse himself.
Jan. 13 – Mailman Tim Losee is interviewed by ADA William O’Neill. Describes car
with four white men.
Jan. 13 – Attorney Maddox holds press conference and “again reiterated that in
the family’s mind Harry Crist is a suspect who was aperson who should be
pursued, and why weren’t photographs shown to Tawana Brawley?
Jan. 14 – ADA Steven Pagones is interviewed by ADA William O’Neill. O’Neill
describes match of identification of car and occupants. Mr. Pagones claimed to
be in Danbury, Connecticut. He remembers that they were in Danbury because
around 11:30am “Harry asked us about a girl in a bag of feces.” (Approximately
two hours before Tawana was found.)
Jan. 19 – Pagones meets with good friend Hilda Kolgut of the FBI. Says he’s not
talking without a lawyer.
Jan 19 – Newsday publishes story that Reverend Sharpton wore a wire in a past
investigation.
Jan 20 – Grady withdraws from the case, citing an undisclosed conflict of
interest.
Jan. 25 – Judge Judith Hillary writes to Governor Cuomo Aide and names Steven
Pagones as a suspect and cause of a conflict of interest in Dutchess County
District Attorney’s office. Requests State help in appointing a prosecutor
Jan. 27 – Governor Mario Cuomo appoints Attorney General Robert Abrams special
prosecutor.
Feb. 11 – Steven Pagones retains a lawyer. Tells his lawyer that he will not
cooperate with the FBI and will not take a polygraph test.
Feb. 17 – Poughkeepsie Journal names Pagones as a suspect.
Feb. 20 – Grady disqualifies citing a conflict of interest.
Feb. 21- Local attorney David Sall appointed as prosecutor. Tells Glenda
Brawley, “I don’t care if you’re white, black or polkadot.”
Feb. 22 – After reviewing the files, David Sall disqualifies himself, saying,
“No one in Dutchess County can prosecute this case.”
Mar. 4 Pagones is examined by a doctor for stress related illness. The doctor’s
records show Pagones reporting he had the condition for the last three months.
Mar. 13 – Alton Maddox, Al Sharpton, C. Vernon Mason hold a press conference.
Maddox made the following statements, “He was one of the attackers, yes. If I
didn’t have direct evidence, I wouldn’t be sitting here saying that.” “We don’t
want to outline to Pagones what evidence we have. He’s still a law enforcement
official and is in the position to retaliate against the family.” And regarding
Harry Crist, “He did not commit suicide, he was murdered.” C. Vernon Mason said,
“What we have here is an official, an officially sanctioned conspiracy to
obstruct and prevent justice in the case of Tawana Brawley.” All of these
statement were ruled NOT defamatory. At the same press conference, Maddox said,
“Steven Pagones had known the Brawley family for some time. He lived on the same
street as the Brawley family. Less than two years ago. He had eyed Tawana
Brawley before.” He also said, “He (District Attorney Grady) knew one of his
Assistant District Attorneys was involved in the abuse of Tawana Brawley.”
March 14 – FBI contacts Pagones. He refuses cooperation.
Mar. 30 – FBI Threatens Pagones.
Mar. 31 – On the “People Are Talking” talk show broadcast by the WWOR-Television
Network at its studios in New York City, in response to this question by Richard
Bey: “I guess its hard for people to believe that a police officer and an
assistant district attorney would work in coercion together to go out, kidnap a
black teenager and rape her”. Defendant, Rev. Al Sharpton, stated in response:
“We stated openly that Steven Pagones, the Assistant District Attorney did it.
His lawyers say he may or may not sue us. If we’re lying, sue us, so we can go
into Court with you and prove you did it. I’ll use your show to dare them to sue
us – sue us right now. We are saying Steven Pagones did it. Now if Steven
Pagones didn’t do it, why isn’t he suing us?” Jury ruled Defamatory, but that
Sharpton did not know it was false.
April 4 – FBI memorandum re: “Changing the thrust of the investigation.”
April 5 – Pagones visits doctor.
April 15 – Al Sharpton made the following statement: “The point is that we have
named Steven Pagones and others and if Ms. Brawley’s given an impartial
prosecutor, we can put them in jail…The investigation now is on every crack
addict in Newburgh rather than an investigation of the alleged suspect. Most
investigators go after suspects. Why aren’t the investigators looking at Pagones
and the people we’ve named?” Jury Deadlocked on defamation.
June 15 – At the Phil Donohue show broadcast by the NBC and filmed at the
Bethany Baptist Church in Brooklyn, made the following statements: …”of semi-
conscious – with excrement all over her body, with urine in her mouth, cotton in
her nose and in her ears, she said and has proven that six white men, one named
Steven Pagones. I’ll repeat it again, Assistant District Attorney of Dutchess
County, another one, William Patterson, another one, Harry Crist were among
those that attacked her…That the key question Miss – we have said what
happened to Tawana, we said we can prove it, we said we’ve got the evidence. If
they really want to resolve it, call our bluff…Mr. Pagones’ father is a judge
and the head of the Democratic Party in that part of the County. And Mr.
Patterson’s father is the No. 2 man for the New York State Police – he is very
close to the Governor – and these people would rather die than have a black girl
put them in jail. But put them in jail they will. These people will go to jail.”
This was ruled defamatory, but he did not know it was false.
June 18 – Pagones marries.
June 30 – Pagones visits doctor.
Aug. 2 – Pagones testifies before a Grand Jury.
Aug. – United African Movement is launched in support of Brawley and all African
American women.
Sept. 2 – Pagones visits Doctor.
Oct. 6 – The state grand jury concludes there is no evidence to support
Brawley’s story and “exonerates” Pagones.
Oct. 31 Pagones files an $800 million slander lawsuit against Tawana Brawley,
Alton Maddox, C. Vernon Mason and Al Sharpton. He claimed advisers to Tawana
Brawley defamed him when they accused him of participating in the alleged kidnap
and rape of the Wappinger’s Falls teenager.
Nov. Maddox requests deposition of Pagones. Pagones seeks to quash deposition.
He is unsuccessful.
1989
February 28 – State Supreme Court Justice Ralph Beisner dismisses 36 causes of
action against Sharpton and Maddox.
Sept. Pagones goes to Appellate division to get a restraining order to preclude
his deposition.
Oct. – Judicial Grievance Committee sends Maddox a letter telling him to bring
all files on Tawana Brawley and appear at a hearing to tell them everything
Tawana had told him. Maddox refuses.
1990
May 21 – Attorney Alton Maddox is suspended from practicing law for refusing to
appear before a judicial grievance committee investigating his conduct in the
Brawley case. Maddox says he will not undermine his lawyer/client privilege.
Nov. – Rudolph Giuliani, former Prosecutor, Southern District, is elected Mayor
of New York City.
1991
May 7 – State Supreme court Justice Ralph Beisner rules Brawley intentionally
inflicted emotional distress on Pagones when her advisers accused him of
abducting and assaulting her.
1990-1993
Several judges in Dutchess County decline to try the case.
1995 Judge Hickman, a friend of George Pataki’s from nearby Putnam County is
selected to try the case.
1997
Jan-Aug. – Depositions taken.
Oct. 28 – Judge Hickman rules that Maddox will not be able to present witnesses
to provide evidence to support his claim that Pagones was involved in the rape
of Miss Brawley and the death of Harry Crist. He rules in his motion that
Crist’s death “had no connection with Tawana Brawley.” He also rules that
Pagones does not have to verify his alibi with witnesses, and if called they
will not be permitted to testify. He rules the defendants could not question the
Grand Jury report, and that Maddox and Mason could not assert the
“attorney-client privilege”. This because the Brawley family had not “come
forward to document the fact that either Maddox or Mason or both were retained
to represent Ms. Brawley; and “there is nothing definitive in the record to
explain how Rev. Sharpton suddenly became the religious adviser to (her)”.
Said Maddox: “Justice Hickman obviously relied upon (the Dred Scott) decision to
rule against (me), Mason, Sharpton and Brawley. This decision is necessary in
order to insulate Pagones from a criminal indictment. Also, Pagones had said he
had more than 50 witnesses who could account for every minute of the day that he
was accused of being with Brawley, but now the judge is saying (he) doesn’t have
to present even one witness.
Nov. 13 – Trial begins at the Dutchess County Courthouse in Poughkeepsie, New
York.
Nov. 18 Jury selection.
Dec. 2 – Brawley breaks her 10-year silence, speaking at Bethany Baptist Church
in Brooklyn. “If I had read everything about me in the past 10 years, I would
say it was a hoax, too. But it happened to me and I am not a liar,” she tells a
crowd of nearly 800 people.
1998
Jan. 13 – Judge Hickman rules there is no compelling reason for former Gov.
Mario Cuomo and former state Attorney General Robert Abrams to come to
Poughkeepsie to testify at the trial, although they both played roles in the
Brawley probe. Because of this ruling, the advisers can not call Cuomo and
Abrams as witnesses.
April 17 – Members of the Committee to Eliminate Media Offensive to African
People (CEMOTAP) conduct a press conference in Poughkeepsie to complain about
media coverage of the trial.
April 29 – Jackson is jailed overnight for being cited for contempt for a third
time. Rev. Sharpton offers to serve the jail term for Jackson. Hickman rejects
Sharpton’s proposal.
June 26 – Judge Hickman issues a ruling that there is evidence to support most
of Pagones’ claims that he was defamed and rejects the defendants’ motions to
quash the plaintiff’s accusation against them.
July 13 – The jury finds all three defendants liable for defaming Pagones. It
finds Rev. Al Sharpton liable for seven statements, Alton H. Maddox liable for
two and C. Vernon Mason liable for one. Eleven other statements of the 22
statements Pagones’ found to be defamatory were not slanderous, the jury
determined. It is a partial victory for the defendants. A lone juror — a black
woman — refuses to sign the verdict sheet.
July 14 – Robert Abrams, (calling WABC Radio in from a meeting of the National
Association of Attorneys General, SAGE, Society of Attorneys General Emeritus in
Colorado): “I extend congratulations to Steven Pagones…There’s no amount of
money that can compensate for the kind of pain he has suffered, he has endured,
he has been put through. As I reflect on this, I’m proud of the fact, here we
are ten years later, and the Grand Jury report stays intact.
“The Grand Jury said that the allegations made by Tawana Brawley namely that she
was abducted by four white men or a group of white men who were attached to law
enforcement and held in the woods against her will for a four- day period and
repeatedly raped. That allegation was false.
“There was no indication whatever that she was physically raped. There was a
rape test conducted when she was taken to the hospital… If a person was held
against her will, repeatedly raped in the out of doors, there would have been
all kinds of physical evidence that would have indicated that. So what I think
what this verdict does and this trial did do, was to show that the investigation
that was conducted which was done by a team of extremely professional and
dedicated investigators headed on a day-to-day basis by a fantastic public
servant, Jack Ryan, who was assistant Attorney General in charge of the criminal
prosecutions bureau, and I was designated the Special Prosecutor. I took full
responsibility for the investigation and put Jack Ryan in charge of the
day-to-day activity of the investigation.”
July 29 Jury awards damages. $5,000 ea. For compensatory damages. Punitive
Damages – $96,000 Maddox, $60,000 Sharpton, $186,000 C. Vernon Mason.
Appeals filed.

Comments on Passing of Percy Sutton (In Formation)

Barack Obama on the Passing of Percy Sutton:

Percy Sutton was a true hero to African Americans in New York City and around the country. We will remember him for his service to the country as a Tuskegee Airman, to New York State as a state assemblyman, to New York City as Manhattan Borough President, and to the community of Harlem in leading the effort to revitalize the world renowned Apollo Theater. His life-long dedication to the fight for civil rights and his career as an entrepreneur and public servant made the rise of countless young African Americans possible. Michelle and I extend our deepest condolences to his family on this sad day.

12.26.09 Governor Paterson released the following statement on the passing of Percy Sutton:
“Tonight, we say farewell to one of New York’s and this nation’s most influential African-American leaders – a man whom I am proud to have called a friend and mentor throughout my entire career.
“Percy Sutton was a trailblazer. He began his career as a prominent lawyer for Malcolm X and then took Harlem by storm as a leader of the Harlem Clubhouse where he launched not only his own successful political career but, as a member of the Gang of Four, spawned the successful careers of so many other African-American leaders. It was Percy Sutton who talked me into running for office and who has continued to serve as one of my most valued advisors ever since.
“The youngest of fifteen children, Percy dreamt big and exceeded even the highest of expectations. His success did not end simply with legal triumph or elective office – both of which he attained. Beyond those achievements, it was his entrepreneurial spirit that led to some of his greatest accomplishments – the rebirth of the Apollo Theater, the stewardship of a growing media empire and more.
“Percy was fiercely loyal, compassionate and a truly kind soul. He will be missed but his legacy lives on through the next generations of African-Americans he inspired to pursue and fulfill their own dreams and ambitions.
“Thank you, Percy, for your friendship and for all that you have contributed to our State and our Nation. On behalf of Michelle, the Paterson Family and all New Yorkers, our prayers are with your family.”

STATEMENT FROM SENATE MAJORITY
CONFERENCE LEADER JOHN L. SAMPSON

“Yesterday, New York lost a giant of a man, and I lost a dear friend and valued mentor.

“Percy Sutton was a defining figure in the African American community for over half a century. As leader of the Harlem Clubhouse, ground-breaking civil rights attorney, former Manhattan Borough President, and business entrepreneur, Percy forever changed the political, social and economic landscape of New York. Savior to the famed Apollo Theater and member of the celebrated Tuskegee Airmen of World War II, our state and nation owe him a debt of gratitude that can only be truly honored by a commitment to follow in his trailblazing footsteps.

“Percy’s steady influence and fearless leadership touched the lives of countless New Yorkers and paved the way for future generations of elected officials and community activist. He fought to make New York a better place and leaves behind a legacy of success and burning torch for others to carry in his absence.

“Percy Sutton led a life of great distinction and will be sorely missed by friends and strangers alike. I would like to thank him one more time for his kindness, his leadership and his guidance.”

Congresswoman Maxine Waters Mourns Passing of Percy Sutton
Washington, DC – Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-CA) released the following statement today on the passing of political and civil rights leader Percy Sutton:
“I am saddened to learn of the death of my old friend Percy Sutton.
Percy emerged as one of the great civil rights lawyers and leaders of the United States, with courage and legal talent that served him well as he represented some of the highly visible community and civil rights leaders in New York and throughout the country. And he was well prepared to do so, volunteering with the N.A.A.C.P as a young man, serving our country with distinction as a Tuskegee Airman in World War II and in the Air Force during the Korean War, and attending Columbia Law School and graduating from Brooklyn Law School.
It is well known that he represented Malcolm X, but more than that, he became a great friend to his wife Betty and their children following Malcolm’s tragic and untimely death.
Percy loved Harlem, and he invested tremendous time and energy in its economic development, most notably his work to revitalize and save the iconic Apollo Theatre.
He was instrumental in helping to elect David Dinkins the first African American Mayor of New York City, and not only helped to shape Dinkins’ career but the careers of other leaders such as former New York Secretary of State Basil Paterson, Congressman Charlie Rangel and New York Governor David Paterson. Percy was a committed public servant himself, serving in the New York State Assembly and as Manhattan Borough President for over a decade.
Percy was also an advisor to Rev. Jesse Jackson during his 1984 and 1988 presidential campaigns. From my role on both of those campaigns I can speak firsthand to the impact he had on Rev. Jackson and the tone of those groundbreaking races.
Percy Sutton will not only be remembered for his legal talent, political acumen, and community development leadership but also for cofounding the Inner City Broadcasting Corporation, which afforded the African American community the kind of communications network that truly focused on news and interests of concern to us. His boldness in establishing New York’s first African American-owned radio station is especially salient during this time of shrinking and disappearing minority, small, local and other media outlets throughout the country.
Many of us who witnessed his dedication to, commitment to, and love for his people and his community will forever be inspired by all that he accomplished, and we are dedicated to continuing his legacy.
My thoughts and prayers are with his wife Leatrice, his children and grandchildren, his family and friends, and the countless people in Harlem and the United States who knew and who were influenced by Percy Sutton.”
###

Percy E. Sutton: A Titan Worthy of Emulation (1920-2009)
Activist, lawyer, politician and business leader lived a life “full to overflowing,”
says Black Enterprise Founder & Publisher Earl G. Graves Sr.
Credit: www.BlackEnterprise.com.

EDITOR’S NOTE: The following article and Black Enterprise magazine image of Percy E. Sutton (circa April 1989)
(New York, NY) December 28, 2009-Percy E. Sutton never met a challenge too great for his boundless energy and intrepid spirit. The founder of Inner City Broadcasting Corp. (which operated the first African American-owned radio station), a Tuskegee Airman, and lawyer, Sutton’s shrewd business sense and iron will made him a force to be reckoned with. The pioneering figure died Saturday. He was 89.
Although he was a San Antonio, Texas native, it was in New York City where Sutton sowed seeds of success cultivated with integrity and indomitable will. The youngest son of a former slave, Sutton made his way to New York before joining the Tuskegee Airmen as an intelligence officer in World War II after being rejected by white Southern recruiters in his hometown. Following a stint in the Air Force, Sutton and his brother Oliver opened a Harlem law office in 1953. His firm represented slain activist Malcolm X, his wife, Betty Shabazz, and the Black Panthers, among others.
“At a time when few African Americans went into the law, Sutton opened up his own practice that aggressively defended civil and human rights activists in New York and elsewhere around the country,” says friend, U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel.
But it was his business acumen and foray into New York City politics that burnished Sutton’s legacy. In 1972, he and his brother founded New York-based Inner City Broadcasting Corp. (ICBC) (No. 80 Black Enterprise Industrial/Service 100 with revenues of $50.6 million), which began with a single radio station, WLIB-AM. With 50 original shareholders, including Jesse Jackson, future New York City Mayor David Dinkins, and Betty Shabazz, the group purchased the station for $1.9 million, with the Suttons owning more than 51% of the company. It eventually went on to add WBLS-FM, one of New York City’s top ranked radio stations, along with stations in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Antonio.
“The people who initially invested in Inner City Broadcasting really did not expect us to make money on an AM daytime radio station in Harlem, but they were really interested in getting a piece of the media that had impact on the community,” Sutton’s son, Pierre told Black Enterprise magazine in 1989. Pierre assumed chairmanship of ICBC in 1991.
In the 1970s, Sutton, who served in the New York State Assembly, was a member a group of black politicians from Harlem dubbed the “Gang of Four,” which included Rep. Rangel; Gov. David Paterson’s father Basil, who became New York’s secretary of state; and Dinkins. He was the longest serving Manhattan borough president holding the position from 1966 to 1977.
Despite a failed 1976 failed bid for a mayoral seat, Sutton still exercised influence in local politics and business.
“As Borough President, Sutton advocated for and implemented programs that specifically targeted the City’s most vulnerable populations,” said Arva Rice, president and CEO of the New York Urban League.
A fixture on the legendary 125th St. as a young man, Sutton was able to give back to the community that helped shape him when he purchased a financially beleaguered Apollo theater for $250,000 in 1981. With the acquisition, ICBC also acquired or launched a magazine, record and publishing companies, an artist management company, and several other related entities, including a syndicated television show, “Showtime at the Apollo.” Along with the purchase Sutton secured investors for an $18 million renovation of the theater.
In addition to his radio holdings, Sutton also headed a group that owned The Amsterdam News, the second largest black weekly newspaper in the country. The paper was later sold.
“[Sutton’s] life-long dedication to the fight for civil rights and his career as an entrepreneur and public servant made the rise of countless young African Americans possible,” remarked President Barack Obama.  Sutton’s achievements mark a staunch dedication to education instilled in him and his siblings by his father, Samuel, who was born into slavery just before the Civil War. Samuel went on to become a high school principal. Sutton, the youngest of 15 children, was born in San Antonio on Nov. 24, 1920. Samuel made sure that 12 of his surviving children all went on to attend college.
Black Enterprise recognized Sutton with the Arthur G. Gaston Lifetime Achievement Award in 2000, one of many awards, including the 1987 NAACP Spingarn Medal, to his credit. Also in 2000, Black Enterprise readers named Sutton one of the “10 Most Important Black Business Luminaries” of the 20th century.
“Tuskegee Airman. Civil-rights activist. Attorney for the family of Malcolm X. First black (and longest-serving) Manhattan Borough President. BE 100s CEO and founder of Inner City Broadcasting Corp., one of America’s largest black-owned companies. Key strategist for the ground-breaking presidential campaigns of Rev. Jesse Jackson. Any one of these designations would make Percy L. Sutton, the youngest son of a former slave, a giant among men,” says Black Enterprise Publisher Earl Graves. “The combination of these, only a sampling of his achievements, stamps Sutton as a true titan. He lived a life full to overflowing, setting a standard truly worthy of emulation, and I am blessed and proud to have been his friend.”
Sutton is survived by his wife, Leatrice; his son Pierre, and daughter Cheryl.
By Renita Burns with Alfred Edmond for BlackEnterprise.com.

Percy Sutton: A Visionary Giant Passes

 

Pioneering Lawyer, Percy Sutton Passes Away
December 27, 2009
Percy Sutton, attorney for Malcolm X, dead at 89

Former NY Mayor Dinkins (l) and Percy Sutton in 2006
NEW YORK – Percy Sutton, the pioneering civil rights attorney who represented Malcolm X before launching successful careers as a political power broker and media mogul, died Saturday at age 89.
Marissa Shorenstein, a spokeswoman for Gov. David Paterson, confirmed Sutton’s death. She did not know the cause. His daughter, Cheryl Sutton, declined to comment when reached by phone at her New York City home on Saturday before midnight.
The son of a slave, Percy Sutton became a fixture on 125th Street in Harlem after moving to New York City following his service with the famed Tuskegee Airmen in World War II. His Harlem law office, founded in 1953, represented Malcolm X and the slain activist’s family for decades.
The consummate politician, Sutton served in the New York State Assembly before taking over as Manhattan borough president in 1966, becoming the highest-ranking black elected official in the state.
Sutton also mounted unsuccessful campaigns for the U.S. Senate and mayor of New York, and served as political mentor for the Rev. Jesse Jackson’s two presidential races.
“The godfather,” Jackson once called him.
In a statement released Saturday night, Gov. David Paterson called Sutton a mentor and “one of New York’s and this nation’s most influential African-American leaders.”
“Percy was fiercely loyal, compassionate and a truly kind soul,” Paterson continued. “He will be missed but his legacy lives on through the next generations of African-Americans he inspired to pursue and fulfill their own dreams and ambitions.”
In 1971, with his brother Oliver, Sutton purchased WLIB-AM, making it the first black-owned radio station in New York City. His Inner City Broadcasting Corp. eventually picked up WBLS-FM, which reigned for years as New York’s top-rated radio station, before buying stations in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Detroit and San Antonio between 1978-85.
The Texas purchase marked a homecoming for the suave and sophisticated Sutton, born in San Antonio on Nov. 24, 1920, the youngest of 15 children.
Among Sutton’s other endeavors was his purchase and renovation of the famed Apollo Theater when the Harlem landmark’s demise appeared imminent. (more)
The death of a true pioneer, and well spoken gentleman.

From: http://btx3.wordpress.com/2009/12/27/pioneering-lawyer-percy-sutton-passes-away/

A Detective Story: Tawana Brawley, an open case

Interview with Graham Weatherspoon, Det. NYPD, Ret.

Graham Weatherspoon (center)

OTP: What do you know about Tawana Brawley’s life before November, 1987?

GW: I did not know her personally, but I’ve been told she was an excellent student, a cheerleader at her high school where she got eighties and nineties in class, an honor student, a member of a church who sang in the choir, and was a regular, everyday young lady.

She lived in the same area as Steven Pagones, an area that was predominately white, and was evidently used to living well. Her parents were both working, and making a good income. Ralph King, her stepfather, worked for the Shortline Bus Company. There was and there still is, a close bond between them. One of her aunts worked for the State of New York.

OTP: When Ms. Brawley was found, what was her condition?

GW: The Slocum-Willem Ambulance Service, was called by the officer on the scene. Upon their arrival she was found in a garbage bag, clutching the bag up under her chin. The paramedic stated that her eyes were closed and he attempted to get a response from her. He broke an ammonia capsule and fanned it under her nostrils but got no response. Upon further examination they noticed a cotton-like substance in her nostrils as well as in her ears. That material was extracted from those canals. He broke another capsule and placed it under her nose and got a slight movement of her head, not the usual jerk of the head that you would get from inhaling ammonia. This gave an indication that she was far from conscious. Her pupils were dilated. There was no response to light. There are a number of things which could induce such a condition.

OTP: Can you fake dilated pupils?

GW: No, you can’t fake dilation of the pupils. That’s an involuntary response of the eye. The iris of the eye will shut down when exposed to great light. That is why when you come out of a movie theater in the day, your eyes hurt when the light hits before the iris shuts down. This did not happen here. Her pupils were wide open and they did not respond to any light. I’m not a medical expert, but there are only two reasons that I know of that would cause this condition. You would have to be heavily drugged or in a state of shock. It was later determined after doing toxicology on Tawana, that there were no drugs in her system which could have induced such a condition relative to the pupil of the eye failing to constrict, so it had to be as a result of some kind of shock. On a scale of zero to fifteen, with zero being flat-line dead, the paramedics at the scene rated Tawana at three. Her condition was serious. They also realized that she was experiencing some kind of heart failure. She had arrhythmia of the heart, and the heart was not beating normally, so they gave her an injection of a high electrolyte base solution, to stabilize the heart. She also had low alkaline in her blood, which was indicative of having not eaten in some time. Once they felt they could transport her, they got her to Saint Francis Hospital. There they gave her another injection to get the heart normal. She was also noted at the scene to smell of feces. They found “KKK” and “nigger” written on her torso, and feces packed in her hair.

OTP: How was that written on her?

GW: I’ve only seen photos, so I don’t want to say whether it was scratched or what. But from the photos, it seemed to have been written with the feces. There were various marks. The crotch of here pants had been cut out, and there were various markings, and what appeared to be burn marks on the skin.

OTP: Were they burn marks?

GW: I believe it turned out that they were not burn marks. At St. Francis, they were treating her as a homeless person, not as a rape victim. They had no information as such. It is reported in the medical record that she was bathed because of the fecal matter and other material that was on her.

OTP: Did they do a rape kit on her?

GW: A rape kit was done, the Vitullo kit was done, but after she had been bathed. The one thing that you don’t do with a rape victim is bathe the victim. One might say that they should have known better, but personally, if you brought a person to me in a hospital and they’re packed with feces, one might say that maybe the person is mentally ill, but you have to leave the doors open. The KKK written on the body, “Nigger” written, that should have sent alarms off in the minds of the hospital personnel and for the police officer at the scene, that you may be dealing with a bias crime, a racial incident. You have to keep open every possibility.

OTP: So there was a rape kit done. What happened to that?

GW: That rape kit was turned over to officer Brazelli, an arson investigator from the sheriff’s office of Dutchess County, who we have since learned was a good friend of Steven Pagones. Ordinarily the rape kit is sealed by the attending physician at the hospital. The kit would be placed either in a locked refrigerator at the hospital, or the investigator who was handling the case would forward it to the lab. Or there are times when the hospital would transport it themselves, to maintain the medical integrity of the kit. But what happened here was Brazelli held onto that kit for, I believe it was three days, before it was forwarded to the lab for analysis.

OTP: And that had the physical evidence?

GW: Yes. When a rape is committed, there are certain things that we look for as evidence of rape, beyond the verbal proclamation of the victim. The medical personnel would take swabs of the vaginal area; they will take swabs around the pubic area for sweat and other material. The pubic area is combed with a very fine comb. Those hairs are also put into the kit. DNA material can be taken from sweat, semen or hair. Her body had been washed because of the foul odor, so that was one of the problems. In the washing was the destruction of evidence. Can you say it was intentional? No. They are medical personnel; they’re not looking at a potential rape victim, but maybe a mentally ill or homeless person.

OTP: So that was the physical evidence. What about personal statements? Did Ms. Brawley ever make any statements to law enforcement officials?

GW: Yes she did. That night she spoke with the only African American officer working in the county, Tommy Young with the Poughkeepsie Police Department. He was directed to go to the hospital where he met two detectives, who told him, according to his testimony, “She was found walking around in a paper bag in Wappinger Falls.” Now that was erroneous information, but that’s what he was told. He had been called because anytime a white male came near her she cringed and drew back on the gurney. So they figured, well let’s get a black person to speak with her. He went in to speak with Tawana, he said to her, in essence; “I’m here to help you. You’ve got to tell me what happened to you. I can’t help you unless you tell me what happened.” She reached up and grabbed his badge. Her aunt was in the room and she told officer Young to give her his book and a pencil. He gave her the memo book and Tawana wrote with her left hand, “White cop.” She’s right-handed, but there was an I.V. in her arm so she had to use her left hand. Officer Young asked her, “Were you raped?” She said “Yes”. He said, “By who, how many?” She said, “five or six men.” “Do you remember any of them?” She said, “White cop.” She was asked, “How many times were you raped? She said, “Many times.” When Officer Young got that information, he asked her for a description of the male, and she gave a description of this white cop. He then exited the trauma unit to speak to the two detectives. Although officer Young was told five or six men raped this young lady, he only sought the description of one man.

OTP: What was that description?

GW: I think sandy blond hair, moustache about six feet tall. She said he showed a badge and he punched her behind the ear. Officer young never asked her for a description of any of the other men. Never did.

OTP: So he stopped at the white cop. What does he say happened when he went out of the room?

GW: he spoke with the detectives and told them that she said a white cop had raped her along with some other men. But there was never a following question of. “Can you give me a description of another man?”.

OTP: Was that the only statement that she ever made? Did she ever speak to anybody else?

GW: Tommy Young said that was the only information that he got from her.

OTP: Wasn’t she interviewed at her home?

GW: Yes she was. See the interview with Tommy Young was on the 28th of November 1987, the day that she was found. And she was found in the afternoon around 2:00pm. Now on the 30th of November, she was home. In fact the way they sent her home was less than decent. They sent her home in a sheet.

OTP: Didn’t her family or anybody go up to the hospital to get her, to bring her clothes?

GW: She was sent home in a sheet, and I believe she still had some feces and other material in her hair, as I recall from the testimony of the nurses. On the evening of the 30th, Hilda Kolgut of the FBI in the Southern District, working out of Newburgh, went with Marjorie Smith of the Dutchess County District Attorney’s office. Smith is the sex crimes Assistant District Attorney, trained in molestation of children and violation of women. She has also been trained at the college of D.A.’s of the State of New York, and taught sex crime investigation to various D.A.’s around the State. She has also taken some training at Princeton relative to the subject. Senior Assistant District Attorney, an African American, C. Otto Williams, was present as well as a detective from the Dutchess County Sheriff’s office. They went to Tawana’s house in the evening. When they got there, the family members were there, the neighbors were there, members of the NAACP, the Human Rights Commission; there was a bunch of people in the house. They came to interview Tawana to find out what happened and commence an investigation. They knew that she did not want to be near any white men. The person who conducted the interview was the white male detective from the sheriff’s office. He did an excellent job in his interview. His interview consisted of ten or eleven pages of questions and answers. One of the things people say is that Tawana never spoke. Tawana spoke in the hospital, and then she spoke to the people there at the house.

OTP: What did she say?

GW: She repeated her statement that five or six white men had attacked her. She was walking home, she got off the Shortline bus, and was walking up the road, it’s a very dark road, a car pulled up, a man got out, showed a badge, it was a police officer, and he grabbed her. She tried to get away; he punched her in the back of the head and threw her in the backseat of the car. There was one other man whose face she didn’t see who was driving the car. She was driven to another location where there were more men. She said that these men raped her repeatedly over a period of time. She was also found to have urine in her mouth at the time that she was found. It’s in the medical reports. It was later determined that she had chlamydia, which is another sexually transmitted disease, which comes as a result of penile penetration. There was a second sexually transmitted disease she had as well. In the medical reports, there is notation of the condition of her pubic area. There was a collection of blood around her pubic area from the constant pounding. As a matter of fact, the doctor who examined her wrote down “Sexual assault” as a possible cause of her condition.

OTP: So her statement to the investigators was buttressed by the doctor’s examination.

GW: Yes. Now she spoke with this detective for about forty-five minutes. She gave verbal answers, which he noted in his report. The sex crimes ADA, Marjorie Smith, only had one or two questions. One, she wanted to know what was the color of the badge that the police officer showed, was it gold or silver, which is a sensible question. The second one was what did it feel like when they urinated in your mouth?

OTP: That was her contribution?

GW: Yes. The detective prepared an ten page report and handed it in to Marjorie Smith the following morning. Marjorie Smith claims that she took no notes, and she felt that the detectives’ work was very exemplary and very thorough. But when Marjorie Smith came to court ten years later, she said that Tawana gave no substantive answers whereby they could conduct an investigation. But she got a ten-page report of questions and answers.

OTP: Now with that ten-page report, if you were an investigator on the case, and you took that report to your supervisor, what would normally happen?

GW: What normally happens in New York City, you did your first DD5, which is the interview of the complainant, and you have noted all of the comments of the victim. From that you have a case to work on.

OTP: What would you do?

GW: If you’re telling me that a police officer raped you, I now have to move on that fact, on the description of the man. I now would be looking for any white male who had sandy blond hair and a moustache as a possible suspect. With the technology we have, you can just punch that into a computer and it’ll give you the photographs of all white male officers with sandy blond hair and moustaches in the police department. Because my next move would be to try and identify this individual.

Realizing that the victim has been traumatized, what I want is to make sure that the victim is stable and able to make the identification. You don’t necessarily rush to do identification the next day. I want to make sure that emotionally and psychologically, my victim is taken care of. It was not at the suggestion of St. Francis Hospital that they seek psychological help for Tawana. It was not at the suggestion of the sex crimes D.A. that they seek psychological help for Tawana. It was at the suggestion of Alton Maddox, her attorney, that she seek psychological help. If Marjorie Smith were credible, if she were credible as an advocate for sex crime victims, that’s one of the first things that she would have done. She also would have gone to the hospital and talked with the medical personnel to find out exactly what her condition was when she was brought in, what evidence and materials do we have. The plastic bag that Tawana was in when she was found never got to the hospital. The bag itself contained evidentiary material.

OTP: Can you get fingerprints off of a plastic bag?

GW: You can get good fingerprints off a plastic bag. That bag never made it to the hospital.

OTP: So now you have the written statements of the victim, you have a rape kit, what happened after that?

GW: There were a number of problems here. Because Tawana was saying that a member of law enforcement raped her, she became a victim a second time. They interviewed her on the 30th of November. On the first, of December, the detective submits his report on the interview. No steps are taken by the District Attorney’s office or the sheriff’s office to secure all of the possible evidence. On the second of December, three days following the initial interview, a part-time police officer from Fishkill named Harry Crist, is found dead in his apartment. This is interesting because of the testimony of mailman Tim Losee. Mailman Losee recalled seeing a car, which looked like an old police cruiser, roaming around the area of the Pavillion Complex, with four white males in it, one of which looked very close to Scott Patterson.

OTP: How did he know it looked like Patterson?

GW: What happened was that he noticed the car cruising the area very slowly, as though these guys were looking for somebody. He looked at the vehicle, the number of men in it, and the driver. He later saw a picture of Scott Patterson in the newspaper and realized he looked like the driver of the car.

OTP: He noticed them because of the way they were driving?

GW: Right. They weren’t just driving. They were creeping through the area. He said it was either the 28th or the 29th that he saw this car. Now Tawana was found on the 28th. The description of the car that Tim Losee the mailman gave, matched that of the car that was owned by Harry Crist. Now, Pagones testified that he and the guys were in Danbury, Connecticut that day.

OTP: Four guys in the same car?

GW: In the same car. Losee said he had given the description of Harry Crist’s car to DA Grady and he also made statement to the New York State Police. Grady realized after hearing this, that there had to be a connection between Pagones, Crist and the others relative to the placement of Tawana’s body. You see, Tim Losee did not come forward until after the Grand Jury report had been written.

OTP: Why not?

GW: Mr. Losee wanted to see how this investigation would go. And when the official report came out, he realized it was not on the up and up. This is a white male who had nothing to gain by going along with the program on behalf of Tawana, but he realized that something was awry relative to the investigation, he had information and was willing to give it but it was not called for.

So Harry Crist wound up dead three days after a car just like his was seen near where Tawana was found. All of the authorities said he committed suicide. The State Police said he committed suicide, the District Attorney said he committed suicide, and of course the media reported that he committed suicide. Tawana happened to see Harry Crist’s photo in a newspaper or magazine, and stated “That was the cop that stopped me.”

OTP: Who did she say that to?

GW: She said that to her parents.

OTP: Who did the parents tell that to?

GW: All the proper authorities, the DA, the FBI, everybody.

OTP: Harry Crist is found dead. If you’re an investigator, and the victim says, “That’s the guy,” wouldn’t you investigate that guy?

GW: Definitely. You see one of the funny things is that Steven Pagones said that he was with Harry Crist the night before he died. Independent of the investigation, this is a statement he made. The night before Crist died, Scott Patterson also said he was with Harry Crist, in Harry’s apartment, lifting weights. He said he had left his wedding band in Harry’s apartment. He had taken it off so it wouldn’t dent on the iron. He had forgotten about it, gone home, and went back to get it the next morning. He had a key to Harry’s apartment. Harry’s aunt lives downstairs. She said she never heard a shot. But Harry is dead in his apartment from what they said was a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Meanwhile, when it comes over the radio that a police officer has been found dead, apparent suicide, Steven Pagones says, that he was in the Fishkill State Police barracks, working on a forgery case and he was talking to the trooper involved in the case. When asked who the trooper was he doesn’t recall. When asked who the judge was who had the case, he doesn’t remember. When asked who the defendant was in the case, he doesn’t remember. But he said he was there when the call came in and he inquired, “Who’s the cop?” They said, “A guy named Crist.” He said, “That’s my friend.” The fact is, Harry and Steve were not close friends, they were more like acquaintances. The irony is that just a few days prior to Crist’s death, he had pulled a gun on Steven Pagones and threatened to shoot him.

OTP: Where does that come from?

GW: From Steven’s own mouth. They had gone to Danbury, Connecticut to quote, “Do some shopping for their girlfriends for Christmas.”

OTP: Now Tawana was found on the 28th. When did they say they were in Danbury?

GW: The 28th.

OTP: The three of them?

GW: Yes. Crist, Pagones, Patterson and Branson.

OTP: Four grown men?

GW: Four grown men.

OTP: They went shopping together at the mall?

GW: At the mall, buying gifts for their girlfriends.

OTP: Did they have receipts?

GW: Steven Pagones presented what he said was a receipt for a sweater that Harry Crist bought. Firstly, what’s he doing with Harry Crist’s receipt? Second, these receipts were not computer generated. They weren’t printout receipts. All of his stuff was handwritten. Do you think, at a major mall, you would be getting handwritten receipts, even in 1987? And this receipt is supposed to have come from a store owned by a close friend of his fathers’. Steve didn’t produce a receipt for anything he bought.

OTP: Did the other guys have receipts?

GW: None of the other guys would come in. All of his alibi witnesses refused to come in. Steven also testified that Harry asked him, about eleven thirty, “Hey, did you hear about the girl they found in a bag of shit?” Now Tawana was not found until after two o’clock. But Steven says that Harry is talking about this around eleven thirty.

Steven said he said, “What girl in a bag of shit?” And Harry said, “Well, never mind, forget about it.”

OTP: What about Harry Crist and this suicide? I know there were no powder stains on his hands, but what other things came out in the trial about this?

GW: Well what they called the suicide note had no fingerprints of Harry Crist on it.

OTP: Did it have any fingerprints on it?

GW: Scott Patterson’s.

OTP: Oh really?

GW: This is what we got from the investigation. Scott Patterson is reported to have found the suicide note, which was really a letter to Harry’s girlfriend. Not a suicide note, just a letter.

OTP: Just a letter. There was nothing that characterized it as a suicide note?

GW: Right. If this were a suicide note, why would not Dennis Vacco release that note so that the jury could see this note relative to this purported suicide? What happened here is that Harry Crist’s body was removed from the crime scene, transported for autopsy. The medical examiner of Dutchess County is not a pathologist and cannot perform an autopsy. But he has the position. So they had to hire a pathologist and they told him that Crist committed suicide. When I’ve had dead body, a homicide or whatever, and I go to the autopsy, I have to give certain information to the pathologist performing the autopsy. The doctor will tell you, “Yeah the guys dead, he’s been shot.” But there’s more to it than that. If you’re telling me this is a suicide, there has to be evidence supporting that. They brought no crime scene photos; they brought no weapon, just a body. They didn’t even bring what they call the suicide note. They just said it’s a suicide, here’s the body.

OTP: Now in a suicide, I would imagine that the weapon would be found still clutched firmly in the hand, or certainly in the area.

GW: The weapon would not be clutched in the hand. You see, Harry Crist was shot through the lower jaw. He had a lateral abrasion running from the left to the right side of the jaw. It was fresh abrasion. Bright red. He had a second one on his right breast about three inches above his nipple. Those were fresh bruises. They were not black and blue. They were fresh, bright red. The capillaries were standing out. In that lateral abrasion under his jaw, right in the middle of it, is a gunshot wound. That’s where the bullet enters. When I examined those two autopsy photos, and even the photo of his brain after it had been removed, I said to Alton Maddox, “This is not a suicide.” It’s death by gunshot, but it’s not a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He died during the course of a struggle. The barrel of the gun dragging across his jaw caused the mark on the jaw. You’re struggling with someone with a gun; it drags across your jaw and then, boom. Now, I would be looking for the angle of trajectory of the bullet through the brain. When you take a weapon and turn it on yourself, you can only rotate your wrist but so far. If you’re left handed or right handed. This bullet went right through the mid brain. The likelihood of you being able to point a gun directly up is low. It’s going to go at an angle. He was shot with a semi-jacketed soft-nose round, which we believe is a .357. Harry Crist did not own a .357. None of the men that I’ve worked with who have committed suicide went out and bought a gun to commit suicide with. They used the one they had. But we do know for a fact that Scott Patterson owned a .357 magnum, because he was a State Trooper. That was the standard weapon. Semi-jacketed, soft lead ammunition.

OTP: Where’s the bullet?

GW: The bullet was extracted from the rear of the cranium. It fractured the rear of the skull. They said they didn’t have the weapon. Then sometime later they said they found the weapon. How could you not find the weapon? Does a man commit suicide and take the weapon with him?

OTP: Did anybody investigate this “suicide”?

GW: No.

OTP: Who are these guys. You talk about Pagones, Patterson, and Crist. Who are they in the police department, the county?

GW: Scott Patterson was a state trooper whose father was a colonel in the New York State Police. He was one of the highest-ranking officials in the New York State Police, and he oversaw that area of the state as well. As a matter of fact, today, Scott Patterson sits at the right hand of God. He is a bodyguard for George Pataki.

OTP: Scott Patterson is a bodyguard of Governor Pataki?

GW: Yes. And he said that under no circumstances would he appear in court to testify in this trial. Now this is a servant of the people of New York saying you can take that subpoena and shove it. I will not show up in court.

OTP: What about Pagones?

GW: Pagones at the time was a young Assistant District Attorney. He had been working for the D.A.’s office for about a year-and-a-half, covering various courts around the county.

OTP: What about his family?

GW: Well to do, silver spoon. His father was a judge. His uncle was a housing court judge.

OTP: So these were certainly well connected young men. What about Harry Crist?

GW: Harry Crist was a regular Joe. He didn’t have the panache that Pagones or Patterson had. He was a part-time police officer in Fishkill. He was just hanging out with the big guys. Steven had told his supervisors that Harry had pulled a gun on him November 28 during their Danbury trip.

OTP: Are you serious? When did he say this?

GW: He said this in the current trial. Now this was the same day Tawana was found but there was no investigation. He told DA Grady about it but there was never an arrest relative to the menacing with a weapon; nothing at all became of it.

OTP: At what point in this investigation, if you were investigating this, going by Tawana’s statements and the physical evidence, the death of Harry Crist, at what point would you say, “I’ve got to ring somebody’s bell.” At what point would you start looking for people?

GW: Way back in December of 1987. Not in 1998. First of all, this case should have gone to the Southern District as a civil right violation. It’s ironic, because in the Dutchess County District Attorney’s office, the chief Assistant DA William O’Neill is a former FBI agent who handled civil rights cases back in North Carolina in the 1960’s. So he knows what constitutes a civil rights violation. When this case came into that office, it should have been immediately apparent to William O’Neill that this was a Federal crime. It was a bias crime. It was a case that should have been given to the Federal authorities. As I mentioned before, we did have an FBI agent, Hilda Kolgut, present at the interview at Tawana’s house. But It turns out Hilda Kolgut was a very close friend of Steven Pagones, and had been for a number of years. She knew him, knew his fiancee, had been to his house, they had gone to various social functions together. A problem further existed in the fact that when Steven Pagones’ name came up in the case, this caused a conflict of interest on the Federal level. Fact: no agent can, shall, or will, conduct an investigation relative to a target that they have a relationship with. Major conflict of interest. How thoroughly can you investigate a good friend? But she (agent Kolgut) would have the jury believe that her integrity is that great that she would do whatever had to be done to conduct a proper investigation relative to Steven Pagones. She also went as far as to say that she mentioned to her supervisor that she and Steven were good friends and her supervisor did not pull her off the case. That has to be a lie. The supervisor would be putting himself and the Bureau in jeopardy. The integrity of the Bureau would be challenged from every direction. And I don’t think that the National Director would appreciate knowing that one of his agents was conducting an investigation of a friend in a matter as egregious as this, with the permission of a supervisor.

OTP: Alton Maddox made a statement that the jury said was NOT defamatory. He said, “He was one of the attackers, yes. If I didn’t have direct evidence I wouldn’t be sitting here saying that.” What evidence did he have that would cause the jury to say that was not defamatory?

GW: Steven Pagones said he was with Harry Crist various days relative to the abduction of Tawana Brawley. He said he had gone with Harry Crist on the 28th of November, to Danbury, Connecticut and they had spent the entire day together. He chronicles hours that he was with Harry Crist. And if he was with Harry Crist, he had to be involved in the abduction of Tawana Brawley.

OTP: Why?

GW: Because of the time sequence. Steven Pagones was setting up an alibi before anybody started to ask him about it. If a man is dead, and you say you were with this man on such and such a date, at such and such a time, and the victim sees a picture of this dead man and says, “That’s the man who did it.” And you’re saying you were with him at that time, then there’s a problem here.

OTP: You’re saying you were with the guy and she says that WAS the guy.

GW: So who’s the fool? Who is the fool? The sheriffs’ office of Dutchess County had Steven Pagones as a suspect early on in this case. Before Alton Maddox got involved in the case.

OTP: Who made him a suspect?

GW: Steven Pagones, at the time of Harry Crist’s death, talked with the New York State Police. And made some statements, which he has refused to release to this court, or the grand jury, or anybody. And if that statement were not incriminating, he wouldn’t have a problem releasing the statement. He refused to take a polygraph under any circumstances. He refused to be interviewed by the FBI under any circumstances. He went out and handed $20,000 to an attorney that he said was a spokesperson, because he knew that Mason, Maddox and Sharpton were going to be coming after him. And this was before they got involved in the case.

OTP: They hadn’t even gotten involved at that point?

GW: Precisely. Now why would you retain an attorney, who you call a spokesperson? Why would you hand a man $20,000 to be your spokesperson? For what? Steven Pagones wasn’t involved in anything he needed a spokesperson for. He wasn’t handling a felony case. He wasn’t doing much of anything in the Dutchess County District Attorney’s office that we can show. As a matter of fact, on the days that Tawana was missing, Steven Pagones, was not even at work.

OTP: He was not at work?

GW: He was not at work. He appeared for two minutes to pick up a paycheck. Two minutes. And at that, he even lied about the deposit of that paycheck. He said that he had his wife Nikki deposit his check and that was a bald-faced lie. Because Steven Pagones’ annual salary in 1987 as a fledgling in the District Attorney’s office, his salary was $25,000. The check that he purports to have deposited in the bank, and he brought in quote /unquote “the deposit slip”. The check was for $1,700. Now if you multiply $1,700 by twenty six, you come up with $46,000 some odd dollars. And this is after taxes. His annual salary was only $25,000. There’s no way in the world that he could have deposited a paycheck for $1,700. Neither he nor Nikki.

OTP: Another question the jury did not find defamatory was when C. Vernon Mason said, “What we have here is an official, an officially sanctioned conspiracy to obstruct and prevent justice in the case of Tawana Brawley.” What evidence did C. Vernon Mason have such that the jury would not find that statement reckless and defamatory?

GW: Well, the fact that the autopsy report determined that Harry Crist was not a victim of a suicide, but of a gunshot wound that was not self-inflicted. Secondly, the fact that neither the District Attorney, or any of his assistants ever went to the hospital and got the medical records, or read them to determine whether or not there was any credibility to Tawana’s allegation. The sheriff’s department never pursued any other information relative to the suspects other than, “white cop”, sandy blond hair with moustache. The fact that when the District Attorney sought to recuse himself of the case, he stated “a conflict-of-interest.” That conflict-of-interest was identified by Judge Judith Hillery of Dutchess County as Steven A. Pagones.

OTP: This was before Mason, Maddox and Sharpton got involved?

GW: Most certainly. Justice Hillery reported it. The New York Times printed it. Newsday printed it.

OTP: That Pagones was a suspect?

GW: That’s right. When the Governor appointed Robert Abrams as a special prosecutor, it was seen as a problem, in that Robert Abrams had no experience as a criminal investigator. He was only a civil attorney. How thorough an investigation could be done here? And that’s not saying the Attorney General does any personal investigating, but he ought to be able to oversee it and be able to recognize any errors he sees in the investigation. When I worked on cases, my sergeant, my lieutenant and my commanding officer, captain, inspector, whoever it was, they read my case folder. If there was anything that I failed to do in the course of that investigation, they were supposed to bring it to my attention. You can’t bring to the attention of an investigator his failure to do one thing or the other, or note an impropriety, if you don’t know anything about criminal investigations. You can’t guide people to a place you’ve never been.

Ralph King and his family initially cooperated. Then they realized that the information that they were giving to the authorities was winding up in the hands of other people. And it was at that point that Alton Maddox suggested that they cease any cooperation with the people, because they were facilitating the position for the opposing side. It was a week before Marjorie Smith even got back to Tawana Brawley. More than a week. Marjorie Smith is a sex crimes Assistant District Attorney. She is the State advocate for this child.

OTP: After her first interview, she didn’t speak to her for a week? What happened? Did anybody speak with her during that week?

GW: No.

OTP: Were they all busily doing something on the case?

GW: They were busy doing something. Look, Tawana had indicated that she had difficulty walking, they said she was feigning it. But the psychologist also felt that it was due to the sexual assault, a posttraumatic shock syndrome that she was going through. They tried to say that she was trying to fake illness and that other people had seen her walking with a cane, without a cane. Or she was seen walking into the treatment center without it, and then complaining that she couldn’t walk once she got in. The reality is, it takes about five years for a woman to get over a rape, if she’s lucky. There are many physical, physiological, psychological, that affect a woman. Rape is the only crime that is committed within the human body. And your threat level is extremely high in rape. The only thing worse than rape is homicide. But in that instance, the victim is gone. In a rape, a person comes to you, sexually penetrates your body, does all sorts of demeaning things to you, well that’s the ultimate trauma that you can go through as a victim of a crime. That experience is long affecting. Long affecting. And it might have a different affect on a young girl than an older woman.

OTP: Have you ever investigated a rape where the victim did not testify? How does that work? Does the victim have to testify?

GW: It can be very difficult for the victim, because the victim is put on trial. The attitude of, “Well she was asking for it.” “Look at what she was wearing. “Do you normally walk around looking promiscuous?” “How sexually active are you?” For an example, Tawana was a fifteen-year-old. They tried to say that she was a prostitute in Newburgh. They had nothing to substantiate that. The people in Newburgh didn’t even know her. None of the people on the street could say they ever saw her or knew her. That was investigated. There was a fellow who said he had all these tapes. A bunch of tapes that he had to expose this scandal, or “Hoax”. And when he brought them in, it turned out all of his tapes were blank. He had tapes to “expose” Sharpton and Maddox and Mason and Tawana. All blank. And you know who produced that witness? Rudy Giuliani.

OTP: Not our esteemed Mayor? I can’t believe this. Explain about those tapes again.

GW: The fellow said he had tapes to expose this conspiracy of Tawana, her family, Sharpton and the others, that there was no rape. But when it came down to the bottom line, his tapes were blank.

OTP: And this witness came from Giuliani. He was the one who said, “I have this witness.”

GW: Yes.

OTP: So when he puts in the paper that he congratulates Pagones on his “victory”, he’s not exactly disinterested?

GW: No, he’s not.

OTP: Another statement that the jury did not find reckless or defamatory: “Plaintiff claims that the defendant Rev. Al Sharpton on or about June 10, 1988 at the Bethany Baptist Church in Brooklyn, New York, made the following statement: “By law, they could have required Mr. Pagones to come in front of this Grand Jury months ago and waive immunity since he was a public official. They gave him all of this time to fabricate alibi witnesses.” What evidence did Sharpton have to make that statement?

GW: Edwin Garcia, the former New York State Trooper who worked out of Poughkeepsie at the time of the incident, was a very close friend to Steven Pagones. He stated on the stand that he taught Steven how to shoot and went with him when he purchased his first firearm. And that he would do anything for Steve. He protected him; he was his bodyguard. One would have to ask, “Why would a twenty-five-year-old Assistant District Attorney, need a bodyguard. And he’s not even investigating organized crime, white collar crime, or any major corruption in the County.” Why would he need a bodyguard?

OTP: Yeah why would he need a bodyguard?

GW: The authorities had various agencies apparently working on this case. There was the Dutchess County Sheriff’s department, the FBI, the New York State Police, the District Attorney’s office. Edward covered the New York State Police. He stated, “Any information that was gathered by us, I made sure Steve got a copy of it.”

OTP: Is that right?

GW: He further went on to say, “Steven introduced me to a woman who he said was his cousin. She was an FBI agent. And she was in the Grand Jury, giving him all the information in the Grand Jury.” Edward Garcia testified to this in open court, prior to Hilda Kolgut, FBI agent, arriving in court. He also stated in sworn testimony, that Steven Pagones was stalking Reverend Sharpton. And on one occasion, Steven wanted him to go with him and the FBI agent to New York City to check out Sharpton, and that they wear disguises.

OTP: Did they go? They actually went to New York?

GW: He testified he was trying to figure out which guns they should take in case things got kind of hot. But then he thought more about it and did not go that day, but Steve and the FBI agent went. Wearing disguises. So they were stalking Al Sharpton at that time. So we have Garcia providing Steven with information, and he testified that Hilda Kolgut was providing information. When Hilda Kolgut finally appeared in court, she appears with a Deputy U.S. Attorney from the Southern District, whose role is to object and intervene relative to any question that is put to her that they don’t think that we should know about. Like this is some Top-Secret case. Hilda Kolgut said, “Well, I only said to Steven, ‘This is what they’re saying about you in the papers.’” As a Federal Agent she was only talking about what was in the papers? He didn’t need her to give him that information, he could read that himself. She also stated that she was a long-time friend of Steven’s, been to his house, knew his fiancee’, had dinner with them. She went to talk to him about the case. He refused to talk officially to the FBI. He refused to take a polygraph, she told him that he had to give an interview or the gloves would come off. I guess the kid gloves were glued on, because they have not come off as yet. In fact Assistant District Attorney O’Neill was asked, “Did you ever confront Steven and ask if he was involved in this matter?” O’Neill said, “No, I did not.” “Why didn’t you?” He said, “I knew what the answer would be.”

OTP: Meaning what?

GW: He didn’t even want to get into that.

OTP: He knew better.

GW: Exactly. If the DA is going to seek to recuse himself, let somebody else deal with it.

OTP: But even given all of this, the Grand Jury Report “exonerates” Mr. Pagones. How did that come to pass?

GW: (Reading from dictionary) Exonerate means, “To free from responsibility, obligation or task. To free from burden.” A Grand Jury does not free anybody from responsibility or a task. A Grand Jury has one sole purpose, to determine whether or not there is enough evidentiary material to proceed with a trial. The Grand Jury does not exonerate. Only a trial by jury can exonerate. That decision is called, “Not Guilty” or an acquittal. When the Grand Jury votes “No True Bill”, which they voted on Steven, it doesn’t mean they exonerate him. It means we don’t have enough to go on.

OTP: I see.

GW: It means you haven’t given us enough information to make a wise determination. That could mean go back and do your homework. That did not happen. Steven Pagones is not exonerated even in the civil trial, because the civil trial is not dealing with criminality. It’s not dealing with kidnapping, abduction, unlawful imprisonment, assault, rape or sodomy. The civil trial was dealing with statements. It’s dealing with oral statements and whether or not they were made maliciously, libelously, or in a slanderous manner. In order for Steven Pagones to present a case, as a public official, the law states that the public official is to be held to a higher standard that the person on the street. In order for you to prove lying, slander or malice as a public official, you first of all have to be squeaky clean, not slipshod. If Steven Pagones was squeaky clean, he would not have been identified as a suspect by the FBI, the Sheriff’s department or judge Judith Hillary.

OTP: Since he was thought of as a suspect, what kind of investigation did they do? How was he turned into not a suspect? Was it the Grand Jury Report?

GW: The Grand Jury, put together by Abrams, is a group of twenty-odd people who know nothing about law, criminal investigation, forensic science, nothing for the most part. They’re put into a room with a couple of guys with suits and ties saying, “I’m the Attorney General of the State of New York, and this is the Special Prosecutor. They come in there and say there are certain facts and evidence that we want to present to you, and you will determine whether to indict or not. Depending on how the prosecutor presents that case, the jury is going to go one way or the other. A Grand Jury is a unilateral presentation. It’s only the way the presenter wants you to see it. It’s not predicated on truth. It’s predicated on what the presenter wants you to believe. In a trial you have two sides to present. That doesn’t exist in a Grand Jury, you only vote with what you’re given. So what was the Grand Jury given? They’re given Michael Baden, the man who said that the Kennedy assassination was the work of a lone gunman. Nobody believed that in 1963.

OTP: He was the same pathologist? What else did he do?

GW: Martin Luther King and O.J. Simpson for two others. See, Michael Baden, who was the medical examiner for New York City, was fired by Ed Koch in 1985. He surfaces some time later as the pathologist for the New York State Police. The Attorney General is also Counsel to the New York State Police. Scott Patterson is also a suspect in this matter, and Scott’s father is one of the heads of the State Police. So he’s right there next to the Attorney General. So if Scotty is involved in something and daddy is right next to the Attorney General, you’d better believe that “the right thing” is going to be done.

OTP: So the Attorney General presented a case that was not strong enough for the Grand Jury to hand down an indictment.

GW: Precisely. First of all, Michael Baden never met or examined Tawana Brawley. What he said was that the DA had certain people saying they saw Tawana jumping around in the bag, hopping around in the bag, doing all sorts of stuff. Michael Baden, said in effect, if she was doing that, then the paramedics report has to be bogus. She could not have been unconscious, her pupils could not have been dilated.

OTP: He just discounted the paramedics report?

GW: That’s right. So now we have to say to ourselves, this fifteen year old girl concocted her story and got some paramedics to go along with her. Then she goes into St. Francis Hospital where her blood pressure was nowhere near normal. And she also would have had to pay the nurses to enter into the medical record her condition. She must have paid them BIG money to enter false information into medical records because falsifying medical records is a state offense for which you will do time. So she’s got the nurses who have never seen her before, they’re willing to falsify the records to say she’s ill, she’s all messed up, and then she’s going to allege that the man she sees in the newspaper (Harry Crist) is the man that initially confronted and assaulted her. She’s just going to make that up, not knowing where the man might have been, he may have been with the President of the United States the night she claims that she was raped. Then you have Steven Pagones, saying out of his own mouth that he was with Harry Crist on this date and that date. Well if you were with him on this date and that date, then dammit you had to be involved in the rape. That’s how he brings attention to himself.

OTP: When Pagones said he was with Harry Crist, was he speaking in regard to the so-called suicide, or to the rape?

OTP: The rape. He says that he went with Harry, Branson and Patterson to Danbury, the day that Tawana was found. He was using Harry Crist as his alibi, because Harry’s a dead man. If you’re using a dead man, there’s no one to refute your alibi.

OTP: Did Pagones’ statement come before or after Tawana had identified Harry Crist?

GW: I think it’s after. Look, to this date, we don’t know who wrote the Grand Jury Report. Why would you bring in Michael Baden to testify to the medical evidence. Did they bring in the ambulance driver, the paramedics that were there? The nurses came into the trial, ten years later, and said that she was faking.

OTP: Which contradicts what is in the record.

GW: Sure, contradicts the record. The record was never presented.

OTP: So instead of presenting the record itself, they presented Baden’s report on the record.

GW: Right. The Grand Jury is handed this bag of goodies which they accept as truth and the Grand Jury reports no true bill. Then the word is put out that Pagones is cleared. See the White man is good at perpetuating his myths. Ask the Seminole, ask the Apache.

OTP: White man speaks with forked tongue?

GW: If the shoe fits…Look, Pagones had none of his alibi witnesses come in. Not even his wife came in to say, “Yes, I took that money to the bank to make a deposit. His wife showed up the last four days of the trial. His own father who he said he was with Thanksgiving night at a get together at the father’s place, doesn’t come and take the stand to swear that they were together.

OTP: So what happens now?

GW: It took thirty years to finally get Beckworth for murdering Medgar Evers. The last DD5 has not been turned in on this case.

There is a level of persistence that goes with the search for truth. Myrlie Evers had to continue her search for justice, despite the findings of juries…well, the last word is not in yet here either. Truth crushed to earth will rise. There has not yet been an investigation in this matter. The media wants to push the facts out of the picture, but this trial does not exonerate Pagones. We have yet to see the end of this case.