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Saying Goodbye to Tookie

By Bianca Jagger, AlterNet. Posted December 24, 2005.


The execution of a reformed criminal was a grave miscarriage of justice, but there is still hope that Tookie's passing can lead to the end of the death penalty.
biancajagger
Bianca Jagger, speaking at Tookie Williams' memorial service.
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[Editor's Note: This is the edited text of a speech given by Bianca Jagger at Stanley Tookie Williams' memorial service.]

When I learned that there was going to be a public viewing of Stanley Tookie Williams' casket for friends and the public to pay their respect, I couldn't help thinking about the tragic irony -- Williams had to be executed before he could be free to visit this church. I can imagine how often he must have dreamed about the possibility of wandering out of prison during those long lonely years in jail. We must rejoice for him, for he is Free at Last, and no one can prevent him from being here, not even Arnold Schwarzenegger.

On Nov. 21, I met Stanley Tookie Williams at the San Quentin State prison. That morning the weather was beautiful, and the sun was shining. A prison guard escorted me; we walked approximately 1,000 meters before we arrived at the death row unit. I had expected to meet Williams behind a barrier of glass and wire partition, as I had when I met Karla Fay Tucker and Gary Graham in death row in Texas. Instead, I was going to meet Williams face to face. He was already inside a small cell with Jesse Jackson and Barbara Becnel, his co-author and longtime supporter. Before I entered, Williams put his hand behind his back through a small aperture in the metal door for the guard to handcuff him. Once I was inside and the door was closed, they removed the handcuffs. He reached out to say hello. Williams was tall and had a muscular build. It was visible that he was once a bodybuilder.

He appeared calm and at peace with himself as I shook his hand and sat next to him. I had so many questions and knew my time with him was limited. I told him I had recently listened to a debate about his case on National Public Radio, and felt very disturbed when his defender had to admit that he was not willing to apologize or express remorse for the murders for which he was convicted and condemned to death. I asked him why.

He answered in a calm and measured voice, "I am innocent. I did not commit the crimes for which I was sentenced to death. I cannot ask for forgiveness and express remorse for a murder I didn't commit, even if by refusing to do so, I risk losing my life. I cannot lie in order to live."

I asked him why he thought he was convicted and sentenced to death for a crime he didn't commit. "I had a nasty reputation, and my reputation was put on trial. I had co-founded the street gang the Crips, and had earned a bad reputation for being violent and beating up people. I was tried, convicted and sentenced to death by an all-white jury. The prosecutor, Robert Martin, dismissed three prospective black jurors, because he was seeking an all-white jury; he is notorious for engaging in racial discrimination when composing a jury."

"In addition, I had an incompetent legal counsel," he said in a lower voice. "I have apologized on many occasions for my crimes, and I genuinely have tried to redeem myself."

How? I asked.

"I have written nine books to bring young people away from a life of violence and street gangs. I educated myself and became an autodidact. As you can imagine, this place has little room for rehabilitation. It was up to me to change."

"For the first eight or nine years, I gave this place hell. I spent years in solitary confinement. My redemption came by virtue of my education. I reflected on my life, I developed a conscience. I have written nine books to encourage kids to stay away from gangs. I worked with churches, schools, and communities to warn kids about the pitfalls of gangster life. I wrote a 'Peace Protocol.' It was used to create a truce between rival gangs in New Jersey and other states."


Digg!

For over 20 years, Bianca Jagger has campaigned for human rights, social and economic justice, and environmental protection throughout the world.

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Annoying
Posted by: daniel1982 on Dec 24, 2005 7:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Tookie is not a hero. Death penalty is wrong and should be abolished, but Tookie had a lot to answer for; Stop putting him on a pedestal. The movement could find better people to idolize.

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» RE: Annoying Posted by: SAllen
For God's sake, kill the Death Penality!
Posted by: grizzlytwolegs2 on Dec 24, 2005 10:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Texas justice", Shoot first and ask questions later or "Kill them all and let God sort it out," are all definitions of justice that have no place in the world today. The fact that the United States in general continues to employ this form of justice shows a bankrupcy of the spirit in America and the American way of life. We seem to have run out of the will to find answers and solutions to our problems, so we cling to forms and habits of behavior that do not serve the purposes of our present life. For God's sake, kill the Death Penalty!

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So far as the Death Penalty, it doesn't matter whether Tookie was innocent or guilty
Posted by: Sojourner on Dec 24, 2005 11:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The execution of one innocent person, and there have been many, makes the Death Penalty an unforgiveable crime.

Yes, there probably are many who deserve the Death Penalty. Until we can guarantee that only the guilty (that is, not those just found guilty by a criminal justice system that is so rotten it reeks) are executed, the Death Penalty is the vengeance only a god can administer.

To play God is the Devil's business. The Death Penalty makes us devils.

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This is simply too sad
Posted by: fredwilliamson2 on Dec 24, 2005 3:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"...total disregard for due process...."
Tookie has had many appeals with two different teams of lawyers.

Where are your kind words for the victims? You have no shame or sympathy?

What second chance did those four victims had?
What have they done to deserve their fate?

I have lost all respect for you and every cause you support.

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Cause Celeb for Idiots in 2005
Posted by: b7j0c on Dec 24, 2005 4:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am nominating my wife for a Nobel Peace Prize, and she is nominating me, in case we ever get in trouble and need a completely fallacious, ridiculous defense against malfeasance.

I also plan to publish a line of children's book filled with glib play-nice text so I can solidify my remorse messaging. If I buy five hundred copies from my own account, I will have outsold Tookie, so that should be enough.

I am not arguing in favor of the death penalty. REPEAT: I am NOT arguing in favor of the death penalty. That said, there was never any useful defense for Williams, he never apologized for his crimes, his claims that he was innocent were (more) lies, and his record as an inmate was hardly that of a "model prisoner" (you can look up his record if you want to confirm).

The man killed multiple times, bragged about it, never apologized, never behaved as a remorseful inmate would....

I had to laugh when I heard a "surprise" mystery witness was coming out of the woodwork on the day of his execution to confirm his innocence (a lie his lawyers kept pushing until then end). I am sure the judge chuckled too, before shredding the request or using it for scrap paper.

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"Received US Presidential Service Award in 2005"
Posted by: b7j0c on Dec 24, 2005 4:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Amusing that Jagger cites the US Presidential Service Award, which anyone can order by mail for themselves or someone else. It carries less weight than a boyscout knot tying badge.

More phony, trumped up accolades for Williams, like the Nobel nominations, which anyone can submit for anyone, and should not be confused with actually winning the Nobel prize.

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Many are conflicted
Posted by: lamar on Dec 24, 2005 10:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most attorneys know that convicted folks didn't necesarily commit the crimes for which they were convicted. We generally justify our performance when wrong verdicts are delivered by assuming that the adversarial system leads to the truth, even when it appears that justice has not been served. The truth is, however, that you simply cannot have faith that a convicted person actually committed the crime he/she is charged with. Given this stark reality, the death penalty is a grevious crime regardless of whether you are pro or anti death penalty. Of course, Tookie killed those people, and sometimes, as conflicted as I am, there are people who should die for their barbarian acts.

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tired of tookie
Posted by: bobdotj on Dec 25, 2005 1:57 AM   
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i`m a yellow dog democrat,i despise bush and the rethugs,i spent 27 years in the navy,wounded 3 times,love this country,etc.etc.etc.but i have to say fuck tookie.he blew away 4 people,reform all you want but you have to pay up sometime.

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Get a life
Posted by: redstarwraith on Dec 25, 2005 8:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
(First) I couldn't care less about those of you who post on here crowing about your "years of service" in the armed forces. You're not selfless people giving for your country. You didn't ever once "fight to keep America free" OR for "principles that we hold dear." Why do so many people think serving in the armed forces is something sacrosanct? (Second) Those of you who would like to give power to the state to take away human life via execution? You people are fundamentally warped. What chance is there for someone to redeem themselves if we murder them? The penal system in this country is tragically flawed. . .everyone knows this, no one cares. We laugh and make jokes about it being nonsense that prisoners become "institutionalized" because we don't want to face the fact that it's true. Tookie didn't ASK to be released. He wanted his life spared. I don't think anyone is "putting Tookie on a pedestal" except those cynical fucks who think life's problems can be solved with a lethal injection.

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the real irony
Posted by: smitty on Dec 25, 2005 4:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The tragic irony is that the viewing of Stanley's corpse was held one half mile from where he murdered the Taiwanese couple who owned the motel on the same street, along with their daughter. Disgusting.

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T
Posted by: shyster27us on Dec 25, 2005 7:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am in favor of the death penalty for someone that is guilty of murder, but the problem is that we rarely know without a doubt that someone is guilty. Another problem that I have with the death penaly is that two people can commit the same crime and one will get death and the other person a less severe punishment. Even though I am not against the death penalty, if it were in my power to save a persons life I would, I would rather be mistaken and save someone that be mistaken and kill them. I know that if Arnold would have seen Tookie hanging onto the edge of a cliff he would have tried to save him.

On the other hand if he was guilty then his sentence was fair, there is no denying it. It is one thing to be forgiven and redeemed, but another to say that you have earned the right to not be punished for your actions. The bible says,"For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord". You can earn your right to die but not your right to live, that is a gift. I certainly hope that I never receive the punishment that I have earned!

Lets not forget the victims, here is a link to the crime scene photos of three of the victims Tookie was conviced of murdering. Be advised these are VERY graphic photographs!

http://www.ogrish.com/archives/three_victims
_of_murderer_stanley_tookie_williams_Dec_13_2005.html

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Nonsense
Posted by: Cy Nicks on Dec 25, 2005 9:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm opposed to Capitol Punishment -- there are too many innocent people on Death Row. But, I'll not shed a tear for Tookie.

Here's a guy that was the origin of the Crips -- the model on which modern inner city gangs are built. His blueprint for gang structure is directly responsibly for increased inner-city murder, prostitution, and drug trafficking across the entire U.S. His invention is directly responsible for the killing of innocent bystanders, caught in the crossfire -- for kids who will never grow up whole and parents who will morn forever. He has personally stolen and destroyed the lives of a couple of generations of young people by creating an atmosphere that makes it impossible to do anything, but survive.

Burn in Hell, Tookie!

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» Now we shall never know Posted by: Sojourner
Modest Eulogy For A Hero
Posted by: malcolmartin on Dec 26, 2005 9:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Farewell Stanley “Tookie” Williams. Your life's trial is over but your people’s rage will burn for years to come against the wealthy men who murdered you out of their perverse sense of justice. Up from poverty, deprivation and abandonment Stanley Williams you had the strength and intellect to organize your “loved ones” as you called desperate and despised youths like yourself. You then grew beyond the boundaries of gangsterism to become the kind of serious political threat that convicts like Malcolm X and George Jackson were before their executions. At that point your fate was sealed and no sham "clemency scene" starring Gov. Terminator was going to change it.

But rest assured you were a fully redeemed man in the eyes of the people, from the children you reached out to and all the way up to the president of the NAACP Bruce Gordon. You were a man who met his death with such great dignity and courage and the whole of your life shames the pathetic cowardly weaklings that occupy the White House and other seats of power in America. George Bush's lies ended the lives of two more young American soldiers on Christmas day. That makes 2,168 murders on top of the "30,000 more or less" Iraqi dead he took credit for recently. His trial date is TBA.

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Been There Done That
Posted by: dlf on Dec 28, 2005 6:35 PM   
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My only child was murdered and I would not want the blood of his murderers on my hands. The death penalty is simply a way to make some members of a community feel better. It doesn't work as a deterant or we'd be tearing jails down, not building new ones. The more barbaric we become in our punishment of criminals the more barbaric they become in the crimes they commit against society. There are a great many criminals who go to jail for crimes that carry lesser sentences but, because of the brutality they either witness or that's visited upon them, they become bitter and brutal as well. We don't have a system that fosters rehabilitation and I believe they no longer allow for secondary education either. Our penal system is strictly meant to punish people. Much like the Willie Lynch Doctrine during slavery our penal system is meant to be self perpetuating. Penal colonies are big business they are generally meant for the poor and minorities because they can't afford the kind of justice the wealthy can. Does anyone remember the case of the millionaire that lived in a boarding house in Texas? He had an argument with his neighbor, killed him, then chopped him up and threw him in a lake or river. He admitted all this at his trial and was still acquitted. Later they began investigating him for the murder of his missing wife. My point is justice would have looked a lot different if he were poor. Which is one of the points made by Bianca Jagger in her piece.

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The Tookster
Posted by: katanasam on Dec 28, 2005 11:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think its a crying shame that medical science hasn't progressed to the point where the " tookster" could be revived and executed 3 more times.

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