Posted on 12/20/2005 4:11:08 PM PST by Pikamax
Heavy crowd gathers in L.A. for funeral of executed former gang leader at 18:39 on December 20, 2005, EST.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Celebrities from hip-hop star Snoop Dogg to motivational speaker Tony Robbins lamented the execution of Stanley Tookie Williams at a funeral Tuesday that drew hundreds to the violence-wracked area where Williams founded the murderous Crips gang three decades ago.
Mourners, including gang members flashing hand signs, waited in line to enter the 1,500-seat Bethel AME Church.
Under heavy police presence, vendors sold T-shirts with Williams' picture, and a large TV set up in the parking lot allowed the overflow crowd to watch the service. Williams was executed Dec. 13 despite clemency pleas from celebrities and others who said he had re-dedicated his life to peace.
"It's nine-fifteen on twelve-thirteen and another black king will be taken from the scene," Snoop Dogg told mourners, reciting a poem about the execution. The line "I don't believe Stan did it" drew wild applause in the parking lot.
Williams, 51, was put to death by injection at San Quentin Prison for the 1979 shotgun murders of a 7-Eleven clerk and three motel owners.
"The war within me is over. I battled my demons and I was triumphant," Williams said in a recording played to mourners, whom he asked to spread a message to loved ones.
"Teach them how to avoid our destructive footsteps. Teach them to strive for higher education. Teach them to promote peace and teach them to focus on rebuilding the neighbourhoods that you, others and I helped to destroy."
Rev. Jesse Jackson decried Williams' execution. Jackson said Williams saw himself in the end as a "healer, not a predator."
"Tookie is dead. We're not safer, we're not more secure, we're not more humane," Jackson said.
Robbins told the mourners he knew Williams only a short time but said he had "so much rage and so much anger" after his execution.
While on death row, Williams wrote children's books warning against gang life. Those efforts attracted supporters who lobbied for clemency, arguing Williams had redeemed himself. But Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger was unconvinced, and refused to spare his life.
Several dozen gang members wearing blue attire associated with Crips gangs watched the funeral in the parking lot. One who identified himself as "Killowatt the Third," 33, estimated there were 20 to 30 Crips-affiliated gang members there to honour Williams.
"That's my role model, man. That's the CEO of the Crips," he said.
Al Birdsong, 54, a school security officer who waited for hours to get into the funeral, said Williams did not deserve to be executed after more than two decades in prison.
"I'm here to pay my respects to humanity, and that goes to Tookie and everyone else they do in. . . . What if it was your son?" Birdsong said.
"He's no different from any other human being. We all made mistakes."
Keelonnie Roberts, 23, said her father was a Crip who used to tell her tales of gang life. Although Roberts never met Williams, she said, "He seemed like a sweet man to me."
Mourner Rick Hayes, 36, of Compton, wore a T-shirt with the slogan, "What does redemption mean . . .," which he had made. If Williams was unable to earn clemency from the governor, "what can a black man do, what can he do in society, to get another chance at life?" Hayes asked.
In his will, Williams asked that his remains be cremated and the ashes scattered over South Africa.
Tuesday's ceremony was not the first public funeral for an executed inmate.
About 300 people attended a San Francisco service for Robert Alton Harris, a murderer whose 1992 execution was the first in 25 years after a death penalty ban and became a rallying point for opponents of capital punishment.
How many of these people would have attended the funerals of his victims?
"Mourners, including gang members flashing hand signs"
There are two million more black women than black men
in this country--and gangs and drugs are the reason why.
None of them. One MOAB on this gathering of persons of inestimable value could potentially save billions in social services, prisons, and legal fees.
This would be a great time to try out that face recognition software crossreferenced against outstanding warrants/mugshots...probably clear half the fugitive warrants.
"...what can a black man do, what can he do in society, to get another chance at life?" Hayes asked."
Don't screw up your first chance.
Suprise, suprise.
Is a riot expected?
Uh...don't kill anybody?
Someone should have posted photos of his victims outside the place where his funeral was held.
Four murders is not a simple mistake, you idiot.
Some mistakes are bigger than others.
Freedom of speech makes it easier to spot the idiots.
So when do the riots start?
Actually, I think murder is the leading cause of death for black males under 24 years of age.
But, but...that's impossible. Tookie "redeemed" himself and denounced gangs. There couldn't have possibly been crips present who were still members and who still victimize society contrary to Tookie's teachings (sarcasm off)
(Way down deep inside, with nothing to prove it ... I believe his name is really TOKEy, but the media had to clean it up. Really, just a guess)
Thousands more Angelenos stayed away because they have no sympathy for cold-blooded murdering street thugs, no matter how hard the media and "community leaders" tried to reinvent a useless POS like Tookie.
Tony Robbins?The motivational speaker?He's still around?
"Tookie is dead. We're not safer, we're not more secure, we're not more humane," Jackson said.
HOW ABOUT STANDING UP FOR THE VICTIMS, JESSE? WHAT IF TOOKIE WAS WHITE, JESSE? WOULD YOU BE STANDING UP FOR HIM THEN?
"He's no different from any other human being. We all made mistakes."
MISTAKES? MISTAKES? THERE IS A LOT OF DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MAKING A "MISTAKE" AND KILLING SOMEBODY. MAKE IT SOUND LIKE HE "MADE A MATH ERROR" OR HE "CUT THE 2 X 4 THE WRONG LENGTH", ETC. MISTAKE MY EFFIN' @SS!
These guys build up the vein pressure.
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