fbpx
Wikipedia

Assata Shakur

Assata Olugbala Shakur (born JoAnne Deborah Byron; July 16, 1947[a]), also known as Joanne Chesimard, is an American political activist who was a member of the Black Liberation Army (BLA). In 1977, she was convicted in the first-degree murder of State Trooper Werner Foerster during a shootout on the New Jersey Turnpike in 1973. She escaped from prison in 1979 and is currently wanted by the FBI, with a $1 million FBI reward for information leading to her capture, and an additional $1 million reward offered by the Attorney General of New Jersey.[3]

Assata Shakur
Photograph taken in 1977
Born
JoAnne Deborah Byron

(1947-07-16) July 16, 1947 (age 76)[a]
Known forConvicted of murder, one of the FBI's "Most Wanted Terrorists", friend of Afeni Shakur and Mutulu Shakur and often described as their son Tupac Shakur's "godmother" or "step-aunt"[2]
Criminal statusEscaped/At large
Spouse
Louis Chesimard
(m. 1967; div. 1970)
Children1 (Kakuya Shakur)
AllegianceBlack Liberation Army (1970/1–1981)
Black Panther Party (1970)
Conviction(s)1977
  • First degree murder
  • Second degree murder (later dismissed)
  • Atrocious assault and battery
  • Assault and battery against a police officer
  • Assault with a dangerous weapon
  • Assault with intent to kill
  • Illegal possession of a weapon
  • Armed robbery (bank)
Criminal penaltyLife sentence
Reward amount
$1,000,000
Capture status
Fugitive
Wanted by
FBI
EscapedNovember 2, 1979;
44 years ago
 (1979-11-02)

Born in Flushing, Queens, she grew up in New York City and Wilmington, North Carolina. After she ran away from home several times, her aunt, who would later act as one of her lawyers, took her in. She became involved in political activism at Borough of Manhattan Community College and City College of New York. After graduation, she began using the name Assata Shakur, and briefly joined the Black Panther Party. She then joined the BLA, a loosely knit offshoot of the Black Panthers, which engaged in an armed struggle against the US government through tactics including robbing banks and killing police officers and drug dealers.[4]

Between 1971 and 1973, she was charged with several crimes and was the subject of a multi-state manhunt. In May 1973, Shakur was arrested after being wounded in a shootout on the New Jersey Turnpike. Also involved in the shootout were New Jersey State Troopers Werner Foerster and James Harper and BLA members Sundiata Acoli and Zayd Malik Shakur. State Trooper Harper was wounded; Zayd Shakur was killed; State Trooper Foerster was killed. Between 1973 and 1977, Shakur was charged with murder, attempted murder, armed robbery, bank robbery, and kidnapping in relation to the shootout and six other incidents. She was acquitted on three of the charges and three were dismissed. In 1977, she was convicted of the murder of State Trooper Foerster and of seven other felonies related to the 1973 shootout. Her defense had argued medical evidence suggested her innocence since her arm was damaged in the shootout.

While serving a life sentence for murder, Shakur escaped in 1979, with assistance from the BLA and members of the May 19 Communist Organization, from the Clinton Correctional Facility for Women in Union Township, NJ, now the Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women. She surfaced in Cuba in 1984, where she was granted political asylum. Shakur has lived in Cuba since, despite US government efforts to have her returned. She has been on the FBI Most Wanted Terrorists list since 2013 as Joanne Deborah Chesimard and was the first woman to be added to this list.[5][6]

Early life and education edit

Assata Shakur was born Joanne Deborah Byron, in Flushing, Queens, New York City, on July 16, 1947.[7] She lived for three years with her mother, schoolteacher Doris E. Johnson, and retired grandparents, Lula and Frank Hill.[8]

In 1950, Shakur's parents divorced, and she moved with her grandparents to Wilmington, North Carolina. After elementary school, Shakur moved back to Queens to live with her mother and stepfather (her mother had remarried); she attended Parsons Junior High School. Shakur still frequently visited her grandparents in the south. Her family struggled financially and argued frequently; Shakur spent little time at home.[9]

She often ran away, staying with strangers and working for short periods of time, until she was taken in by her mother's sister, Evelyn A. Williams, a civil rights worker who lived in Manhattan.[10] Shakur has said that her aunt was the heroine of her childhood, as she was constantly introducing her to new things. She said that her aunt was "very sophisticated and knew all kinds of things. She was right up my alley because i [sic] was forever asking all kinds of questions. I wanted to know everything." Williams often took the girl to museums, theaters, and art galleries.[11]

Shakur converted to Catholicism as a child and attended the all-girls Cathedral High School, for six months before transferring to public high school.[12] She attended for a while before dropping out. Her aunt helped her to later earn a General Educational Development (GED) degree.[11] Often there were few or no other black students in her Catholic high school class.

Shakur later wrote that teachers seemed surprised when she answered a question in class, as if not expecting black people to be intelligent and engaged. She said she was taught a sugar-coated version of history that ignored the oppression suffered by people of color, especially in the United States. In her autobiography, she wrote: "I didn't know what a fool they had made out of me until I grew up and started to read real history".[13]

Shakur attended Borough of Manhattan Community College (BMCC) and then the City College of New York (CCNY) in the mid-1960s, where she became involved in many political activities, civil rights protests, and sit-ins.[14]

She was arrested for the first time — with 100 other BMCC students — in 1967, on charges of trespassing. The students had chained and locked the entrance to a college building to protest the low numbers of black faculty and the lack of a black studies program.[15]

Personal life edit

In April 1967, she married Louis Chesimard, a fellow student-activist at CCNY, in a Catholic wedding ceremony. Their married life ended within a year; they divorced in December 1970 and Chesimard was granted an annulment.[16] In her 320-page memoir, Shakur gave one paragraph to her marriage, saying that it ended over their differing views of gender roles.[17]

Black Panther Party and Black Liberation Army edit

After graduation from CCNY, Shakur moved to Oakland, California, where she joined the Black Panther Party (BPP).[18] In Oakland, Shakur worked with the BPP to organize protests and community education programs.[19]

After returning to New York City, Shakur led the BPP chapter in Harlem, coordinating the Free Breakfast Program for children, free clinics, and community outreach.[19] But she soon left the party, disliking the macho behavior of the men and believing that the BPP members and leaders lacked knowledge and understanding of United States black history.[20] Shakur joined the Black Liberation Army (BLA), an offshoot whose members were inspired by the Vietcong and the Algerian independence fighters of the Battle of Algiers. They mounted a campaign of guerilla activities against the U.S. government, using such tactics as planting bombs, holding up banks, and murdering drug dealers and police.[21][22][23]

She began using the name Assata Olugbala Shakur in 1971, rejecting Joanne Chesimard as a "slave name".[11][24] Assata is a West African name, derived from Aisha, said to mean "she who struggles", while Shakur means "thankful one" in Arabic. Olugbala means "savior" in Yoruba.[24] She identified as an African and felt her old name no longer fit: "It sounded so strange when people called me Joanne. It really had nothing to do with me. I didn't feel like no Joanne, or no negro, or no American. I felt like an African woman".[25]

Allegations and manhunt edit

Beginning in 1971, Shakur was allegedly involved in several incidents of assault and robbery, in which she was charged or identified as wanted for questioning, including attacks on New York City police and bank robberies in the area.

On April 6, 1971, Shakur was shot in the stomach during a struggle with a guest at the Statler Hilton Hotel in Midtown Manhattan. According to police, Shakur knocked on the door of a guest's room, asked "Is there a party going on here?", then displayed a revolver and demanded money.[26] In 1987, Shakur confirmed to a journalist that there was a drug connection in this incident but refused to elaborate.[12]

 
New York City Police Department mugshot of Shakur, April 1971

She was booked on charges of attempted robbery, felonious assault, reckless endangerment, and possession of a deadly weapon, then released on bail.[27] Shakur is alleged to have said that she was glad that she had been shot; afterward, she was no longer afraid to be shot again.[28]

Following an August 23, 1971, bank robbery in Queens, Shakur was sought for questioning. A photograph of a woman (who was later alleged to be Shakur) wearing thick-rimmed black glasses, with a high hairdo pulled tightly over her head, and pointing a gun, was widely displayed in banks. The New York Clearing House Association paid for full-page ads displaying material about Shakur.[29] In 1987, when asked in Cuba about police allegations that the BLA gained funds by conducting bank robberies and theft, Shakur responded, "There were expropriations, there were bank robberies."[12]

 
Police stand next to the patrol car that was destroyed by a hand grenade attack on December 20, 1971.

On December 21, 1971, Shakur was named by the New York City Police Department as one of four suspects in a hand grenade attack that destroyed a police car and injured two officers in Maspeth, Queens. When a witness identified Shakur and Andrew Jackson from Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) photographs, a 13-state alarm was issued three days after the attack.[30][31][32][33] Law enforcement officials in Atlanta, Georgia, said that Shakur and Jackson had lived together in Atlanta for several months in the summer of 1971.[34][35][36]

Shakur was wanted for questioning for wounding a police officer on January 26, 1972, who was attempting to serve a traffic summons in Brooklyn.[37] After an $89,000 Brooklyn bank robbery on March 1, 1972, a Daily News headline asked: "Was that JoAnne?" Shakur was identified as wanted for questioning after a September 1, 1972, bank robbery in the Bronx.[37] Based on FBI photographs, Monsignor John Powis alleged that Shakur was involved in an armed robbery at Our Lady of the Presentation Church in Brownsville, Brooklyn, on September 14, 1972.[38]

In 1972, Shakur became the subject of a nationwide manhunt after the FBI alleged that she led a Black Liberation Army cell that had conducted a "series of cold-blooded murders of New York City police officers".[39] The FBI said these included the "execution style murders" of New York City Police Officers Joseph Piagentini and Waverly Jones on May 21, 1971, and NYPD officers Gregory Foster and Rocco Laurie on January 28, 1972.[40][41] Shakur was alleged to have been directly involved with the Foster and Laurie murders, and involved tangentially with the Piagentini and Jones murders.[42]

Some sources identify Shakur as the de facto head of the BLA after the arrest of co-founder Dhoruba Moore.[43] Robert Daley, Deputy Commissioner of the New York City Police, for example, described Shakur as "the final wanted fugitive, the soul of the gang, the mother hen who kept them together, kept them moving, kept them shooting".[44] Years later, some police officers argued that her importance in the BLA had been exaggerated by the police. One officer said that they had created a "myth" to "demonize" Shakur because she was "educated", "young and pretty".[45]

As of February 17, 1972, when Shakur was identified as one of four BLA members on a short trip to Chattanooga, Tennessee, she was wanted for questioning (along with Robert Vickers, Twyman Meyers, Samuel Cooper, and Paul Stewart) in relation to police killings, a Queens bank robbery, and the grenade attack on police.[46][47][48] Shakur was reported as one of six suspects in the ambushing of four policemen—two in Jamaica, Queens, and two in Brooklyn—on January 28, 1973.[49]

On April 16, 1981, Shakur was allegedly in the back seat of a van connected with a burglary. After the vehicle was pulled over, two men stepped out of the vehicle and opened fire on NYPD officers John Scarangella and Richard Rainey. The two men were charged with the murder of Officer Scarangella and attempted murder of Officer Rainey.[50]

By June 1973, an apparatus that would become the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF)[51] was issuing nearly daily briefings on Shakur's status and the allegations against her.[52][53]

According to Cleaver and Katsiaficas, the FBI and local police "initiated a national search-and-destroy mission for suspected BLA members, collaborating in stakeouts that were the products of intensive political repression and counterintelligence campaigns like NEWKILL". They "attempted to tie Assata to every suspected action of the BLA involving a woman".[54] The JTTF would later serve as the "coordinating body in the search for Assata and the renewed campaign to smash the BLA", after her escape from prison.[53] After her capture, however, Shakur was not charged with any of the crimes for which she was purportedly the subject of the manhunt.[39][55]

Shakur and others[39][55][56] claim that she was targeted by the FBI's COINTELPRO as a result of her involvement with the black liberation organizations.[18] Specifically, documentary evidence suggests that Shakur was targeted by an investigation named CHESROB, which "attempted to hook former New York Panther Joanne Chesimard (Assata Shakur) to virtually every bank robbery or violent crime involving a black woman on the East Coast".[57] Although named after Shakur, CHESROB (like its predecessor, NEWKILL) was not limited to Shakur.[58]

Years later when she was living in Cuba, Shakur was asked about the BLA's alleged involvement in the killings of police officers. She said, "In reality, armed struggle historically has been used by people to liberate themselves... But the question lies in when do people use armed struggle... There were people [in the BLA] who absolutely took the position that it was just time to resist, and if black people didn't start to fight back against police brutality and didn't start to wage armed resistance, we would be annihilated."[12]

New Jersey Turnpike shootout edit

On May 2, 1973, at about 12:45 a.m.,[59] Assata Shakur, along with Zayd Malik Shakur (born James F. Costan) and Sundiata Acoli (born Clark Squire), were stopped on the New Jersey Turnpike in East Brunswick for driving with a broken tail light by State Trooper James Harper, backed up by Trooper Werner Foerster in a second patrol vehicle.[60] The vehicle was "slightly" exceeding the speed limit.[59][61] Recordings of Trooper Harper calling the dispatcher were played at the trials of both Acoli and Assata Shakur.[60][62]

The stop occurred 200 yards (183 m) south of what was then the Turnpike Authority administration building.[59][62][63] Acoli was driving the two-door vehicle, Assata Shakur was seated in the right front seat, and Zayd Shakur was in the right rear seat.[64][b] Trooper Harper asked the driver for identification, noticed a discrepancy, asked him to get out of the car, and questioned him at the rear of the vehicle.[59]

With the questioning of Acoli, accounts by participants of the confrontation begin to differ (see the witnesses section below).[65] A shootout ensued in which Trooper Foerster was shot twice in the head with his own gun and killed,[60][65] Zayd Shakur was killed, and Assata Shakur and Trooper Harper were wounded.

According to initial police statements, at this point one or more of the suspects had begun firing with semiautomatic handguns, and Trooper Foerster fired four times before falling mortally wounded.[59] At Acoli's trial, Harper testified that the gunfight started "seconds" after Foerster arrived at the scene.[64] At this trial, Harper said that Foerster reached into the vehicle, pulled out and held up a semi-automatic pistol and ammunition magazine, and said "Jim, look what I found",[64] while facing Harper at the rear of the vehicle.[66] The police ordered Assata Shakur and Zayd Shakur to put their hands on their laps and not to move; Harper said that Assata Shakur reached down to the right of her right leg, pulled out a pistol, and shot him in the shoulder, after which he retreated to behind his vehicle. Questioned by prosecutor C. Judson Hamlin, Harper said he saw Foerster shot just as Assata Shakur was hit by bullets from Harper's gun.[64] In his opening statement to a jury, Hamlin said that Acoli shot Foerster with a .38 caliber semiautomatic pistol and used Foerster's own gun to "execute him".[67] According to the testimony of State Police investigators, two jammed semi-automatic pistols were discovered near Foerster's body.[68]

Acoli drove the car (a white Pontiac LeMans with Vermont license plates)[63]—which contained Assata Shakur, who was wounded, and Zayd Shakur, who was dead or dying—5 miles (8 km) down the road.[60][59] The vehicle was chased by three patrol cars and the booths down the turnpike were alerted. Acoli stopped and exited the car and, after being ordered to halt by a trooper, fled into the woods as the trooper emptied his gun.[59] Assata Shakur walked toward the trooper with her bloodied arms raised in surrender.[59] Acoli was captured after a 36-hour manhunt—involving 400 people, state police helicopters, and bloodhounds.[59][69][70] Zayd Shakur's body was found in a nearby gully along the road.[59]

According to a New Jersey Police spokesperson, Assata Shakur was on her way to a "new hideout in Philadelphia" and "heading ultimately for Washington". A book in the vehicle was said to contain a list of potential BLA targets.[59] Assata Shakur testified she was on her way to Baltimore for a job as a bar waitress.[71]

With gunshot wounds in both arms and a shoulder, Assata Shakur was moved to Middlesex General Hospital under "heavy guard" and was reported to be in "serious condition". Trooper Harper was wounded in the left shoulder, reported in "good" condition, and given a protective guard at the hospital.[59][69] Assata Shakur was interrogated and arraigned from her hospital bed.[72]

Her defense team alleged that her medical care during this period was "substandard".[11][73][74][75]

She was transferred from Middlesex General Hospital in New Brunswick to Roosevelt Hospital in Edison after her lawyers obtained a court order from Judge John Bachman,[76] and then transferred to Middlesex County Workhouse a few weeks later.[77]

During an interview, Assata Shakur discussed her treatment by the police and medical staff at Middlesex General Hospital. She said that the police beat and choked her and were "doing everything that they could possibly do as soon as the doctors or nurses would go outside".[78]

Criminal charges and dispositions edit

Between 1973 and 1977, in New York and New Jersey, Shakur was indicted ten times, resulting in seven different criminal trials. Shakur was charged with two bank robberies, the kidnapping of a Brooklyn heroin dealer, the attempted murder of two Queens police officers stemming from a January 23, 1973, failed ambush, and eight other felonies related to the Turnpike shootout.[39][79] Of these trials, three resulted in acquittals, one in a hung jury, one in a change of venue, one in a mistrial due to pregnancy, and one in a conviction. Three indictments were dismissed without trial.[79]

Criminal charge Court Arraignment Proceedings Disposition
Attempted armed robbery at Statler Hilton Hotel
April 5, 1971
New York Supreme Court, New York County November 22, 1977 None Dismissed
Bank robbery in Queens
August 23, 1971
United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York July 20, 1973 January 5–16, 1976 Acquitted
Bank robbery in Bronx: Conspiracy, robbery, and assault with a deadly weapon
September 1, 1972
United States District Court for the Southern District of New York August 1, 1973 December 3–14, 1973 Hung jury
December 19–28, 1973 Acquitted
Kidnapping of James E. Freeman
December 28, 1972
N.Y. Supreme Court, Kings County May 30, 1974 September 6 – December 19, 1975 Acquitted
Murder of Richard Nelson
January 2, 1973
N.Y. Supreme Court, New York County May 29, 1974 None Dismissed
Attempted murder of policemen Michael O'Reilly and Roy Polliana
January 23, 1973
N.Y. Supreme Court, Queens County May 11, 1974 None Dismissed
Turnpike shootout: First-degree murder, second-degree murder, atrocious assault and battery, assault and battery against a police officer, assault with a dangerous weapon, assault with intent to kill, illegal possession of a weapon, and armed robbery
May 2, 1973
N.J. Superior Court, Middlesex County May 3, 1973 October 9–23, 1973 Change of venue
January 1 – February 1, 1974 Mistrial due to pregnancy
February 15 – March 25, 1977 Convicted
Source: Shakur, 1987, p. xiv.

Turnpike shootout change of venue edit

On the charges related to the New Jersey Turnpike shootout, New Jersey Superior Court Judge Leon Gerofsky ordered a change of venue in 1973 from Middlesex to Morris County, New Jersey, saying "it was almost impossible to obtain a jury here comprising people willing to accept the responsibility of impartiality so that defendants will be protected from transitory passion and prejudice."[80] Polls of residents in Middlesex County, where Acoli had been convicted less than three years earlier,[81] showed that 83% knew Shakur's identity and 70% believed that she was guilty.[63]

Bronx bank robbery mistrial edit

In December 1973, Shakur was tried for a September 29, 1972, $3,700 robbery of the Manufacturer's Hanover Trust Company in the Bronx, along with co-defendant Kamau Sadiki (born Fred Hilton).[82][83] In light of the pending murder prosecution against Shakur in New Jersey state court, her lawyers requested that the trial be postponed for six months to permit further preparation. Judge Lee P. Gagliardi denied a postponement, and the Second Circuit denied Shakur's petition for mandamus.[84] In protest, the lawyers stayed mute, and Shakur and Sadiki conducted their own defense.[82][83] Seven other BLA members were indicted by District Attorney Eugene Gold in connection with the series of holdups and shootings on the same day,[85] who—according to Gold—represented the "top echelon" of the BLA as determined by a year-long investigation.[86]

The prosecution's case rested largely on the testimony of two men who had pleaded guilty to participating in the holdup.[87] The prosecution called four witnesses: Avon White and John Rivers (both of whom had already pled guilty to the robbery) and the manager and teller of the bank.[88] White and Rivers, although having pled guilty, had not yet been sentenced for the robbery and were promised that the charges would be dropped in exchange for their testimony.[88] White and Rivers testified that Shakur had guarded one of the doors with a .357 magnum pistol and that Sadiki had served as a lookout and drove the getaway truck during the robbery; neither White nor Rivers was cross-examined due to the defense attorney's refusal to participate in the trial.[88] Shakur's aunt and lawyer, Evelyn Williams, was cited for contempt after walking out of the courtroom after many of her attempted motions were denied.[82] The trial was delayed for a few days after Shakur was diagnosed with pleurisy.[89]

During the trial, the defendants were escorted to a "holding pen" outside the courtroom several times after shouting complaints and epithets at Judge Gagliardi.[90] While in the holding pen, they listened to the proceedings over loudspeakers.[91] Both defendants were repeatedly cited for contempt of court and eventually barred from the courtroom, where the trial continued in their absence.[82] A contemporary New York Times editorial criticized Williams for failing to maintain courtroom "decorum," comparing her actions to William Kunstler's recent contempt conviction for his actions during the "Chicago Seven" trial.[92]

Sadiki's lawyer, Robert Bloom, attempted to have the trial dismissed and then postponed due to new "revelations" regarding the credibility of White, a former co-defendant by then working for the prosecution.[93] Bloom had been assigned to defend Sadiki/Hilton over the summer, but White was not disclosed as a government witness until right before the trial.[94] Judge Gagliardi instructed both the prosecution and the defense not to bring up Shakur or Sadiki's connections to the BLA, saying they were "not relevant".[93] Gagliardi denied requests by the jurors to pose questions to the witnesses—either directly or through him—and declined to provide the jury with information they requested about how long the defense had been given to prepare, saying it was "none of their concern".[95] This trial resulted in a hung jury and then a mistrial, when the jury reported to Gagliardi that they were hopelessly deadlocked for the fourth time.[94]

Bronx bank robbery retrial edit

The retrial was delayed for one day to give the defendants more time to prepare.[96] The new jury selection was marked by attempts by Williams to be relieved of her duties, owing to disagreements with Shakur as well as with Hilton's attorney.[97] Judge Arnold Bauman denied the application, but directed another lawyer, Howard Jacobs, to defend Shakur while Williams remained the attorney of record.[97] Shakur was ejected following an argument with Williams, and Hilton left with her as jury selection continued.[98] After the selection of twelve jurors (60 were excused), Williams was allowed to retire from the case, with Shakur officially representing herself, assisted by lawyer Florynce Kennedy.[99] In the retrial, White testified that the six alleged robbers had saved their hair clippings to create disguises, and identified a partially obscured head and shoulder in a photo taken from a surveillance camera as Shakur's.[100] Kennedy objected to this identification on the grounds that the prosecutor, assistant United States attorney Peter Truebner, had offered to stipulate that Shakur was not depicted in any of the photographs.[100] Although both White and Rivers testified that Shakur was wearing overalls during the robbery, the person identified as Shakur in the photograph was wearing a jacket.[101] The defense attempted to discredit White on the grounds that he had spent eight months in Matteawan Hospital for the Criminally Insane in 1968, and White countered that he had faked insanity (by claiming to be Allah in front of three psychiatrists) to get transferred out of prison.[102]

Shakur personally cross-examined the witnesses, getting White to admit that he had once been in love with her; the same day, one juror (who had been frequently napping during the trial) was replaced with an alternate.[103] During the retrial, the defendants repeatedly left or were thrown out of the courtroom.[104] Both defendants were acquitted in the retrial; six jurors interviewed after the trial stated that they did not believe the two key prosecution witnesses.[101] Shakur was immediately returned to Morristown, New Jersey, under a heavy guard following the trial.[101] Louis Chesimard (Shakur's ex-husband) and Paul Stewart, the other two alleged robbers, had been acquitted in June.[105]

Turnpike shootout mistrial edit

The Turnpike shootout proceedings continued with Judge John E. Bachman in Middlesex County.[106] New Jersey Superior Court Judge Leon Gerofsky ordered a change of venue in 1973 from Middlesex to Morris County, New Jersey, saying "it was almost impossible to obtain a jury here comprising people willing to accept the responsibility of impartiality so that defendants will be protected from transitory passion and prejudice."[80] Morris County, had a far smaller black population than Middlesex County.[107] On this basis, Shakur unsuccessfully attempted to remove the trial to federal court.[108]

Before jury selection was complete, it was discovered that Shakur was pregnant. Due to the possibility of miscarriage, the prosecution successfully requested a mistrial for Shakur; Acoli's trial continued.[109][110][111]

Attempted murder dismissal edit

Shakur and four others (including Fred Hilton, Avon White, and Andrew Jackson) were indicted in the State Supreme Court in the Bronx on December 31, 1973, on charges of attempting to shoot and kill two policemen—Michael O'Reilly and Roy Polliana, who were wounded but had since returned to duty—in an ambush in St. Albans, Queens on January 28, 1973.[112] On March 5, 1974, two new defendants (Jeannette Jefferson and Robert Hayes) were named in an indictment involving the same charges.[113] On April 26, while Shakur was pregnant,[109] New Jersey Governor Brendan Byrne signed an extradition order to move Shakur to New Jersey to face two counts of attempted murder, attempted assault, and possession of dangerous weapons related to the alleged ambush; however, Shakur declined to waive her right to an extradition hearing, and asked for a full hearing before Middlesex County Court Judge John E. Bachman.[114]

Shakur was extradited to New York City on May 6,[115] arraigned on May 11 (pleading not guilty), and remanded to jail by Justice Albert S. McGrover of the State Supreme Court, pending a pretrial hearing on July 2.[116] In November 1974, New York State Supreme Court Justice Peter Farrell dismissed the attempted murder indictment because of insufficient evidence, declaring "The court can only note with disapproval that virtually a year has passed before counsel made an application for the most basic relief permitted by law, namely an attack on the sufficiency of the evidence submitted by the grand jury."[117]

Kidnapping trial edit

Shakur was indicted on May 30, 1974, on the charge of having robbed a Brooklyn bar and kidnapping bartender James E. Freeman for ransom.[116] Shakur and co-defendant Ronald Myers were accused of entering the bar with pistols and shotguns, taking $50 from the register, kidnapping the bartender, leaving a note demanding a $20,000 ransom from the bar owner, and fleeing in a rented truck.[118] Freeman was said to have later escaped unhurt.[118] The text of Shakur's opening statement in the trial is reproduced in her autobiography.[119] Shakur and co-defendant Ronald Myers were acquitted on December 19, 1975, after seven hours of jury deliberation, ending a three-month trial in front of Judge William Thompson.[118]

Queens bank robbery trial edit

In July 1973, after being indicted by a grand jury, Shakur pleaded not guilty in Federal Court in Brooklyn to an indictment related to a $7,700 robbery of the Bankers Trust Company bank in Queens on August 31, 1971.[120] Judge Jacob Mishlerset set a tentative trial date of November 5 that year.[121][122] The trial was delayed until 1976,[120] when Shakur was represented by Stanley Cohen and Evelyn Williams.[123] In this trial, Shakur acted as her own co-counsel and told the jury in her opening testimony:

I have decided to act as co-counsel, and to make this opening statement, not because I have any illusions about my legal abilities, but, rather, because there are things that I must say to you. I have spent many days and nights behind bars thinking about this trial, this outrage. And in my own mind, only someone who has been so intimately a victim of this madness as I have can do justice to what I have to say.[124]

One bank employee testified that Shakur was one of the bank robbers, but three other bank employees (including two tellers) testified that they were uncertain.[123] The prosecution showed surveillance photos of four of the six alleged robbers, contending that one of them was Shakur wearing a wig. Shakur was forcibly subdued and photographed by the FBI on the judge's order, after having refused to cooperate, believing that the FBI would use photo manipulation; a subsequent judge determined that the manners in which the photos were obtained violated Shakur's rights and ruled the new photos inadmissible.[82] In her autobiography, Shakur recounts being beaten, choked, and kicked on the courtroom floor by five marshals, as Williams narrated the events to ensure they would appear on the court record.[125] Shortly after deliberation began, the jury asked to see all the photographic exhibits taken from the surveillance footage.[123] The jury determined that a widely circulated FBI photo allegedly showing Shakur participating in the robbery was not her.[126]

Shakur was acquitted after seven hours of jury deliberation on January 16, 1976,[123] and was immediately remanded back to New Jersey for the Turnpike trial.[127] The actual transfer took place on January 29.[128] She was the only one of the six suspects in the robbery to be brought to trial.[123] Andrew Jackson and two others indicted for the same robbery pleaded guilty; Jackson was sentenced to five years in prison and five years' probation; another was shot and killed in a gunfight in Florida on December 31, 1971, and the last remained at large at the time of Shakur's acquittal.[120][123]

Turnpike shootout retrial edit

 
Shakur's murder trial for the Turnpike shootout took place in New Brunswick, Middlesex County, New Jersey, not far from the East Brunswick site of the gunfight.

By the time she was retried in 1977, Acoli had already been convicted of shooting and murdering Foerster.[64] The prosecution argued that Assata had fired the bullets that had wounded Harper, while the defense argued that the now deceased Zayd had fired them.[129] Based on New Jersey law, if Shakur's presence at the scene could be considered as "aiding and abetting" the murder of Foerster, she could be convicted even if she had not fired the bullets which had killed him.[130]

A total of 289 articles had been published in the local press relating to the various crimes with which Shakur had been accused.[63] Shakur again attempted to remove the trial to federal court. The United States District Court for the District of New Jersey denied the petition and also denied Shakur an injunction against the holding of trial proceedings on Fridays.[60][131][132] An en banc panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit affirmed.[133]

The nine-week trial was widely publicized and was even reported on by the Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union (TASS).[63][134] During the trial, hundreds of civil rights campaigners demonstrated outside of the Middlesex County courthouse each day.[63]

Following the 13-minute opening statement by Edward J. Barone, the first assistant Middlesex County prosecutor (directing the case for the state), William Kunstler (the chief of Shakur's defense staff) moved immediately for a mistrial, calling the eight-count grand jury indictment "adversary proceeding solely and exclusively under the control of the prosecutor", whom Kunstler accused of "improper prejudicial remarks"; Judge Theodore Appleby, noting the frequent defense interruptions that had characterized the previous days' jury selection, denied the motion.[135]

On February 23, Shakur's attorneys filed papers asking Judge Appleby to subpoena FBI Director Clarence Kelley, Senator Frank Church and other federal and New York City law enforcement officials to testify about the Counter Intelligence Program, which they alleged was designed to harass and disrupt black activist organizations.[68] Kunstler had previously been successful in subpoenaing Kelley and Church for the trials of American Indian Movement (AIM) members charged with murdering FBI agents.[68] The motion (argued March 2)—which also asked the court to require the production of memos, tapes, documents, and photographs of alleged COINTELPRO involvement from 1970 to 1973—was denied.[68][136]

Shakur herself was called as a witness on March 15, the first witness called by the defense; she denied shooting either Harper or Foerster, and also denied handling a weapon during the incident. She was questioned by her own attorney, Stuart Ball, for under 40 minutes, and then cross-examined by Barone for less than two hours (see the Witnesses section below).[71] Ball's questioning ended with the following exchange:

On that night of May 2[n]d, did you shoot, kill, execute or have anything to do with the death of Trooper Werner Foerster?

No.

Did you shoot or assault Trooper James Harper?

No.[71]

Under cross-examination, Shakur was unable to explain how three magazines of ammunition and 16 live shells had gotten into her shoulder bag; she also admitted to knowing that Zayd Shakur carried a gun at times, and specifically to seeing a gun sticking out of Acoli's pocket while stopping for supper at a Howard Johnson's restaurant shortly before the shooting.[71] Shakur admitted to carrying an identification card with the name "Justine Henderson" in her billfold the night of the shootout, but denied using any of the aliases on the long list that Barone proceeded to read.[71]

Defense attorneys edit

 
Lawyer William Kunstler was the chief of Shakur's defense staff.

Shakur's defense attorneys were William Kunstler (the chief of Shakur's defense staff),[135] Stuart Ball, Robert Bloom, Raymond A. Brown,[137] Stanley Cohen (who died of unknown causes early on in the Turnpike trial), Lennox Hinds, Florynce Kennedy, Louis Myers, Laurence Stern, and Evelyn Williams, Shakur's aunt.[79][135][138] Of these attorneys, Kunstler, Ball, Cohen, Myers, Stern and Williams appeared in court for the turnpike trial.[139][140] Kunstler became involved in Shakur's trials in 1975, when contacted by Williams, and commuted from New York City to New Brunswick every day with Stern.[141]

Her attorneys, in particular Lennox Hinds, were often held in contempt of court, which the National Conference of Black Lawyers cited as an example of systemic bias in the judicial system.[142] The New Jersey Legal Ethics Committee also investigated complaints against Hinds for comparing Shakur's murder trial to "legalized lynching"[143] undertaken by a "kangaroo court".[63][144] Hinds' disciplinary proceeding reached the U.S. Supreme Court in Middlesex County Ethics Committee v. Garden State Bar Ass'n (1982).[145] According to Kunstler's autobiography, the sizable contingent of New Jersey State Troopers guarding the courthouse were under strict orders from their commander, Col. Clinton Pagano, to completely shun Shakur's defense attorneys.[146]

Judge Appleby also threatened Kunstler with dismissal and contempt of court after he delivered an October 21, 1976, speech at nearby Rutgers University that in part discussed the upcoming trial,[147] but later ruled that Kunstler could represent Shakur.[148] Until obtaining a court order, Kunstler was forced to strip naked and undergo a body search before each visit with Shakur—during which Shakur was shackled to a bed by both ankles.[63] Judge Appleby also refused to investigate a burglary of her defense counsel's office that resulted in the disappearance of trial documents,[136] amounting to half of the legal papers related to her case.[149] Her lawyers also claimed that their offices were bugged.[82]

Witnesses edit

Sundiata Acoli, Assata Shakur, Trooper Harper, and a New Jersey Turnpike driver who saw part of the incident were the only surviving witnesses.[150] Acoli did not testify or make any pre-trial statements, nor did he testify in his own trial or give a statement to the police.[151] The driver traveling north on the turnpike testified that he had seen a State Trooper struggling with a Black man between a white vehicle and a State Trooper car, whose revolving lights illuminated the area.[150]

Shakur testified that Trooper Harper shot her after she raised her arms to comply with his demand. She said that the second shot hit her in the back as she turned to avoid it, and that she fell onto the road for the duration of the gunfight before crawling back into the backseat of the Pontiac—which Acoli drove 5 miles (8 km) down the road and parked. She testified that she remained there until State Troopers dragged her onto the road.[65][150]

Trooper Harper's official reports state that after he stopped the Pontiac, he ordered Acoli to the back of the vehicle for Trooper Foerster—who had arrived on the scene—to examine his driver's license.[150] The reports then state that after Acoli complied, and as Harper was looking inside the vehicle to examine the registration, Trooper Foerster yelled and held up an ammunition magazine as Shakur simultaneously reached into her red pocketbook, pulled out a 9mm handgun and fired at him.[150] Trooper Harper's reports then state that he ran to the rear of his car and shot at Shakur who had exited the vehicle and was firing from a crouched position next to the vehicle.[150]

Jury edit

A total of 408 potential jurors were questioned during the voir dire, which concluded on February 14.[135] All of the 15 jurors—ten women and five men—were white, and most were under thirty years old.[135][152] Five jurors had personal ties to State Troopers (one girlfriend, two nephews, and two friends).[136][153] A sixteenth female juror was removed before the trial formally opened, when it was determined that Sheriff Joseph DeMarino of Middlesex County, while a private detective several years earlier, had worked for a lawyer who represented the juror's husband.[135] Judge Appleby repeatedly denied Kunstler's requests for DeMarino to be removed from his responsibilities for the duration of the trial "because he did not divulge his association with the juror".[135]

One prospective juror was dismissed for reading Target Blue,[154] a book by Robert Daley, a former New York City Deputy Police Commander, which dealt in part with Shakur and had been left in the jury assembly room.[155] Before the jury entered the courtroom, Judge Appleby ordered Shakur's lawyers to remove a copy of Roots: The Saga of an American Family by Alex Haley from a position on the defense counsel table easily visible to jurors.[135] The Roots TV miniseries adapted from the book and shown shortly before the trial was believed to have evoked feelings of "guilt and sympathy" with many white viewers.[135]

Shakur's attorneys sought a new trial on the grounds that one jury member, John McGovern, had violated the jury's sequestration order.[156] Judge Appleby rejected Kunstler's claim that the juror had violated the order.[157] McGovern later sued Kunstler for defamation;[158] Kunstler eventually publicly apologized to McGovern and paid him a small settlement.[159] Additionally, in his autobiography, Kunstler alleged that he later learned from a law enforcement agent that a New Jersey State Assembly member had addressed the jury at the hotel where they were sequestered, urging them to convict Shakur.[159]

Medical evidence edit

 
Shakur's broken clavicle was a key element of her defense, and the implications of her injury for the differing accounts of the shootout were points of contention.

A key element of Shakur's defense was medical testimony meant to demonstrate that she was shot with her hands up and that she would have been subsequently unable to fire a weapon. A neurologist testified that the median nerve in Shakur's right arm was severed by the second bullet, making her unable to pull a trigger.[111] Neurosurgeon Dr. Arthur Turner Davidson, Associate Professor of Surgery at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, testified that the wounds in her upper arms, armpit and chest, and severed median nerve that instantly paralyzed her right arm, would only have been caused if both arms were raised, and that to sustain such injuries while crouching and firing a weapon (as described in Trooper Harper's testimony) "would be anatomically impossible".[63][160]

Davidson based his testimony on an August 4, 1976, examination of Shakur and on X-rays taken immediately after the shootout at Middlesex General Hospital.[160] Prosecutor Barone questioned whether Davidson was qualified to make such a judgment 39 months after the injury; Barone proceeded to suggest (while a female Sheriff's attendant acted out his suggestion) that Shakur was struck in the right arm and collar bone and "then spun around by the impact of the bullet so an immediate second shot entered the fleshy part of her upper left arm" to which Davidson replied "Impossible."[160]

Dr. David Spain, a pathologist from Brookdale Community College, testified that her bullet scars as well as X-rays supported her claim that her arms were raised, and that there was "no conceivable way" the first bullet could have hit Shakur's clavicle if her arm was down.[129][161]

Judge Appleby eventually cut off funds for any further expert defense testimony.[63] Shakur, in her autobiography, and Williams, in Inadmissible Evidence, both claim that it was difficult to find expert witnesses for the trial, because of the expense and because most forensic and ballistic specialists declined on the grounds of a conflict of interest when approached because they routinely performed such work for law enforcement officials.[162]

Other evidence edit

According to Angela Davis, neutron activation analysis that was administered after the shootout showed no gunpowder residue on Shakur's fingers and forensic analysis performed at the Trenton, New Jersey, crime lab and the FBI crime labs in Washington, D.C., did not find her fingerprints on any weapon at the scene.[163] According to tape recordings and police reports made several hours after the shoot-out, when Harper returned on foot to the administration building 200 yards (183 m) away, he did not report Foerster's presence at the scene; no one at headquarters knew of Foerster's involvement in the shoot-out until his body was discovered beside his patrol car, more than an hour later.[63][12]

Conviction and sentencing edit

On March 24, the jurors listened for 45 minutes to a rereading of testimony of the State Police chemist regarding the blood found at the scene, on the LeMans, and Shakur's clothing.[65] That night, the second night of jury deliberation, the jury asked Judge Appleby to repeat his instructions regarding the four assault charges 30 minutes before retiring for the night, which led to speculation that the jury had decided in Shakur's favor on the remaining charges, especially the two counts of murder.[65] Appleby reiterated that the jury must consider separately the four assault charges (atrocious assault and battery, assault on a police officer acting in the line of duty, assault with a deadly weapon, and assault with intent to kill), each of which carried a total maximum penalty of 33 years in prison.[65] The other charges were: first-degree murder (of Foerster), second-degree murder (of Zayd Shakur), illegal possession of a weapon, and armed robbery (related to Foerster's service revolver).[139] The jury also asked Appleby to repeat the definitions of "intent" and "reasonable doubt".[65]

Shakur was convicted on all eight counts: two murder charges, and six assault charges.[139] Upon hearing the verdict, Shakur said—in a barely audible voice— "I am ashamed that I have even taken part in this trial", and that the jury was racist and had "convicted a woman with her hands up".[139] When Judge Appleby told the court attendants to "remove the prisoner", Shakur herself replied: "the prisoner will walk away on her own feet".[139] After Joseph W. Lewis, the jury foreman, read the verdict, Kunstler asked that the jury be removed before alleging that one juror had violated the sequestration order (see above).[139]

At the post-trial press conference, Kunstler blamed the verdict on racism, stating that "the white element was there to destroy her". When asked by a reporter why, if that were the case, it took the jury 24 hours to reach a verdict, Kunstler replied, "That was just a pretense." A few minutes later the prosecutor Barone disagreed with Kunstler's assessment saying the trial's outcome was decided "completely on the facts".[139]

At Shakur's sentencing hearing on April 25, Appleby sentenced her to 26 to 33 years in state prison (10 to 12 for the four counts of assault, 12 to 15 for robbery, 2 to 3 for armed robbery, plus 2 to 3 for aiding and abetting the murder of Foerster), to be served consecutively with her mandatory life sentence. However, Appleby dismissed the second-degree murder of Zayd Shakur, as the New Jersey Supreme Court had recently narrowed the application of the law.[164] Appleby finally sentenced Shakur to 30 days in the Middlesex County Workhouse for contempt of court, concurrent with the other sentences, for refusing to rise when he entered the courtroom.[164] To become eligible for parole, Shakur would have had to serve a minimum of 25 years, which would have included her four years in custody during the trials.[164]

Nelson murder dismissal edit

In October 1977, New York State Superior Court Justice John Starkey dismissed murder and robbery charges against Shakur related to the death of Richard Nelson during a hold-up of a Brooklyn social club on December 28, 1972, ruling that the state had delayed too long in bringing her to trial. Judge Starkey said, "People have constitutional rights, and you can't shuffle them around."[165] The case was delayed in being brought to trial as a result of an agreement between the governors of New York and New Jersey as to the priority of the various charges against Shakur.[165] Three other defendants were indicted in relation to the same holdup: Melvin Kearney, who died in 1976 from an eight-floor fall while trying to escape from the Brooklyn House of Detention, Twymon Myers, who was killed by police while a fugitive, and Andrew Jackson, the charges against whom were dismissed when two prosecution witnesses could not identify him in a lineup.[165]

Attempted robbery dismissal edit

On November 22, 1977, Shakur pleaded not guilty to an attempted armed robbery indictment stemming from the 1971 incident at the Statler Hilton Hotel.[166] Shakur was accused of attempting to rob a Michigan man staying at the hotel of $250 of cash and personal property.[166] The prosecutor was C. Richard Gibbons.[166] The charges were dismissed without trial.[167]

Imprisonment edit

 
Shakur was kept in solitary confinement on Rikers Island for 21 months.

After the Turnpike shootings, Shakur was briefly held at the Garden State Youth Correctional Facility[168] in Yardville, Burlington County, New Jersey, and later moved to Rikers Island Correctional Institution for Women in New York City[10] where she was kept in solitary confinement[169][170] for 21 months. Shakur's only daughter, Kakuya Shakur, was conceived during her trial[109] and born on September 11, 1974, in the "fortified psychiatric ward" at Elmhurst General Hospital in Queens,[123][171] where Shakur stayed for a few days before being returned to Rikers Island. In her autobiography, Shakur claims that she was beaten and restrained by several large female officers after refusing a medical exam from a prison doctor shortly after giving birth.[125] After a bomb threat was made against Judge Appleby, Sheriff Joseph DeMarino lied to the press about the exact date of her transfer to Clinton Correctional Facility for Women; He later claimed the threat to be the cause of his falsification.[172] She was also transferred from the Clinton Correctional Facility for Women to a special area staffed by women guards at the Garden State Youth Correctional Facility, where she was the only female inmate,[173] for "security reasons".[174] When Kunstler first took on Shakur's case (before meeting her), he described her basement cell as "adequate", which nearly resulted in his dismissal as her attorney.[146] On May 6, 1977, Judge Clarkson Fisher, of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey, denied Shakur's request for an injunction requiring her transfer from the all-male facility to Clinton Correctional Facility for Women; the Third Circuit affirmed.[170][175][176]

On April 8, 1978, Shakur was transferred to Alderson Federal Prison Camp in Alderson, West Virginia, where she met Puerto Rican nationalist Lolita Lebrón[10] and Mary Alice, a Catholic nun, who introduced Shakur to the concept of liberation theology.[177] At Alderson, Shakur was housed in the Maximum Security Unit, which also contained several members of the Aryan Sisterhood as well as Sandra Good and Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, followers of Charles Manson.[178]

On February 20, 1979,[179] after the Maximum Security Unit at Alderson was closed,[177] Shakur was transferred to the Clinton Correctional Facility for Women in New Jersey.[10] According to her attorney Lennox Hinds, Shakur "understates the awfulness of the condition in which she was incarcerated", which included vaginal and anal searches.[180] Hinds argues that "in the history of New Jersey, no woman pretrial detainee or prisoner has ever been treated as she was, continuously confined in a men's prison, under twenty-four-hour surveillance of her most intimate functions, without intellectual sustenance, adequate medical attention, and exercise, and without the company of other women for all the years she was in custody".[134]

Shakur was identified as a political prisoner as early as October 8, 1973, by Angela Davis,[181] and in an April 3, 1977, The New York Times advertisement purchased by the Easter Coalition for Human Rights.[182] An international panel of seven jurists were invited by Hinds to tour a number of U.S. prisons, and concluded in a report filed with the United Nations Commission on Human Rights that the conditions of her solitary confinement were "totally unbefitting any prisoner".[183][134] Their investigation, which focused on alleged human rights abuses of political prisoners, cited Shakur as "one of the worst cases" of such abuses and including her in "a class of victims of FBI misconduct through the COINTELPRO strategy and other forms of illegal government conduct who as political activists have been selectively targeted for provocation, false arrests, entrapment, fabrication of evidence, and spurious criminal prosecutions".[63][184] Amnesty International, however, did not regard Shakur as a former political prisoner.[185]

Escape edit

In early 1979, "the Family", a group of BLA members, began to plan Shakur's escape from prison. They financed this by stealing $105,000 from a Bamberger's store in Paramus, New Jersey.[186] On November 2, 1979, Shakur escaped the Clinton Correctional Facility for Women in New Jersey, when three members of the Black Liberation Army visiting her drew concealed .45-caliber pistols and a stick of dynamite, seized two correction officers as hostages, commandeered a van and (with the assistance of members of the May 19 Communist Organization) made their escape.[187][188] No one was injured during the prison break, including the officers held as hostages who were left in a parking lot.[39] According to later court testimony, Shakur lived in Pittsburgh until August 1980, when she flew to the Bahamas.[186] Mutulu Shakur, Silvia Baraldini, Sekou Odinga, and Marilyn Buck were charged with assisting in her escape; Ronald Boyd Hill was also held on charges related to the escape.[189][190] In part for his role in the event, Mutulu was named on July 23, 1982, as the 380th addition to the FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list, where he remained for the next four years until his capture in 1986. State correction officials disclosed in November 1979 that they had not run identity checks on Shakur's visitors[191] and that the three men and one woman who assisted in her escape had presented false identification to enter the prison's visitor room,[192] before which they were not searched.[63] Mutulu Shakur and Marilyn Buck were convicted in 1988 of several robberies as well as the prison escape.[193]

 
Shakur in a 1982 photo issued by the FBI

At the time of the escape, Kunstler had just started to prepare her appeal.[159] After her escape, Shakur lived as a fugitive for several years. The FBI circulated wanted posters throughout the New York – New Jersey area; her supporters hung "Assata Shakur is Welcome Here" posters in response.[194] In New York, three days after her escape, more than 5,000 demonstrators organized by the National Black Human Rights Coalition carried signs with the same slogan. At the rally, a statement from Shakur was circulated condemning U.S. prison conditions and calling for an independent "New Afrikan" state.[190][195]

For years after Shakur's escape, the movements, activities and phone calls of her friends and relatives—including her daughter walking to school in upper Manhattan—were monitored by investigators in an attempt to ascertain her whereabouts.[196] In July 1980, FBI director William H. Webster said that the search for Shakur had been frustrated by residents' refusal to cooperate, and a New York Times editorial opined that the department's commitment to "enforce the law with vigor—but also with sensitivity for civil rights and civil liberties" had been "clouded" by an "apparently crude sweep" through a Harlem building in search of Shakur.[197] In particular, one pre-dawn April 20, 1980, raid on 92 Morningside Avenue, during which FBI agents armed with shotguns and machine guns broke down doors and searched through the building for several hours while preventing residents from leaving, was seen by residents as having "racist overtones".[198] In October 1980, New Jersey and New York City Police denied published reports that they had declined to raid a Bedford–Stuyvesant, Brooklyn building where Shakur was suspected to be hiding for fear of provoking a racial incident.[199] Since her escape, Shakur has been charged with unlawful flight to avoid imprisonment.[200]

Political asylum in Cuba edit

Shakur was in Cuba by 1984; in that year she was granted political asylum there.[194] The Cuban government paid approximately $13 a day toward her living expenses.[196][201] In 1985, her daughter, Kakuya, who had been raised by Shakur's mother in New York, came to live with her. In 1987, her presence in Cuba became widely known when she agreed to be interviewed by Newsday.[12][10][202]

In an open letter, Shakur has called Cuba "One of the Largest, Most Resistant and Most Courageous Palenques (Maroon Camps) that has ever existed on the Face of this Planet".[203] She has praised Fidel Castro as a "hero of the oppressed"[12] and referred to herself as a "20th century escaped slave".[203] Shakur is also known to have worked as an English-language editor for Radio Havana Cuba.[204]

Books edit

In 1987, she published Assata: An Autobiography, which was written in Cuba. Her autobiography has been cited in relation to critical legal studies[205] and critical race theory.[206] The book does not give a detailed account of her involvement in the BLA or the events on the New Jersey Turnpike, except to say that the jury "[c]onvicted a woman with her hands up!"[45][79] It gives an account of her life beginning with her youth in the South and New York. Shakur challenges traditional styles of literary autobiography and offers a perspective on her life that is not easily accessible to the public.[207][208] The book was published by Lawrence Hill & Company in the United States and Canada but the copyright is held by Zed Books Ltd. of London due to "Son of Sam" laws, which restrict who can receive profits from a book.[209] In the six months preceding the publications of the book, Evelyn Williams, Shakur's aunt and attorney, made several trips to Cuba and served as a go-between with Hill.[202] Her autobiography was republished in Britain in 2014[130] and a dramatized version performed on BBC Radio 4 in July 2017.[210]

In 1993, she published a second book, Still Black, Still Strong, with Dhoruba bin Wahad and Mumia Abu-Jamal.

In 2005, SUNY Press released The New Abolitionists (Neo)Slave Narratives and Contemporary Prison Writings, edited and with an added introduction by Joy James, in which Shakur's Women in Prison: How We Are 1978 is featured.[211]

Extradition attempts edit

In 1997, Carl Williams, the superintendent of the New Jersey State Police, wrote a letter to Pope John Paul II asking him to raise the issue of Shakur's extradition during his talks with President Fidel Castro.[212] During the pope's visit to Cuba in 1998, Shakur agreed to an interview with NBC journalist Ralph Penza.[213] Shakur later published an extensive criticism of the NBC segment, which inter-spliced footage of Trooper Foerster's grieving widow with an FBI photo connected to a bank robbery of which Shakur had been acquitted.[214] On March 10, 1998[215] New Jersey Governor Christine Todd Whitman asked Attorney General Janet Reno to do whatever it would take to return Shakur from Cuba.[216] Later in 1998, U.S. media widely reported claims that the United States State Department had offered to lift the Cuban embargo in exchange for the return of 90 U.S. fugitives, including Shakur.[217]

The United States Congress passed a non-binding resolution in September 1998, asking Cuba for the return of Shakur as well as 90 fugitives believed by Congress to be residing in Cuba; House Concurrent Resolution 254 passed 371–0 in the House and by unanimous consent in the Senate.[218][219] The Resolution was due in no small part to the lobbying efforts of Governor Whitman and New Jersey Representative Bob Franks.[124] Before the passage of the Resolution, Franks stated: "This escaped murderer now lives a comfortable life in Cuba and has launched a public relations campaign in which she attempts to portray herself as an innocent victim rather than a cold-blooded murderer."[124]

In an open letter to Castro, chair of the Congressional Black Caucus Representative Maxine Waters of California later explained that many members of the Caucus (including herself) were against Shakur's extradition but had mistakenly voted for the bill, which was placed on the accelerated suspension calendar, generally reserved for non-controversial legislation.[220] In the letter, Waters explained her opposition, calling COINTELPRO "illegal, clandestine political persecution".[220]

On May 2, 2005, the 32nd anniversary of the Turnpike shootings, the FBI classified her as a domestic terrorist, increasing the reward for assistance in her capture to $1 million,[194][221] the largest reward placed on an individual in the history of New Jersey. New Jersey State Police superintendent Rick Fuentes said "she is now 120 pounds of money."[222] The bounty announcement reportedly caused Shakur to "drop out of sight" after having previously lived relatively openly (including having her home telephone number listed in her local telephone directory).[223]

New York City Councilman Charles Barron, a former Black Panther, has called for the bounty to be rescinded.[224] The New Jersey State Police and Federal Bureau of Investigation each still have an agent officially assigned to her case.[225] Calls for Shakur's extradition increased following Fidel Castro's transfer of presidential duties;[223] in a May 2005 television address, Castro had called Shakur a victim of racial persecution, saying "they wanted to portray her as a terrorist, something that was an injustice, a brutality, an infamous lie."[226] In 2013, the FBI announced it had added Shakur to its list of 'most wanted terrorists', the first time that a woman was so designated. The reward for her capture and return was also doubled to $2 million.[227]

In June 2017, President Donald Trump gave a speech "cancelling" the Cuban thaw policies of his predecessor Barack Obama. A condition of making a new deal between the United States and Cuba is the release of political prisoners and the return of fugitives from justice. Trump specifically called for the return of "the cop-killer Joanne Chesimard".[228]

Cultural influence edit

A documentary film about Shakur, Eyes of The Rainbow, written and directed by Cuban filmmaker Gloria Rolando, appeared in 1997.[10] The official premiere of the film in Havana in 2004 was promoted by Casa de las Américas, the main cultural forum of the Cuban government.[204] Assata aka Joanne Chesimard is a 2008 biographical film directed by Fred Baker. The film premiered at the San Diego Black Film Festival and starred Assata Shakur herself. The National Conference of Black Lawyers and Mos Def are among the professional organizations and entertainers to support Assata Shakur; the "Hands Off Assata" campaign is organized by Dream Hampton.[222]

Numerous musicians have composed and recorded songs about her or dedicated to her:

Digable Planets, The Underachievers and X-Clan have also recorded songs about Shakur.[190] Shakur has been described as a "rap music legend"[223] and a "minor cause celebre".[231]

On December 12, 2006, the Chancellor of the City University of New York, Matthew Goldstein, directed City College's president, Gregory H. Williams, to remove the "unauthorized and inappropriate" designation of the "Guillermo Morales/Assata Shakur Community and Student Center," which was named by students in 1989. A student group won the right to use the lounge after a campus shutdown over proposed tuition increases.[232] CUNY was sued by student and alumni groups after removing the plaque.[233] As of April 7, 2010, the presiding judge has ruled that the issues of students' free speech and administrators' immunity from suit "deserve a trial".[234]

Following controversy, in 1995, Borough of Manhattan Community College renamed a scholarship that had previously been named for Shakur.[235] In 2008, a Bucknell University professor included Shakur in a course on "African-American heroes"—along with figures such as Harriet Tubman, Sojourner Truth, John Henry, Malcolm X, and Angela Davis.[236] Her autobiography is studied together with those of Angela Davis and Elaine Brown, the only women activists of the Black Power movement who have published book-length autobiographies.[237] Rutgers University professor H. Bruce Franklin, who excerpts Shakur's book in a class on 'Crime and Punishment in American Literature,' describes her as a "revolutionary fighter against imperialism".[238]

Black NJ State Trooper Anthony Reed (who has left the force) sued the police force because, among other things, persons had hung posters of Shakur, altered to include Reed's badge number, in a Newark barracks. He felt it was intended to insult him, as she had killed an officer, and was "racist in nature".[239] According to Dylan Rodriguez, to many "U.S. radicals and revolutionaries" Shakur represents a "venerated (if sometimes fetishized) signification of liberatory desire and possibility".[240]

The largely Internet-based "Hands Off Assata!" campaign is coordinated by Chicago-area Black Radical Congress activists.[241]

In 2015, New Jersey's Kean University dropped hip-hop artist Common as a commencement speaker because of police complaints. Members of the State Troopers Fraternal Association of New Jersey expressed their anger over Common's "A Song For Assata".[242]

In 2015, Black Lives Matter co-founder Alicia Garza writes: "When I use Assata's powerful demand in my organizing work, I always begin by sharing where it comes from, sharing about Assata's significance to the Black Liberation Movement, what its political purpose and message is, and why it's important in our context."[243]

The Chicago Black activist group Assata's Daughters is named in her honor.[244] In April 2017, former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick's foundation donated $25,000 to the group. [245]

In July 2017, the Women's March official Twitter feed celebrated Shakur's birthday, leading to criticism from some media outlets.[246][247][248]

In April 2018, a North Carolina court ordered that payment of $15,000 be made to Shakur's representative, her sister Beverly Goins, as part of a land deal.[249]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b The Federal Bureau of Investigation notes that Shakur has also used August 19, 1952, as her birthdate.[1]
  2. ^ Note that the New York Times source given here reverses the roles of Zayd Shakur and Acoli.

References edit

  1. ^ . Federal Bureau of Investigation. Archived from the original on June 11, 2008. Retrieved July 16, 2021.
  2. ^ "Cuba still harbors one of America's most wanted fugitives. What happens to Assata Shakur now? - The Washington Post". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 28, 2016.
  3. ^ "Joanne Chesimard Reward Poster" (PDF). Official Site of the State of New Jersey.
  4. ^ "Black Liberation Army: Understanding - Monitoring - Controlling". Retrieved December 14, 2021.
  5. ^ "Joanne Chesimard First Woman Named to Most Wanted Terrorists List". Federal Bureau of Investigation. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
  6. ^ "JOANNE DEBORAH CHESIMARD". Federal Bureau of Investigation.
  7. ^ Mueller, Robert S. III. . Federal Bureau of Investigation. Archived from the original on June 11, 2008. Retrieved June 6, 2008. According to the FBI, Shakur has also used August 19, 1952, as a birthdate.
  8. ^ Castellucci, John (1986). The Big Dance: the untold story of Kathy Boudin and the terrorist family that committed the Brink's robbery murders. Dodd, Mead. ISBN 9780396087137.
  9. ^ Eyes of the Rainbow. Dir. Gloria Roland. Perf. Asset Shakur. 1997. May 4, 2013. Accessed May 15, 2017.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Scheffler, 2002, p. 203.
  11. ^ a b c d Gates, Henry Louis; Anthony Appiah (1999). Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience. Basic Civitas Books. pp. 1697–1698. ISBN 0-465-00071-1.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Howell, Ron (October 11, 1987) "'On the Run With Assata Shakur' - Newsday.
  13. ^ Shakur, Assata (1987). Assata: An Autobiography. Zed Books. ISBN 9781556520747.
  14. ^ "Hands Off Assata Shakur: Angela Davis Calls for Radical Activism to Protect Activist Exiled in Cuba", Democracy Now! Accessed May 16, 2017.
  15. ^ Williams, 1993, p. 7.
  16. ^ Maryland State Police, Criminal Intelligence Division, "The Black Liberation Army: Understanding, Monitoring, Controlling". October 1991.
  17. ^ Perkins, 2000, p. 103.
  18. ^ a b James, Matthew Thomas; James, Joy James, eds. (2005). The New Abolitionists: (Neo)slave Narratives And Contemporary Prison Writings. SUNY Press. p. 77. ISBN 0-7914-6485-7.
  19. ^ a b "Gale - Product Login". galeapps.galegroup.com. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
  20. ^ Shakur, 1987, p. 221-4.
  21. ^ Finkelman, Paul (2009). Encyclopedia of African American History, 1896 to the Present: From the Age of Segregation to the Twenty-first Century Five-volume Set. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 9780195167795.
  22. ^ Harris, Paul (May 3, 2013). "FBI makes Joanne Chesimard the first woman to appear on most-wanted list". The Guardian.
  23. ^ James, Joy (2003). Imprisoned Intellectuals: America's Political Prisoners Write on Life, Liberation, and Rebellion. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 104. ISBN 0-7425-2027-7.
  24. ^ a b Van Deburg; William L. (1997). Modern Black Nationalism: From Marcus Garvey to Louis Farrakhan. NYU Press. p. 269. ISBN 0-8147-8789-4.
  25. ^ Shakur, Assata. Assata - an autobiography. London: Zed, 2014. Print.
  26. ^ Waggoner, Walter H. (April 7, 1971). "Woman Shot in Struggle With Her Alleged Victim". The New York Times. p. 40. Retrieved June 12, 2008.
  27. ^ The New York Times (November 23, 1977), "Plea by Joanne Chesimard", p. 23.
  28. ^ Seedman, Albert and Peter Hellman. (1975) Chief!. Avon ISBN 0-380-00358-9. pp. 451–452.
  29. ^ Williams, 1993, pp. 4–5.
  30. ^ "2 Suspects Named In Grenade Attack". The New York Times. December 22, 1971. p. 23.
  31. ^ Pace, Eric (December 27, 1971). "Police See More Military Arms in Use", The New York Times, p. 10.
  32. ^ The New York Times (January 1, 1972). "A Suspect in Panther's Death Here Is Slain by F.B.I. in South", p. 6.
  33. ^ Kaufman, Michael T. (February 9, 1972), "9 in Black 'Army' Are Hunted in Police Assassinations", The New York Times, p. 1.
  34. ^ Kaufman, Michael T. (January 30, 1973). "Police by Hundreds Comb 2 Boroughs for 6 Suspects in Ambush Shootings".
  35. ^ The New York Times, p. 43.
  36. ^ Kaufman, Michael T. (May 3, 1973), "Seized Woman Called Black Militants' 'Soul'". The New York Times, p. 47.
  37. ^ a b Williams, 1993, p. 5.
  38. ^ Daly, Michael (December 13, 2006). "The Msgr. & the Militant", New York Daily News.
  39. ^ a b c d e Churchill and Vander Wall, 2002, p. 308.
  40. ^ Churchill and Vander Wall, 2002, p. 409.
  41. ^ Seedman, Albert A. (1975). Chief!. New York: Avon Books.
  42. ^ Jones, Robert A. (May 3, 1973), "2 Die in Shootout; Militant Seized", Los Angeles Times, p. 22.
  43. ^ Camisa, Harry (2003). Inside Out: Fifty Years Behind the Walls of New Jersey's Trenton State Prison. Windsor Press and Publishing. ISBN 0-9726473-0-9, p. 197.
  44. ^ Williams, 1993, p. 6.
  45. ^ a b Burrough, Bryan (2016). Days of Rage: America's Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence. Penguin Publishing Group. ISBN 9780143107972.
  46. ^ Kaufman, Michael T. (February 17, 1972). "Evidence of 'Liberation Army' Said to Rise", The New York Times, p. 1.
  47. ^ McFadden, Robert D. (February 19, 1972). "Warrant Issued In Police Slaying". The New York Times, p. 1.
  48. ^ Montgomery, Paul L. (February 20, 1972), "3D Suspect Linked To Police Slayings", The New York Times, p. 43.
  49. ^ Perlmutter, Emanuel (January 29, 1973), "Extra Duty Tours For Police Set Up After 2D Ambush", The New York Times, p. 61.
  50. ^ McShane, Joseph Stepansky, Thomas Tracy, Larry (March 5, 2015). "Death of cop Richard Rainey could have been due to 1981 shooting, could mean life in jail for shooter Abdul Majid". New York Daily News. Retrieved February 14, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  51. ^ According to Churchill and Vander Wall (2002): "What had emerged in the 1980s was a formal amalgamation of FBI COINTELPRO specialists and New York City red squad detectives known as the Joint Terrorist Task Force (JTTF), consolidating the more ad hoc models of such an apparatus which had materialized in cities like Chicago and Los Angeles during the late 1960s" (p. 309); "JTTF: The Joint Terrorist Task Force, created in the late 1970s as an interlock between the FBI and New York City red squads to engage in COINTELPRO-type activities" (p. xiii).
  52. ^ Williams, 1993, p. 3.
    "It was the spring of 1973 and for the last two years the nationwide dragnet for her capture had intensified each time a young African American identified as a member of the BLA was arrested or wounded or killed. The Joint Terrorist Task Force, made up of the FBI and local police agencies across the country, issued daily bulletins predicting her imminent apprehension each time another bank had been robbed or another cop had been killed. Whenever there was a lull in such occurrences, they leaked information, allegedly classified as 'confidential,' to the media, repeating past accusations and flashing her face across television screens and newspapers with heartbeat regularity, lest the public forget."
  53. ^ a b Cleaver and Katsiaficas, 2001, p. 16.
  54. ^ Cleaver and Katsiaficas, 2001, p. 13.
  55. ^ a b Marable, Manning, and Mullings, Leith. (2003). Let Nobody Turn Us Around: Voices of Resistance, Reform, and Renewal: an African American Anthology. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-8476-8346-X. pp. 529–530.
  56. ^ Zinn, Howard, and Anthony Arnove (2004). Voices of a People's History of the United States. Seven Stories Press. ISBN 1-58322-628-1, p. 470.
  57. ^ O'Reilly, Kenneth (1989), Racial Matters: The FBI's Secret File on Black America, 1960–1972. Collier Macmillan. ISBN 0-02-923681-9.
  58. ^ Wolf, Paul (2001). "COINTELPRO: The Untold American Story" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on August 17, 2016.
  59. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Sullivan, Joseph F. (May 3 or 4th, 1973). "Panther, Trooper Slain in Shoot-Out", The New York Times, p. 1.
  60. ^ a b c d e Waggoner, Walter H. (February 14, 1977). "Jury in Chesimard Murder Trial Listens to State Police Radio Tapes", The New York Times, p. 83.
  61. ^ Burrough, Bryan (2016). Days of Rage: America's Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence. Penguin Publishing Group. p. 246. ISBN 9780143107972.
  62. ^ a b Johnston, Richard J. (February 20, 1974). "Squires Jurors Hear Chase Tape". The New York Times, p. 78.
  63. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Kirsta, Alix (May 29, 1999), "A black and white case – Investigation – Joanne Chesimard", The Times.
  64. ^ a b c d e Johnston, Richard J. (February 14, 1974). "Trooper Recalls Shooting on Pike", The New York Times, p. 86. Retrieved June 17, 2008.
  65. ^ a b c d e f g Sullivan, Joseph E. (March 25, 1977). "Chesimard Jury Asks Clarification of Assault Charges", The New York Times, p. 50.
  66. ^ Johnston, Richard J. H. (March 9, 1974). "Jury Deliberations Begin in Murder Trial of Squire", The New York Times, p. 64.
  67. ^ Johnston, Richard H. (February 13, 1974). "Squire Charged With 'Execution'", The New York Times, p. 84.
  68. ^ a b c d Sullivan, Joseph F. (February 24, 1977), "Chesimard Attorney Acts to Call Kelley; Wants F.B.I. Director and Others to Testify on Program Aimed at Harassing Activists", The New York Times, p. 76, column 1.
  69. ^ a b Sullivan, Joseph F. (May 4, 1973). "Gunfight Suspect Caught in Jersey", The New York Times, p. 41.
  70. ^ Kupendua, Marpessa (January 28, 1998), "Sundiata Acoli", Revolutionary Worker. No. 94. Retrieved on May 9, 2008.
  71. ^ a b c d e Sullivan, Joseph F. (March 16, 1977). "Mrs. Chesimard, on Stand, Denies Having Weapon in Turnpike Shooting", The New York Times, p. 57.
  72. ^ Tomlinson, 1994, p. 144.
  73. ^ Jones, 1998, p. 397.
  74. ^ Davis, Angela Yvonne. 2003. Are Prisons Obsolete? Seven Stories Press; ISBN 1-58322-581-1, p. 62.
  75. ^ Dandridge, Rita B. 1992. Black Women's Blues: A Literary Anthology, 1934–1988. Maxwell Macmillan International; ISBN 0-8161-9084-4, p. 113.
  76. ^ The New York Times (May 15, 1973). "Miss Chesimard Transferred", p. 83.
  77. ^ The New York Times (June 5, 1973). "Black Militant Transferred", p. 88.
  78. ^ Wahad, Dhoruba Bin; et al. (1993). Still Black, Still Strong: Survivors of the U.S. War against Black Revolutionaries. Semiotext(e). pp. 205–206.
  79. ^ a b c d Nelson, Jim (February 29, 1988). "The Soul Survivor; Assata Shakur on the Making of a Radical". The Washington Post, p. B6.
  80. ^ a b Hershberger, James (March 24, 2006). "Assata Shakur: Case of oppression in U.S". Daily Toreador.
  81. ^ The New York Times (March 12, 1974). "News Summary and Index; The Major Events of the Day", p. 39.
  82. ^ a b c d e f Perkins, 2000, p. 81.
  83. ^ a b The New York Times (December 14, 1973). "Chesimard Verdict Still Awaited Here", p. 31.
  84. ^ Chesimard v. Gagliardi, 489 F.2d 271 (2d Cir. 1973) (per curiam).
  85. ^ Los Angeles Times (August 23, 1973). "9 'Black Liberation' Suspects Indicted", p. 2.
  86. ^ Butler, Vincent (August 24, 1973). "Black Liberation leaders indicted". Chicago Tribune, p. A16.
  87. ^ The New York Times (December 30, 1973), "Chesimard Acquitted", p. 104.
  88. ^ a b c Prial, Frank J. (December 12, 1973). "Prosecution Rests Case on Chesimard Robbery Trial; Defendant Ejected", The New York Times, p. 54.
  89. ^ The New York Times (December 7, 1973), "Miss Chesimard Ill; Trial Here Delayed", p. 55.
  90. ^ Lichtenstein, Grace. December 6, 1973. "New Outbursts Mark Chesimard Trial", The New York Times. Retrieved on 2008-06-12.
  91. ^ Dugan, George. January 27, 1974. "Mrs. Chesimard Expects a Child". The New York Times. Retrieved on 2008-06-12.
  92. ^ The New York Times (December 8, 1973). "Order in Court", p. 34.
  93. ^ a b Lichtenstein, Grace (December 11, 1973). "Judge and Defendants Clash Again as Chesimard Jury Is Chosen", The New York Times, p. 31.
  94. ^ a b Prial, Frank J. (December 15, 1973). "Mistrial Declared in Chesimard Case as Jury Splits 11-1", The New York Times, p. 28.
  95. ^ Prial, Frank J. (December 13, 1973), "Chesimard Trial Goes To The Jury", The New York Times, p. 42.
  96. ^ The New York Times (December 18, 1973). "2d Chesimard Trial Delayed", p. 45.
  97. ^ a b The New York Times (December 19, 1973). "Second Chesimard Jury Being Picked", p. 47.
  98. ^ The Hartford Courant, (December 19, 1973). "Court Ejects Defendant Again", p. 74B.
  99. ^ The New York Times (December 20, 1973). "Jury Picked for New Chesimard Trial", p. 43.
  100. ^ a b Prial, Frank J. (December 21, 1973). "Mrs. Chesimard Is Ousted Again as 2d Trial for Robbery Begins", The New York Times, p. 8.
  101. ^ a b c Chambers, Marcia (December 29, 1973). "Mrs. Chesimard Wins Acquittal", The New York Times, p. 16.
  102. ^ The New York Times (December 22, 1973). "U.S. Witness Tells Of Faking Insanity", p. 29.
  103. ^ The New York Times (December 25, 1973). "Robbery Defendant Questions Witness", p. 19.
  104. ^ Chambers, Marcia (December 27, 1973). "Mrs. Chesimard, in Summation, Terms Holdup Case Contrived". The New York Times, p. 41.
  105. ^ Chambers, Marcia (December 28, 1973). "2d Jury Here Begins Weighing Chesimard Bank-Robbery Case", The New York Times, p. 24.
  106. ^ Smothers, Ronald (October 24, 1973), "Chesimard Case Gets A Jury Shift", The New York Times, p. 98.
  107. ^ Joy, James (1999), Shadowboxing: Representations of Black Feminist Politics. Macmillan. ISBN 0-312-29449-2, p. 118.
  108. ^ Chesimard v. Kuhlthau, 370 F. Supp. 473 (D.N.J. 1974).
  109. ^ a b c Kamau Sadiki (born Fred W. X. Hilton), a co-defendant who shared a cell with Shakur during their trial for armed robbery in the Bronx (of which both were acquitted), is believed to be the father. See Kirsta, Alix (May 29, 1999), "A black and white case – Investigation – Joanne Chesimard", The Times.
  110. ^ The New York Times (February 2, 1974), "Chesimard Pregnancy Leads to Mistrial", p. 63, column 6.
  111. ^ a b Hinds, Lennox (October 26, 1998). "The injustice of the trial".Covert Action Quarterly. Retrieved on May 9, 2008.
  112. ^ The New York Times (January 1, 1974). "Chesimard And Four Named In Shootings", p. 16.
  113. ^ The New York Times (March 6, 1974). "2 More Named in Attempt On Police Officers' Lives", p. 16.
  114. ^ The Hartford Courant (May 1, 1974). "Woman Balks At Extradition", p. 16.
  115. ^ The New York Times (May 7, 1974). "Joanne Chesimard Is Extradited", p. 96, column 5.
  116. ^ a b The Hartford Courant (May 30, 1974). "Accused Police Slayer Arraigned in 2 Cases", p. 29D.
  117. ^ The New York Times (November 2, 1974), "Judge Quashes Indictment Against Joanne Chesimard", p. 36, column 4.
  118. ^ a b c The New York Times (December 20, 1975). "Acquittal Is Won By Miss Chesimard", p. 54.
  119. ^ Christol, 2001, p. 140. Her other texts in the book are a July 4, 1973, speech ("To My People"), which was broadcast on many radio stations, an exposition on the theory of "armed revolutionary struggle", and many poems.
  120. ^ a b c The New York Times (January 7, 1976). "Miss Chesimard Goes on Trial", p. 36.
  121. ^ The New York Times (July 21, 1973). "Miss Chesimard Pleads Not Guilty", p. 60.
  122. ^ Gupte, Pranay (July 21, 1973), "Joanne Chesimard Pleads Not Guilty in Holdup Here", The New York Times, p. 56.
  123. ^ a b c d e f g The New York Times (January 17, 1976), "Joanne Chesimard Is Acquitted In Robbery of a Bank in Queens", p. 18.
  124. ^ a b c Rodriguez, 2006, p. 63.
  125. ^ a b Shakur, 1987, p. 161.
  126. ^ Taylor, Mark Lewis (January 17, 1999), "Soapbox; Flight From Justice". The New York Times. Retrieved on October 18, 2007.
  127. ^ Los Angeles Times (January 17, 1976). "Woman Cleared In Bank Robbery", p. A3.
  128. ^ The New York Times (January 30, 1976). "Joanne Chesimard Moved for Trial", p. 63.
  129. ^ a b Sullivan, Joseph F. (March 18, 1977). "Doctor Testifies On Bullet Scars in Chesimard Trial", The New York Times, Section 2, p. 24, column 1.
  130. ^ a b Adewunmi, Bim (July 13, 2014). "Assata Shakur: from civil rights activist to FBI's most-wanted". The Guardian.
  131. ^ Janson, Donald (February 19, 1977). "Mrs. Chesimard Bids U.S. Court Bar Trial Sessions on Her Sabbath". The New York Times, p. 51, column 1.
  132. ^ The New York Times (January 27, 1977). "Chesimard Plea Rejected", p. 76, column 2.
  133. ^ New Jersey v. Chesimard, 555 F.2d 63 (3d Cir. 1977) (en banc).
  134. ^ a b c Browder, 2006, p. 159.
  135. ^ a b c d e f g h i Waggoner, Walter H. (February 16, 1977), "Chesimard Murder Trial Opens in New Brunswick". The New York Times, p. 46.
  136. ^ a b c James, Joy, p. 144.
  137. ^ Berger, Joseph. "Raymond A. Brown, Civil Rights Lawyer, Dies at 94", The New York Times, October 11, 2009. Accessed October 12, 2009.
  138. ^ Shakur, 1987, p. 247.
  139. ^ a b c d e f g Waggoner, Walter H. (March 26, 1977). "Joanne Chesimard Convicted in Killing Of Jersey Trooper". The New York Times. Retrieved October 18, 2007.
  140. ^ Williams, 1993, pp. 162–163.
  141. ^ Kunstler, 1994, pp. 275–276.
  142. ^ The New York Times (May 9, 1977). "Black Legal Group Assails U.S. Courts; Lawyers at Conference Find Bias Still Exists Against Blacks Despite Constitutional Bans", p. 67, column 6.
  143. ^ The New York Times (March 2, 1977), "Complaint on Lawyer". Section 2, p. 21, column 2.
  144. ^ In the Matter of Hinds, 449 A.2d 483 (N.J. 1982).
  145. ^ Middlesex County Ethics Committee v. Garden State Bar Ass'n, 457 U.S. 423 (1982).
  146. ^ a b Kunstler, 1994, p. 276.
  147. ^ Waldron, Martin (December 3, 1976), "Kunstler and the Courts in a Battle On Right to Discuss Pending Trial". The New York Times, Section 2, p. 21, column 1.
  148. ^ The New York Times (December 15, 1976), "Judge Approves Kunstler". Section 2, p. 53, column 1.
  149. ^ Christol, 2001, p. 139.
  150. ^ a b c d e f Williams, Evelyn A. (June 25, 2005). "Statement of Facts in the New Jersey trial of Assata Shakur 2006-12-14 at the Wayback Machine". The Talking Drum Collective. Retrieved on May 9, 2008.
  151. ^ Schuppe, Jonathan (February 8, 2004), "In parole bid, Chesimard cohort denies killing trooper", The Star-Ledger.
  152. ^ The New York Times (February 15, 1977), "Chesimard Jury Chosen", p. 67, column 5.
  153. ^ Browder, 2006, p. 157.
  154. ^ Daley, Robert. 1973. Target Blue: An Insider's View of the N.Y.P.D.. Delacorte Press. ISBN 978-0-440-08489-1.
  155. ^ The New York Times (January 25, 1974), "Chesimard Panelist Out For Reading Daley Book", p. 71, column 7.
  156. ^ The New York Times (April 20, 1977). "Chesimard Retrial Asked". Section 2, p. 23, column 3.
  157. ^ The New York Times, May 10, 1977. "Law Group Urges Grand Jury Change", p. 71, column 2.
  158. ^ Krebs, Alan (February 3, 1978), "Notes on People", The New York Times, p. 16, column 5.
  159. ^ a b c Kunstler, 1994, p. 277.
  160. ^ a b c Waggoner, Walter H. (March 17, 1977). "Neurosurgeon's Testimony Backs Mrs. Chesimard", The New York Times, Section 2, p. 20, column 3.
  161. ^ James, Joy, and Sharpley-Whiting, T. Denean (2000), The Black Feminist Reader. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 0-631-21007-5, p. 279.
  162. ^ Perkins, 2000, pp. 80–81.
  163. ^ Shakur, Assata (2016). Assata: An Autobiography. Zed Books Ltd. ISBN 9781783606818.
  164. ^ a b c Sullivan, Joseph F. (April 26, 1977). "Assault Charges Add 26 Years To Mrs. Chesimard's Life Term", The New York Times, p. 83, column 4. Retrieved on June 16, 2008.
  165. ^ a b c Seigel, Max H. (October 26, 1977). "Chesimard Murder Case Dropped Because of Delay in Holding Trial". The New York Times, p. 25, column 5.
  166. ^ a b c Chicago Tribune (November 24, 1977). "Black lib army 'chief' denies 1971 robbery", p. C23.
  167. ^ Shakur, 1987, p. xiv.
  168. ^ Churchill and Vander Wal, 2002, p. 410.
  169. ^ Muhammad, Nisa Islam (May 16, 2005), "Assata: The stakes are raised". Final Call News. Retrieved on May 9, 2008.
  170. ^ a b The New York Times (April 12, 1977), "Suit Seeks Transfer For Mrs. Chesimard", p. 71, column 2.
  171. ^ The New York Times (September 1, 1974). "Heavy Security for Mrs. Chesimard", p. 40.
  172. ^ The New York Times (March 31, 1977), "Sheriff Says He Lied About Transfer Of Mrs. Chesimard to Aid Security". Section 2, p. 6, column 3.
  173. ^ Krebs, Albin (April 8, 1978). "Notes on People". The New York Times, p. 21, column 3. Retrieved on June 15, 2008.
  174. ^ Waggoner, Walter H. (April 8, 1977), "Trenton Topics; Court Absolves Felons in Killings Of Accomplices by Their Victims". The New York Times, Section 2, p. 13, column 4.
  175. ^ The New York Times (May 6, 1977), "Mrs. Chesimard's Bid to Transfer To Another Prison Denied by Judge". Section 2, p. 4, column 3.
  176. ^ Chesimard v. Mulcahy, 570 F.2d 1184 (3d Cir. 1978).
  177. ^ a b Scheffler, 2002, p. 206.
  178. ^ Scheffler, 2002, p. 204.
  179. ^ The New York Times (November 3, 1979) "Miss Chesimard Escapes in New Jersey" p. 25
  180. ^ Jones, 1998, p. 379.
  181. ^ Cummings, Judith (October 8, 1973), "Angela Davis Asks Support for 'Political Prisoners'", The New York Times, p. 70.
  182. ^ The New York Times (April 3, 1977), "Display Ad 68 – No Title", p. 46.
  183. ^ Meyer, Matt (2008). Let Freedom Ring: A Collection of Documents from the Movements to Free U.S. Political Prisoners. PM Press. ISBN 9781604860351.[permanent dead link]
  184. ^ Covert Action Quarterly (October 26, 1998). "The U.N. Petition". Retrieved on May 9, 2008.
  185. ^ Friedly, Jock (January 13, 1999), "Waters seeks asylum for cop killer", The Hill, p. 1.
  186. ^ a b Burrough, Bryan (2015). Days of Rage: America's Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence. Penguin. pp. 476–479. ISBN 9780698170070.
  187. ^ Hanley, Robert (November 3, 1979). "Miss Chesimard Flees Jersey Prison, Helped By 3 Armed 'Visitors'." The New York Times Retrieved on October 19, 2007.
  188. ^ Tomlinson, 1994, p. 146.
  189. ^ The New York Times (November 29, 1979). "Bail Set at $2,500 In Chesimard Case". Section 2, p. 4, column 4.
  190. ^ a b c Jones, 1998, p. 425.
  191. ^ Hanley, Robert (November 6, 1979). "No Checking Was Done On Chesimard 'Visitors'; Identification Required of Visitors Security Review Ordered". The New York Times. Section 2, p. 2, column 1.
  192. ^ Hanley, Robert (November 4, 1979). "F.B.I. to Aid Search for Miss Chesimard; Jersey Authorities Tell Magistrate She Apparently Fled the State After Her Prison Escape Visitors Were Not Searched Drove Across a Field Visitation Policies Under Review Official Account of Escape", The New York Times, p. 31, column 6.
  193. ^ Lubasch, Arnold H. (May 12, 1988). "2 Ex-Fugitives Convicted of Roles In Fatal Armored-Truck Robbery." The New York Times. Retrieved on May 26, 2008.
  194. ^ a b c Cleaver, Kathleen (August 2005), , Essence, archived from the original on March 17, 2006
  195. ^ Cleaver, Kathleen; Katsiaficas, George (2014). Liberation, Imagination and the Black Panther Party: A New Look at the Black Panthers and Their Legacy. Routledge. p. 15. ISBN 9781135298326.
  196. ^ a b Sterling, Guy, and Forero, Juan (May 7, 1998), "On the lam, Chesimard is hardly on her own". The Star-Ledger, p. 31.
  197. ^ The New York Times Editorial Board (July 2, 1980), "A Cloud Over the New F.B.I.." Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
  198. ^ Emery, Richard, and LaMarche, Gara (June 11, 1980). "Our tinderboxes for radical violence". The New York Times, Section A, p. 30, column 4.
  199. ^ The New York Times (October 15, 1980), "The City; Chesimard Report Called Unfounded". Section B, p. 3, column 1.
  200. ^ Thompson, Krissah (May 8, 2013). "Assata Shakur was convicted of murder. Is she a terrorist?". The Washington Post.
  201. ^ Davison, Phil (May 2, 1998). "Cuba's American refugees", The Independent (London), p. 13
  202. ^ a b McQuiston, John T. (October 12, 1987). "Fugitive murderer reported in Cuba", The New York Times, Section A; Page 1, Column 1. Retrieved on June 1, 2008.
  203. ^ a b Rodriguez, 2006, p. 64.
  204. ^ a b Wilfredo, Cancio Isla (December 18, 2007). "U.S. fugitive a hero to Fidel, but a curiosity to many". McClatchy Newspapers via Houston Chronicle. The Miami Herald published this article as "Fugitive a curiosity in Cuba".
  205. ^ Farley, Anthony Paul (March 2001). "Symposium Critical Legal Histories: Lilies of the Field: A Critique of Adjudication". Cardozo Law Review 22, 1013.
  206. ^ Farley, Anthony Paul (Fall 2005). "Going Back to Class? The Reemergence of Class in Critical Race Theory Symposium: Essay: Accumulation", Michigan Journal of Race & Law 11, 51.
  207. ^ Hames-Garcia, Michael (2004). Fugitive Thought: Prison Movements, Race, and the Meaning of Justice. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0816643148.
  208. ^ Perkins, Margo (1999). Autobiography as Activism: Three Black Women of the Sixties. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781578062645.
  209. ^ Ravo, Nick (October 13, 1987). "Officials Can't Confirm Chesimard Is in Havana", The New York Times, Section B; Page 3, Column 5.
  210. ^ "BBC Radio 4 - 15 Minute Drama, Assata Shakur - The FBI's Most Wanted Woman, Episode 4". BBC.
  211. ^ The New Abolitionists. Retrieved April 19, 2018. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  212. ^ Chicago Sun Times (December 28, 1997), "N.J. cops enlist pope; Seek help in getting fugitive out of Cuba", p. 34.
  213. ^ Shakur, Assata. "". The Talking Drum Collective, p. 2. Retrieved on May 9, 2008.
  214. ^ Shakur, Assata, and Lewis, Ida E. (November 1, 2000). "Assata Shakur: Profiled and on the Run". New Crisis, 107(6).
  215. ^ The 85th anniversary of the death of Harriet Tubman according to Brath (1998).
  216. ^ Brath, Elombe (March 13, 1998). "N.J. Bloodhounds on Assata's Trail", NY Daily Challenge. Retrieved on May 9, 2008.
  217. ^ James, Joy, p. 115.
  218. ^ "H.Con.Res.254 — 105th Congress (1997-1998)". Congress.gov. October 21, 1998. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
  219. ^ Batista, Carlos (March 18, 2002). "Cuba seeks deals with US to fight terror, migrant smuggling". Agence France Presse.
  220. ^ a b Waters, Maxine (September 29, 1998). "Congresswoman Waters issues statement on U.S. Freedom Fighter Assata Shakur". HYPE Information Service. Retrieved on May 9, 2008.
  221. ^ Cleaver, Kathleen (2005). "". The Talking Drum Collective. Retrieved on May 9, 2008.
  222. ^ a b Williams, Houston (May 2, 2005), "U.S. Government Declares $2 Million Bounty For Assata Shakur, Tupac's Godmother
  223. ^ a b c Allen-Mills, Tony (May 27, 2007). "Bounty hunt for US cop killer on Cuba", The Sunday Times, p. 27.
  224. ^ Parry, Wayne (May 24, 2005), "NY councilman plans rally against Chesimard bounty". AP.
  225. ^ Wood, Sam (May 15, 2006), "Always a priority: Fugitive cop-killers". Philadelphia Inquirer.
  226. ^ Associated Press (May 12, 2005), "Castro won't hand over killer of N.J. trooper." Boston Globe. Castro did not refer to Shakur by name, but did describe a woman placed on the U.S. government terrorist watch list on May 2.
  227. ^ Griego, Tina (December 20, 2014). "Cuba still harbors one of America's most wanted fugitives. What happens to Assata Shakur now?". Washington Post.
  228. ^ "Trump calls on Cuba to return U.S. fugitives, including cop-killer Chesimard". The Washington Times – washingtontimes.com. June 16, 2017. Retrieved June 17, 2017.
  229. ^ Neal, Mark Anthony (May 5, 2000)
  230. ^ "Like Water for Chocolate: Common's Recipe for Progressive Hip-Hop". Pop Matters. Retrieved on April 7, 2007.
  231. ^ Robinson, Eugene (July 18, 2004). "Exiles", The Washington Post, W23.
  232. ^ Arenson, Karen W. (December 13, 2006). "CUNY Chief Orders Names Stripped From Student Center". The New York Times. Retrieved on May 9, 2008.
  233. ^ Zambito, Thomas (January 7, 2007). "CUNY sued in cop killer naming flap", New York Daily News, p. 3.
  234. ^ Wise, Daniel (April 8, 2010). "First Amendment Violation Claim Proceeds Against College Over Removed Plaque", New York Law Journal. Retrieved on April 8, 2010.
  235. ^ Honan, William H. (April 12, 1995). "Two Scholarships Given New Names After Controversy", The New York Times, Section B, p. 11, column 4. Retrieved on June 1, 2008.
  236. ^ Bucknell University (April 1, 2008). "Superhero Inspiration for Course on 'Black Heroes'".
  237. ^ Perkins, 2000.
  238. ^ Hepp, Rick (October 31, 2004). "Chesimard still stirs admiration and scorn," The Star-Ledger, p. 23.
  239. ^ The Star-Ledger (January 19, 1996). "Black Ex-Trooper Tells Trial of Poster of Killer Chesimard Made to Mock."
  240. ^ Rodriguez, 2006, p. 61.
  241. ^ Boyd, Herb (2002). Race and Resistance: African Americans in the Twenty-first Century. South End Press. ISBN 0-89608-652-6, p. 116.
  242. ^ Frydenlund, Zach. "Common Pulled From Kean University Commencement Speech After Police Complaints". Complex.com. Retrieved April 3, 2015.
  243. ^ Garza, Alicia. "A Herstory of the #BlackLivesMatter Movement". The Feminist Wire. Retrieved August 28, 2015.
  244. ^ Zacharias, Michelle (February 17, 2016). "Activists of every stripe unite in ICE civil disobedience". People's World. Retrieved March 14, 2016.
  245. ^ . Archived from the original on October 12, 2017. Retrieved October 13, 2017.
  246. ^ "Assata Shakur birthday honored by Women's March organizers". Fox News. July 18, 2017.
  247. ^ "When the 'Resistance' Gets Reprehensible". National Review.
  248. ^ Lampen, Claire (July 21, 2017). "Six months after the Women's March on Washington, the Resistance Revival has a message for Trump". Mic. Retrieved July 22, 2017.
  249. ^ "County pays $15K to FBI fugitive, part of Freeman Park land deal".

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Belton, Brian A. (2007). Assata Shakur: A Voice from the Palenques in Black Routes: Legacy of African Diaspora. Hansib Publications Ltd. ISBN 978-1-870518-92-5.
  • Tenorio, Sam C. (2021). "Assata's escape as disincarceral practice". Cultural Dynamics. 33 (1–2): 1–17. doi:10.1177/0921374020935137. ISSN 0921-3740. S2CID 225743651.

External links edit

assata, shakur, assata, redirects, here, book, assata, autobiography, assata, olugbala, shakur, born, joanne, deborah, byron, july, 1947, also, known, joanne, chesimard, american, political, activist, member, black, liberation, army, 1977, convicted, first, de. Assata redirects here For the book see Assata An Autobiography Assata Olugbala Shakur born JoAnne Deborah Byron July 16 1947 a also known as Joanne Chesimard is an American political activist who was a member of the Black Liberation Army BLA In 1977 she was convicted in the first degree murder of State Trooper Werner Foerster during a shootout on the New Jersey Turnpike in 1973 She escaped from prison in 1979 and is currently wanted by the FBI with a 1 million FBI reward for information leading to her capture and an additional 1 million reward offered by the Attorney General of New Jersey 3 Assata ShakurPhotograph taken in 1977BornJoAnne Deborah Byron 1947 07 16 July 16 1947 age 76 a New York City U S Known forConvicted of murder one of the FBI s Most Wanted Terrorists friend of Afeni Shakur and Mutulu Shakur and often described as their son Tupac Shakur s godmother or step aunt 2 Criminal statusEscaped At largeSpouseLouis Chesimard m 1967 div 1970 wbr Children1 Kakuya Shakur AllegianceBlack Liberation Army 1970 1 1981 Black Panther Party 1970 Conviction s 1977 First degree murder Second degree murder later dismissed Atrocious assault and battery Assault and battery against a police officer Assault with a dangerous weapon Assault with intent to kill Illegal possession of a weapon Armed robbery bank Criminal penaltyLife sentenceReward amount 1 000 000Capture statusFugitiveWanted byFBIEscapedNovember 2 1979 44 years ago 1979 11 02 Born in Flushing Queens she grew up in New York City and Wilmington North Carolina After she ran away from home several times her aunt who would later act as one of her lawyers took her in She became involved in political activism at Borough of Manhattan Community College and City College of New York After graduation she began using the name Assata Shakur and briefly joined the Black Panther Party She then joined the BLA a loosely knit offshoot of the Black Panthers which engaged in an armed struggle against the US government through tactics including robbing banks and killing police officers and drug dealers 4 Between 1971 and 1973 she was charged with several crimes and was the subject of a multi state manhunt In May 1973 Shakur was arrested after being wounded in a shootout on the New Jersey Turnpike Also involved in the shootout were New Jersey State Troopers Werner Foerster and James Harper and BLA members Sundiata Acoli and Zayd Malik Shakur State Trooper Harper was wounded Zayd Shakur was killed State Trooper Foerster was killed Between 1973 and 1977 Shakur was charged with murder attempted murder armed robbery bank robbery and kidnapping in relation to the shootout and six other incidents She was acquitted on three of the charges and three were dismissed In 1977 she was convicted of the murder of State Trooper Foerster and of seven other felonies related to the 1973 shootout Her defense had argued medical evidence suggested her innocence since her arm was damaged in the shootout While serving a life sentence for murder Shakur escaped in 1979 with assistance from the BLA and members of the May 19 Communist Organization from the Clinton Correctional Facility for Women in Union Township NJ now the Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women She surfaced in Cuba in 1984 where she was granted political asylum Shakur has lived in Cuba since despite US government efforts to have her returned She has been on the FBI Most Wanted Terrorists list since 2013 as Joanne Deborah Chesimard and was the first woman to be added to this list 5 6 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Personal life 3 Black Panther Party and Black Liberation Army 4 Allegations and manhunt 5 New Jersey Turnpike shootout 6 Criminal charges and dispositions 6 1 Turnpike shootout change of venue 6 2 Bronx bank robbery mistrial 6 3 Bronx bank robbery retrial 6 4 Turnpike shootout mistrial 6 5 Attempted murder dismissal 6 6 Kidnapping trial 6 7 Queens bank robbery trial 6 8 Turnpike shootout retrial 6 8 1 Defense attorneys 6 8 2 Witnesses 6 8 3 Jury 6 8 4 Medical evidence 6 8 5 Other evidence 6 8 6 Conviction and sentencing 6 9 Nelson murder dismissal 6 10 Attempted robbery dismissal 7 Imprisonment 8 Escape 9 Political asylum in Cuba 9 1 Books 9 2 Extradition attempts 10 Cultural influence 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life and education editAssata Shakur was born Joanne Deborah Byron in Flushing Queens New York City on July 16 1947 7 She lived for three years with her mother schoolteacher Doris E Johnson and retired grandparents Lula and Frank Hill 8 In 1950 Shakur s parents divorced and she moved with her grandparents to Wilmington North Carolina After elementary school Shakur moved back to Queens to live with her mother and stepfather her mother had remarried she attended Parsons Junior High School Shakur still frequently visited her grandparents in the south Her family struggled financially and argued frequently Shakur spent little time at home 9 She often ran away staying with strangers and working for short periods of time until she was taken in by her mother s sister Evelyn A Williams a civil rights worker who lived in Manhattan 10 Shakur has said that her aunt was the heroine of her childhood as she was constantly introducing her to new things She said that her aunt was very sophisticated and knew all kinds of things She was right up my alley because i sic was forever asking all kinds of questions I wanted to know everything Williams often took the girl to museums theaters and art galleries 11 Shakur converted to Catholicism as a child and attended the all girls Cathedral High School for six months before transferring to public high school 12 She attended for a while before dropping out Her aunt helped her to later earn a General Educational Development GED degree 11 Often there were few or no other black students in her Catholic high school class Shakur later wrote that teachers seemed surprised when she answered a question in class as if not expecting black people to be intelligent and engaged She said she was taught a sugar coated version of history that ignored the oppression suffered by people of color especially in the United States In her autobiography she wrote I didn t know what a fool they had made out of me until I grew up and started to read real history 13 Shakur attended Borough of Manhattan Community College BMCC and then the City College of New York CCNY in the mid 1960s where she became involved in many political activities civil rights protests and sit ins 14 She was arrested for the first time with 100 other BMCC students in 1967 on charges of trespassing The students had chained and locked the entrance to a college building to protest the low numbers of black faculty and the lack of a black studies program 15 Personal life editIn April 1967 she married Louis Chesimard a fellow student activist at CCNY in a Catholic wedding ceremony Their married life ended within a year they divorced in December 1970 and Chesimard was granted an annulment 16 In her 320 page memoir Shakur gave one paragraph to her marriage saying that it ended over their differing views of gender roles 17 Black Panther Party and Black Liberation Army editAfter graduation from CCNY Shakur moved to Oakland California where she joined the Black Panther Party BPP 18 In Oakland Shakur worked with the BPP to organize protests and community education programs 19 After returning to New York City Shakur led the BPP chapter in Harlem coordinating the Free Breakfast Program for children free clinics and community outreach 19 But she soon left the party disliking the macho behavior of the men and believing that the BPP members and leaders lacked knowledge and understanding of United States black history 20 Shakur joined the Black Liberation Army BLA an offshoot whose members were inspired by the Vietcong and the Algerian independence fighters of the Battle of Algiers They mounted a campaign of guerilla activities against the U S government using such tactics as planting bombs holding up banks and murdering drug dealers and police 21 22 23 She began using the name Assata Olugbala Shakur in 1971 rejecting Joanne Chesimard as a slave name 11 24 Assata is a West African name derived from Aisha said to mean she who struggles while Shakur means thankful one in Arabic Olugbala means savior in Yoruba 24 She identified as an African and felt her old name no longer fit It sounded so strange when people called me Joanne It really had nothing to do with me I didn t feel like no Joanne or no negro or no American I felt like an African woman 25 Allegations and manhunt editBeginning in 1971 Shakur was allegedly involved in several incidents of assault and robbery in which she was charged or identified as wanted for questioning including attacks on New York City police and bank robberies in the area On April 6 1971 Shakur was shot in the stomach during a struggle with a guest at the Statler Hilton Hotel in Midtown Manhattan According to police Shakur knocked on the door of a guest s room asked Is there a party going on here then displayed a revolver and demanded money 26 In 1987 Shakur confirmed to a journalist that there was a drug connection in this incident but refused to elaborate 12 nbsp New York City Police Department mugshot of Shakur April 1971She was booked on charges of attempted robbery felonious assault reckless endangerment and possession of a deadly weapon then released on bail 27 Shakur is alleged to have said that she was glad that she had been shot afterward she was no longer afraid to be shot again 28 Following an August 23 1971 bank robbery in Queens Shakur was sought for questioning A photograph of a woman who was later alleged to be Shakur wearing thick rimmed black glasses with a high hairdo pulled tightly over her head and pointing a gun was widely displayed in banks The New York Clearing House Association paid for full page ads displaying material about Shakur 29 In 1987 when asked in Cuba about police allegations that the BLA gained funds by conducting bank robberies and theft Shakur responded There were expropriations there were bank robberies 12 nbsp Police stand next to the patrol car that was destroyed by a hand grenade attack on December 20 1971 On December 21 1971 Shakur was named by the New York City Police Department as one of four suspects in a hand grenade attack that destroyed a police car and injured two officers in Maspeth Queens When a witness identified Shakur and Andrew Jackson from Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI photographs a 13 state alarm was issued three days after the attack 30 31 32 33 Law enforcement officials in Atlanta Georgia said that Shakur and Jackson had lived together in Atlanta for several months in the summer of 1971 34 35 36 Shakur was wanted for questioning for wounding a police officer on January 26 1972 who was attempting to serve a traffic summons in Brooklyn 37 After an 89 000 Brooklyn bank robbery on March 1 1972 a Daily News headline asked Was that JoAnne Shakur was identified as wanted for questioning after a September 1 1972 bank robbery in the Bronx 37 Based on FBI photographs Monsignor John Powis alleged that Shakur was involved in an armed robbery at Our Lady of the Presentation Church in Brownsville Brooklyn on September 14 1972 38 In 1972 Shakur became the subject of a nationwide manhunt after the FBI alleged that she led a Black Liberation Army cell that had conducted a series of cold blooded murders of New York City police officers 39 The FBI said these included the execution style murders of New York City Police Officers Joseph Piagentini and Waverly Jones on May 21 1971 and NYPD officers Gregory Foster and Rocco Laurie on January 28 1972 40 41 Shakur was alleged to have been directly involved with the Foster and Laurie murders and involved tangentially with the Piagentini and Jones murders 42 Some sources identify Shakur as the de facto head of the BLA after the arrest of co founder Dhoruba Moore 43 Robert Daley Deputy Commissioner of the New York City Police for example described Shakur as the final wanted fugitive the soul of the gang the mother hen who kept them together kept them moving kept them shooting 44 Years later some police officers argued that her importance in the BLA had been exaggerated by the police One officer said that they had created a myth to demonize Shakur because she was educated young and pretty 45 As of February 17 1972 when Shakur was identified as one of four BLA members on a short trip to Chattanooga Tennessee she was wanted for questioning along with Robert Vickers Twyman Meyers Samuel Cooper and Paul Stewart in relation to police killings a Queens bank robbery and the grenade attack on police 46 47 48 Shakur was reported as one of six suspects in the ambushing of four policemen two in Jamaica Queens and two in Brooklyn on January 28 1973 49 On April 16 1981 Shakur was allegedly in the back seat of a van connected with a burglary After the vehicle was pulled over two men stepped out of the vehicle and opened fire on NYPD officers John Scarangella and Richard Rainey The two men were charged with the murder of Officer Scarangella and attempted murder of Officer Rainey 50 By June 1973 an apparatus that would become the FBI s Joint Terrorism Task Force JTTF 51 was issuing nearly daily briefings on Shakur s status and the allegations against her 52 53 According to Cleaver and Katsiaficas the FBI and local police initiated a national search and destroy mission for suspected BLA members collaborating in stakeouts that were the products of intensive political repression and counterintelligence campaigns like NEWKILL They attempted to tie Assata to every suspected action of the BLA involving a woman 54 The JTTF would later serve as the coordinating body in the search for Assata and the renewed campaign to smash the BLA after her escape from prison 53 After her capture however Shakur was not charged with any of the crimes for which she was purportedly the subject of the manhunt 39 55 Shakur and others 39 55 56 claim that she was targeted by the FBI s COINTELPRO as a result of her involvement with the black liberation organizations 18 Specifically documentary evidence suggests that Shakur was targeted by an investigation named CHESROB which attempted to hook former New York Panther Joanne Chesimard Assata Shakur to virtually every bank robbery or violent crime involving a black woman on the East Coast 57 Although named after Shakur CHESROB like its predecessor NEWKILL was not limited to Shakur 58 Years later when she was living in Cuba Shakur was asked about the BLA s alleged involvement in the killings of police officers She said In reality armed struggle historically has been used by people to liberate themselves But the question lies in when do people use armed struggle There were people in the BLA who absolutely took the position that it was just time to resist and if black people didn t start to fight back against police brutality and didn t start to wage armed resistance we would be annihilated 12 New Jersey Turnpike shootout editOn May 2 1973 at about 12 45 a m 59 Assata Shakur along with Zayd Malik Shakur born James F Costan and Sundiata Acoli born Clark Squire were stopped on the New Jersey Turnpike in East Brunswick for driving with a broken tail light by State Trooper James Harper backed up by Trooper Werner Foerster in a second patrol vehicle 60 The vehicle was slightly exceeding the speed limit 59 61 Recordings of Trooper Harper calling the dispatcher were played at the trials of both Acoli and Assata Shakur 60 62 The stop occurred 200 yards 183 m south of what was then the Turnpike Authority administration building 59 62 63 Acoli was driving the two door vehicle Assata Shakur was seated in the right front seat and Zayd Shakur was in the right rear seat 64 b Trooper Harper asked the driver for identification noticed a discrepancy asked him to get out of the car and questioned him at the rear of the vehicle 59 With the questioning of Acoli accounts by participants of the confrontation begin to differ see the witnesses section below 65 A shootout ensued in which Trooper Foerster was shot twice in the head with his own gun and killed 60 65 Zayd Shakur was killed and Assata Shakur and Trooper Harper were wounded According to initial police statements at this point one or more of the suspects had begun firing with semiautomatic handguns and Trooper Foerster fired four times before falling mortally wounded 59 At Acoli s trial Harper testified that the gunfight started seconds after Foerster arrived at the scene 64 At this trial Harper said that Foerster reached into the vehicle pulled out and held up a semi automatic pistol and ammunition magazine and said Jim look what I found 64 while facing Harper at the rear of the vehicle 66 The police ordered Assata Shakur and Zayd Shakur to put their hands on their laps and not to move Harper said that Assata Shakur reached down to the right of her right leg pulled out a pistol and shot him in the shoulder after which he retreated to behind his vehicle Questioned by prosecutor C Judson Hamlin Harper said he saw Foerster shot just as Assata Shakur was hit by bullets from Harper s gun 64 In his opening statement to a jury Hamlin said that Acoli shot Foerster with a 38 caliber semiautomatic pistol and used Foerster s own gun to execute him 67 According to the testimony of State Police investigators two jammed semi automatic pistols were discovered near Foerster s body 68 Acoli drove the car a white Pontiac LeMans with Vermont license plates 63 which contained Assata Shakur who was wounded and Zayd Shakur who was dead or dying 5 miles 8 km down the road 60 59 The vehicle was chased by three patrol cars and the booths down the turnpike were alerted Acoli stopped and exited the car and after being ordered to halt by a trooper fled into the woods as the trooper emptied his gun 59 Assata Shakur walked toward the trooper with her bloodied arms raised in surrender 59 Acoli was captured after a 36 hour manhunt involving 400 people state police helicopters and bloodhounds 59 69 70 Zayd Shakur s body was found in a nearby gully along the road 59 According to a New Jersey Police spokesperson Assata Shakur was on her way to a new hideout in Philadelphia and heading ultimately for Washington A book in the vehicle was said to contain a list of potential BLA targets 59 Assata Shakur testified she was on her way to Baltimore for a job as a bar waitress 71 With gunshot wounds in both arms and a shoulder Assata Shakur was moved to Middlesex General Hospital under heavy guard and was reported to be in serious condition Trooper Harper was wounded in the left shoulder reported in good condition and given a protective guard at the hospital 59 69 Assata Shakur was interrogated and arraigned from her hospital bed 72 Her defense team alleged that her medical care during this period was substandard 11 73 74 75 She was transferred from Middlesex General Hospital in New Brunswick to Roosevelt Hospital in Edison after her lawyers obtained a court order from Judge John Bachman 76 and then transferred to Middlesex County Workhouse a few weeks later 77 During an interview Assata Shakur discussed her treatment by the police and medical staff at Middlesex General Hospital She said that the police beat and choked her and were doing everything that they could possibly do as soon as the doctors or nurses would go outside 78 Criminal charges and dispositions editBetween 1973 and 1977 in New York and New Jersey Shakur was indicted ten times resulting in seven different criminal trials Shakur was charged with two bank robberies the kidnapping of a Brooklyn heroin dealer the attempted murder of two Queens police officers stemming from a January 23 1973 failed ambush and eight other felonies related to the Turnpike shootout 39 79 Of these trials three resulted in acquittals one in a hung jury one in a change of venue one in a mistrial due to pregnancy and one in a conviction Three indictments were dismissed without trial 79 Criminal charge Court Arraignment Proceedings DispositionAttempted armed robbery at Statler Hilton HotelApril 5 1971 New York Supreme Court New York County November 22 1977 None DismissedBank robbery in QueensAugust 23 1971 United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York July 20 1973 January 5 16 1976 AcquittedBank robbery in Bronx Conspiracy robbery and assault with a deadly weaponSeptember 1 1972 United States District Court for the Southern District of New York August 1 1973 December 3 14 1973 Hung juryDecember 19 28 1973 AcquittedKidnapping of James E FreemanDecember 28 1972 N Y Supreme Court Kings County May 30 1974 September 6 December 19 1975 AcquittedMurder of Richard NelsonJanuary 2 1973 N Y Supreme Court New York County May 29 1974 None DismissedAttempted murder of policemen Michael O Reilly and Roy PollianaJanuary 23 1973 N Y Supreme Court Queens County May 11 1974 None DismissedTurnpike shootout First degree murder second degree murder atrocious assault and battery assault and battery against a police officer assault with a dangerous weapon assault with intent to kill illegal possession of a weapon and armed robberyMay 2 1973 N J Superior Court Middlesex County May 3 1973 October 9 23 1973 Change of venueJanuary 1 February 1 1974 Mistrial due to pregnancyFebruary 15 March 25 1977 ConvictedSource Shakur 1987 p xiv Turnpike shootout change of venue edit On the charges related to the New Jersey Turnpike shootout New Jersey Superior Court Judge Leon Gerofsky ordered a change of venue in 1973 from Middlesex to Morris County New Jersey saying it was almost impossible to obtain a jury here comprising people willing to accept the responsibility of impartiality so that defendants will be protected from transitory passion and prejudice 80 Polls of residents in Middlesex County where Acoli had been convicted less than three years earlier 81 showed that 83 knew Shakur s identity and 70 believed that she was guilty 63 Bronx bank robbery mistrial edit In December 1973 Shakur was tried for a September 29 1972 3 700 robbery of the Manufacturer s Hanover Trust Company in the Bronx along with co defendant Kamau Sadiki born Fred Hilton 82 83 In light of the pending murder prosecution against Shakur in New Jersey state court her lawyers requested that the trial be postponed for six months to permit further preparation Judge Lee P Gagliardi denied a postponement and the Second Circuit denied Shakur s petition for mandamus 84 In protest the lawyers stayed mute and Shakur and Sadiki conducted their own defense 82 83 Seven other BLA members were indicted by District Attorney Eugene Gold in connection with the series of holdups and shootings on the same day 85 who according to Gold represented the top echelon of the BLA as determined by a year long investigation 86 The prosecution s case rested largely on the testimony of two men who had pleaded guilty to participating in the holdup 87 The prosecution called four witnesses Avon White and John Rivers both of whom had already pled guilty to the robbery and the manager and teller of the bank 88 White and Rivers although having pled guilty had not yet been sentenced for the robbery and were promised that the charges would be dropped in exchange for their testimony 88 White and Rivers testified that Shakur had guarded one of the doors with a 357 magnum pistol and that Sadiki had served as a lookout and drove the getaway truck during the robbery neither White nor Rivers was cross examined due to the defense attorney s refusal to participate in the trial 88 Shakur s aunt and lawyer Evelyn Williams was cited for contempt after walking out of the courtroom after many of her attempted motions were denied 82 The trial was delayed for a few days after Shakur was diagnosed with pleurisy 89 During the trial the defendants were escorted to a holding pen outside the courtroom several times after shouting complaints and epithets at Judge Gagliardi 90 While in the holding pen they listened to the proceedings over loudspeakers 91 Both defendants were repeatedly cited for contempt of court and eventually barred from the courtroom where the trial continued in their absence 82 A contemporary New York Times editorial criticized Williams for failing to maintain courtroom decorum comparing her actions to William Kunstler s recent contempt conviction for his actions during the Chicago Seven trial 92 Sadiki s lawyer Robert Bloom attempted to have the trial dismissed and then postponed due to new revelations regarding the credibility of White a former co defendant by then working for the prosecution 93 Bloom had been assigned to defend Sadiki Hilton over the summer but White was not disclosed as a government witness until right before the trial 94 Judge Gagliardi instructed both the prosecution and the defense not to bring up Shakur or Sadiki s connections to the BLA saying they were not relevant 93 Gagliardi denied requests by the jurors to pose questions to the witnesses either directly or through him and declined to provide the jury with information they requested about how long the defense had been given to prepare saying it was none of their concern 95 This trial resulted in a hung jury and then a mistrial when the jury reported to Gagliardi that they were hopelessly deadlocked for the fourth time 94 Bronx bank robbery retrial edit The retrial was delayed for one day to give the defendants more time to prepare 96 The new jury selection was marked by attempts by Williams to be relieved of her duties owing to disagreements with Shakur as well as with Hilton s attorney 97 Judge Arnold Bauman denied the application but directed another lawyer Howard Jacobs to defend Shakur while Williams remained the attorney of record 97 Shakur was ejected following an argument with Williams and Hilton left with her as jury selection continued 98 After the selection of twelve jurors 60 were excused Williams was allowed to retire from the case with Shakur officially representing herself assisted by lawyer Florynce Kennedy 99 In the retrial White testified that the six alleged robbers had saved their hair clippings to create disguises and identified a partially obscured head and shoulder in a photo taken from a surveillance camera as Shakur s 100 Kennedy objected to this identification on the grounds that the prosecutor assistant United States attorney Peter Truebner had offered to stipulate that Shakur was not depicted in any of the photographs 100 Although both White and Rivers testified that Shakur was wearing overalls during the robbery the person identified as Shakur in the photograph was wearing a jacket 101 The defense attempted to discredit White on the grounds that he had spent eight months in Matteawan Hospital for the Criminally Insane in 1968 and White countered that he had faked insanity by claiming to be Allah in front of three psychiatrists to get transferred out of prison 102 Shakur personally cross examined the witnesses getting White to admit that he had once been in love with her the same day one juror who had been frequently napping during the trial was replaced with an alternate 103 During the retrial the defendants repeatedly left or were thrown out of the courtroom 104 Both defendants were acquitted in the retrial six jurors interviewed after the trial stated that they did not believe the two key prosecution witnesses 101 Shakur was immediately returned to Morristown New Jersey under a heavy guard following the trial 101 Louis Chesimard Shakur s ex husband and Paul Stewart the other two alleged robbers had been acquitted in June 105 Turnpike shootout mistrial edit The Turnpike shootout proceedings continued with Judge John E Bachman in Middlesex County 106 New Jersey Superior Court Judge Leon Gerofsky ordered a change of venue in 1973 from Middlesex to Morris County New Jersey saying it was almost impossible to obtain a jury here comprising people willing to accept the responsibility of impartiality so that defendants will be protected from transitory passion and prejudice 80 Morris County had a far smaller black population than Middlesex County 107 On this basis Shakur unsuccessfully attempted to remove the trial to federal court 108 Before jury selection was complete it was discovered that Shakur was pregnant Due to the possibility of miscarriage the prosecution successfully requested a mistrial for Shakur Acoli s trial continued 109 110 111 Attempted murder dismissal edit Shakur and four others including Fred Hilton Avon White and Andrew Jackson were indicted in the State Supreme Court in the Bronx on December 31 1973 on charges of attempting to shoot and kill two policemen Michael O Reilly and Roy Polliana who were wounded but had since returned to duty in an ambush in St Albans Queens on January 28 1973 112 On March 5 1974 two new defendants Jeannette Jefferson and Robert Hayes were named in an indictment involving the same charges 113 On April 26 while Shakur was pregnant 109 New Jersey Governor Brendan Byrne signed an extradition order to move Shakur to New Jersey to face two counts of attempted murder attempted assault and possession of dangerous weapons related to the alleged ambush however Shakur declined to waive her right to an extradition hearing and asked for a full hearing before Middlesex County Court Judge John E Bachman 114 Shakur was extradited to New York City on May 6 115 arraigned on May 11 pleading not guilty and remanded to jail by Justice Albert S McGrover of the State Supreme Court pending a pretrial hearing on July 2 116 In November 1974 New York State Supreme Court Justice Peter Farrell dismissed the attempted murder indictment because of insufficient evidence declaring The court can only note with disapproval that virtually a year has passed before counsel made an application for the most basic relief permitted by law namely an attack on the sufficiency of the evidence submitted by the grand jury 117 Kidnapping trial edit Shakur was indicted on May 30 1974 on the charge of having robbed a Brooklyn bar and kidnapping bartender James E Freeman for ransom 116 Shakur and co defendant Ronald Myers were accused of entering the bar with pistols and shotguns taking 50 from the register kidnapping the bartender leaving a note demanding a 20 000 ransom from the bar owner and fleeing in a rented truck 118 Freeman was said to have later escaped unhurt 118 The text of Shakur s opening statement in the trial is reproduced in her autobiography 119 Shakur and co defendant Ronald Myers were acquitted on December 19 1975 after seven hours of jury deliberation ending a three month trial in front of Judge William Thompson 118 Queens bank robbery trial edit In July 1973 after being indicted by a grand jury Shakur pleaded not guilty in Federal Court in Brooklyn to an indictment related to a 7 700 robbery of the Bankers Trust Company bank in Queens on August 31 1971 120 Judge Jacob Mishlerset set a tentative trial date of November 5 that year 121 122 The trial was delayed until 1976 120 when Shakur was represented by Stanley Cohen and Evelyn Williams 123 In this trial Shakur acted as her own co counsel and told the jury in her opening testimony I have decided to act as co counsel and to make this opening statement not because I have any illusions about my legal abilities but rather because there are things that I must say to you I have spent many days and nights behind bars thinking about this trial this outrage And in my own mind only someone who has been so intimately a victim of this madness as I have can do justice to what I have to say 124 One bank employee testified that Shakur was one of the bank robbers but three other bank employees including two tellers testified that they were uncertain 123 The prosecution showed surveillance photos of four of the six alleged robbers contending that one of them was Shakur wearing a wig Shakur was forcibly subdued and photographed by the FBI on the judge s order after having refused to cooperate believing that the FBI would use photo manipulation a subsequent judge determined that the manners in which the photos were obtained violated Shakur s rights and ruled the new photos inadmissible 82 In her autobiography Shakur recounts being beaten choked and kicked on the courtroom floor by five marshals as Williams narrated the events to ensure they would appear on the court record 125 Shortly after deliberation began the jury asked to see all the photographic exhibits taken from the surveillance footage 123 The jury determined that a widely circulated FBI photo allegedly showing Shakur participating in the robbery was not her 126 Shakur was acquitted after seven hours of jury deliberation on January 16 1976 123 and was immediately remanded back to New Jersey for the Turnpike trial 127 The actual transfer took place on January 29 128 She was the only one of the six suspects in the robbery to be brought to trial 123 Andrew Jackson and two others indicted for the same robbery pleaded guilty Jackson was sentenced to five years in prison and five years probation another was shot and killed in a gunfight in Florida on December 31 1971 and the last remained at large at the time of Shakur s acquittal 120 123 Turnpike shootout retrial edit nbsp Shakur s murder trial for the Turnpike shootout took place in New Brunswick Middlesex County New Jersey not far from the East Brunswick site of the gunfight By the time she was retried in 1977 Acoli had already been convicted of shooting and murdering Foerster 64 The prosecution argued that Assata had fired the bullets that had wounded Harper while the defense argued that the now deceased Zayd had fired them 129 Based on New Jersey law if Shakur s presence at the scene could be considered as aiding and abetting the murder of Foerster she could be convicted even if she had not fired the bullets which had killed him 130 A total of 289 articles had been published in the local press relating to the various crimes with which Shakur had been accused 63 Shakur again attempted to remove the trial to federal court The United States District Court for the District of New Jersey denied the petition and also denied Shakur an injunction against the holding of trial proceedings on Fridays 60 131 132 An en banc panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit affirmed 133 The nine week trial was widely publicized and was even reported on by the Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union TASS 63 134 During the trial hundreds of civil rights campaigners demonstrated outside of the Middlesex County courthouse each day 63 Following the 13 minute opening statement by Edward J Barone the first assistant Middlesex County prosecutor directing the case for the state William Kunstler the chief of Shakur s defense staff moved immediately for a mistrial calling the eight count grand jury indictment adversary proceeding solely and exclusively under the control of the prosecutor whom Kunstler accused of improper prejudicial remarks Judge Theodore Appleby noting the frequent defense interruptions that had characterized the previous days jury selection denied the motion 135 On February 23 Shakur s attorneys filed papers asking Judge Appleby to subpoena FBI Director Clarence Kelley Senator Frank Church and other federal and New York City law enforcement officials to testify about the Counter Intelligence Program which they alleged was designed to harass and disrupt black activist organizations 68 Kunstler had previously been successful in subpoenaing Kelley and Church for the trials of American Indian Movement AIM members charged with murdering FBI agents 68 The motion argued March 2 which also asked the court to require the production of memos tapes documents and photographs of alleged COINTELPRO involvement from 1970 to 1973 was denied 68 136 Shakur herself was called as a witness on March 15 the first witness called by the defense she denied shooting either Harper or Foerster and also denied handling a weapon during the incident She was questioned by her own attorney Stuart Ball for under 40 minutes and then cross examined by Barone for less than two hours see the Witnesses section below 71 Ball s questioning ended with the following exchange On that night of May 2 n d did you shoot kill execute or have anything to do with the death of Trooper Werner Foerster No Did you shoot or assault Trooper James Harper No 71 Under cross examination Shakur was unable to explain how three magazines of ammunition and 16 live shells had gotten into her shoulder bag she also admitted to knowing that Zayd Shakur carried a gun at times and specifically to seeing a gun sticking out of Acoli s pocket while stopping for supper at a Howard Johnson s restaurant shortly before the shooting 71 Shakur admitted to carrying an identification card with the name Justine Henderson in her billfold the night of the shootout but denied using any of the aliases on the long list that Barone proceeded to read 71 Defense attorneys edit nbsp Lawyer William Kunstler was the chief of Shakur s defense staff Shakur s defense attorneys were William Kunstler the chief of Shakur s defense staff 135 Stuart Ball Robert Bloom Raymond A Brown 137 Stanley Cohen who died of unknown causes early on in the Turnpike trial Lennox Hinds Florynce Kennedy Louis Myers Laurence Stern and Evelyn Williams Shakur s aunt 79 135 138 Of these attorneys Kunstler Ball Cohen Myers Stern and Williams appeared in court for the turnpike trial 139 140 Kunstler became involved in Shakur s trials in 1975 when contacted by Williams and commuted from New York City to New Brunswick every day with Stern 141 Her attorneys in particular Lennox Hinds were often held in contempt of court which the National Conference of Black Lawyers cited as an example of systemic bias in the judicial system 142 The New Jersey Legal Ethics Committee also investigated complaints against Hinds for comparing Shakur s murder trial to legalized lynching 143 undertaken by a kangaroo court 63 144 Hinds disciplinary proceeding reached the U S Supreme Court in Middlesex County Ethics Committee v Garden State Bar Ass n 1982 145 According to Kunstler s autobiography the sizable contingent of New Jersey State Troopers guarding the courthouse were under strict orders from their commander Col Clinton Pagano to completely shun Shakur s defense attorneys 146 Judge Appleby also threatened Kunstler with dismissal and contempt of court after he delivered an October 21 1976 speech at nearby Rutgers University that in part discussed the upcoming trial 147 but later ruled that Kunstler could represent Shakur 148 Until obtaining a court order Kunstler was forced to strip naked and undergo a body search before each visit with Shakur during which Shakur was shackled to a bed by both ankles 63 Judge Appleby also refused to investigate a burglary of her defense counsel s office that resulted in the disappearance of trial documents 136 amounting to half of the legal papers related to her case 149 Her lawyers also claimed that their offices were bugged 82 Witnesses edit Sundiata Acoli Assata Shakur Trooper Harper and a New Jersey Turnpike driver who saw part of the incident were the only surviving witnesses 150 Acoli did not testify or make any pre trial statements nor did he testify in his own trial or give a statement to the police 151 The driver traveling north on the turnpike testified that he had seen a State Trooper struggling with a Black man between a white vehicle and a State Trooper car whose revolving lights illuminated the area 150 Shakur testified that Trooper Harper shot her after she raised her arms to comply with his demand She said that the second shot hit her in the back as she turned to avoid it and that she fell onto the road for the duration of the gunfight before crawling back into the backseat of the Pontiac which Acoli drove 5 miles 8 km down the road and parked She testified that she remained there until State Troopers dragged her onto the road 65 150 Trooper Harper s official reports state that after he stopped the Pontiac he ordered Acoli to the back of the vehicle for Trooper Foerster who had arrived on the scene to examine his driver s license 150 The reports then state that after Acoli complied and as Harper was looking inside the vehicle to examine the registration Trooper Foerster yelled and held up an ammunition magazine as Shakur simultaneously reached into her red pocketbook pulled out a 9mm handgun and fired at him 150 Trooper Harper s reports then state that he ran to the rear of his car and shot at Shakur who had exited the vehicle and was firing from a crouched position next to the vehicle 150 Jury edit A total of 408 potential jurors were questioned during the voir dire which concluded on February 14 135 All of the 15 jurors ten women and five men were white and most were under thirty years old 135 152 Five jurors had personal ties to State Troopers one girlfriend two nephews and two friends 136 153 A sixteenth female juror was removed before the trial formally opened when it was determined that Sheriff Joseph DeMarino of Middlesex County while a private detective several years earlier had worked for a lawyer who represented the juror s husband 135 Judge Appleby repeatedly denied Kunstler s requests for DeMarino to be removed from his responsibilities for the duration of the trial because he did not divulge his association with the juror 135 One prospective juror was dismissed for reading Target Blue 154 a book by Robert Daley a former New York City Deputy Police Commander which dealt in part with Shakur and had been left in the jury assembly room 155 Before the jury entered the courtroom Judge Appleby ordered Shakur s lawyers to remove a copy of Roots The Saga of an American Family by Alex Haley from a position on the defense counsel table easily visible to jurors 135 The Roots TV miniseries adapted from the book and shown shortly before the trial was believed to have evoked feelings of guilt and sympathy with many white viewers 135 Shakur s attorneys sought a new trial on the grounds that one jury member John McGovern had violated the jury s sequestration order 156 Judge Appleby rejected Kunstler s claim that the juror had violated the order 157 McGovern later sued Kunstler for defamation 158 Kunstler eventually publicly apologized to McGovern and paid him a small settlement 159 Additionally in his autobiography Kunstler alleged that he later learned from a law enforcement agent that a New Jersey State Assembly member had addressed the jury at the hotel where they were sequestered urging them to convict Shakur 159 Medical evidence edit nbsp Shakur s broken clavicle was a key element of her defense and the implications of her injury for the differing accounts of the shootout were points of contention A key element of Shakur s defense was medical testimony meant to demonstrate that she was shot with her hands up and that she would have been subsequently unable to fire a weapon A neurologist testified that the median nerve in Shakur s right arm was severed by the second bullet making her unable to pull a trigger 111 Neurosurgeon Dr Arthur Turner Davidson Associate Professor of Surgery at Albert Einstein College of Medicine testified that the wounds in her upper arms armpit and chest and severed median nerve that instantly paralyzed her right arm would only have been caused if both arms were raised and that to sustain such injuries while crouching and firing a weapon as described in Trooper Harper s testimony would be anatomically impossible 63 160 Davidson based his testimony on an August 4 1976 examination of Shakur and on X rays taken immediately after the shootout at Middlesex General Hospital 160 Prosecutor Barone questioned whether Davidson was qualified to make such a judgment 39 months after the injury Barone proceeded to suggest while a female Sheriff s attendant acted out his suggestion that Shakur was struck in the right arm and collar bone and then spun around by the impact of the bullet so an immediate second shot entered the fleshy part of her upper left arm to which Davidson replied Impossible 160 Dr David Spain a pathologist from Brookdale Community College testified that her bullet scars as well as X rays supported her claim that her arms were raised and that there was no conceivable way the first bullet could have hit Shakur s clavicle if her arm was down 129 161 Judge Appleby eventually cut off funds for any further expert defense testimony 63 Shakur in her autobiography and Williams in Inadmissible Evidence both claim that it was difficult to find expert witnesses for the trial because of the expense and because most forensic and ballistic specialists declined on the grounds of a conflict of interest when approached because they routinely performed such work for law enforcement officials 162 Other evidence edit According to Angela Davis neutron activation analysis that was administered after the shootout showed no gunpowder residue on Shakur s fingers and forensic analysis performed at the Trenton New Jersey crime lab and the FBI crime labs in Washington D C did not find her fingerprints on any weapon at the scene 163 According to tape recordings and police reports made several hours after the shoot out when Harper returned on foot to the administration building 200 yards 183 m away he did not report Foerster s presence at the scene no one at headquarters knew of Foerster s involvement in the shoot out until his body was discovered beside his patrol car more than an hour later 63 12 Conviction and sentencing edit On March 24 the jurors listened for 45 minutes to a rereading of testimony of the State Police chemist regarding the blood found at the scene on the LeMans and Shakur s clothing 65 That night the second night of jury deliberation the jury asked Judge Appleby to repeat his instructions regarding the four assault charges 30 minutes before retiring for the night which led to speculation that the jury had decided in Shakur s favor on the remaining charges especially the two counts of murder 65 Appleby reiterated that the jury must consider separately the four assault charges atrocious assault and battery assault on a police officer acting in the line of duty assault with a deadly weapon and assault with intent to kill each of which carried a total maximum penalty of 33 years in prison 65 The other charges were first degree murder of Foerster second degree murder of Zayd Shakur illegal possession of a weapon and armed robbery related to Foerster s service revolver 139 The jury also asked Appleby to repeat the definitions of intent and reasonable doubt 65 Shakur was convicted on all eight counts two murder charges and six assault charges 139 Upon hearing the verdict Shakur said in a barely audible voice I am ashamed that I have even taken part in this trial and that the jury was racist and had convicted a woman with her hands up 139 When Judge Appleby told the court attendants to remove the prisoner Shakur herself replied the prisoner will walk away on her own feet 139 After Joseph W Lewis the jury foreman read the verdict Kunstler asked that the jury be removed before alleging that one juror had violated the sequestration order see above 139 At the post trial press conference Kunstler blamed the verdict on racism stating that the white element was there to destroy her When asked by a reporter why if that were the case it took the jury 24 hours to reach a verdict Kunstler replied That was just a pretense A few minutes later the prosecutor Barone disagreed with Kunstler s assessment saying the trial s outcome was decided completely on the facts 139 At Shakur s sentencing hearing on April 25 Appleby sentenced her to 26 to 33 years in state prison 10 to 12 for the four counts of assault 12 to 15 for robbery 2 to 3 for armed robbery plus 2 to 3 for aiding and abetting the murder of Foerster to be served consecutively with her mandatory life sentence However Appleby dismissed the second degree murder of Zayd Shakur as the New Jersey Supreme Court had recently narrowed the application of the law 164 Appleby finally sentenced Shakur to 30 days in the Middlesex County Workhouse for contempt of court concurrent with the other sentences for refusing to rise when he entered the courtroom 164 To become eligible for parole Shakur would have had to serve a minimum of 25 years which would have included her four years in custody during the trials 164 Nelson murder dismissal edit In October 1977 New York State Superior Court Justice John Starkey dismissed murder and robbery charges against Shakur related to the death of Richard Nelson during a hold up of a Brooklyn social club on December 28 1972 ruling that the state had delayed too long in bringing her to trial Judge Starkey said People have constitutional rights and you can t shuffle them around 165 The case was delayed in being brought to trial as a result of an agreement between the governors of New York and New Jersey as to the priority of the various charges against Shakur 165 Three other defendants were indicted in relation to the same holdup Melvin Kearney who died in 1976 from an eight floor fall while trying to escape from the Brooklyn House of Detention Twymon Myers who was killed by police while a fugitive and Andrew Jackson the charges against whom were dismissed when two prosecution witnesses could not identify him in a lineup 165 Attempted robbery dismissal edit On November 22 1977 Shakur pleaded not guilty to an attempted armed robbery indictment stemming from the 1971 incident at the Statler Hilton Hotel 166 Shakur was accused of attempting to rob a Michigan man staying at the hotel of 250 of cash and personal property 166 The prosecutor was C Richard Gibbons 166 The charges were dismissed without trial 167 Imprisonment edit nbsp Shakur was kept in solitary confinement on Rikers Island for 21 months After the Turnpike shootings Shakur was briefly held at the Garden State Youth Correctional Facility 168 in Yardville Burlington County New Jersey and later moved to Rikers Island Correctional Institution for Women in New York City 10 where she was kept in solitary confinement 169 170 for 21 months Shakur s only daughter Kakuya Shakur was conceived during her trial 109 and born on September 11 1974 in the fortified psychiatric ward at Elmhurst General Hospital in Queens 123 171 where Shakur stayed for a few days before being returned to Rikers Island In her autobiography Shakur claims that she was beaten and restrained by several large female officers after refusing a medical exam from a prison doctor shortly after giving birth 125 After a bomb threat was made against Judge Appleby Sheriff Joseph DeMarino lied to the press about the exact date of her transfer to Clinton Correctional Facility for Women He later claimed the threat to be the cause of his falsification 172 She was also transferred from the Clinton Correctional Facility for Women to a special area staffed by women guards at the Garden State Youth Correctional Facility where she was the only female inmate 173 for security reasons 174 When Kunstler first took on Shakur s case before meeting her he described her basement cell as adequate which nearly resulted in his dismissal as her attorney 146 On May 6 1977 Judge Clarkson Fisher of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey denied Shakur s request for an injunction requiring her transfer from the all male facility to Clinton Correctional Facility for Women the Third Circuit affirmed 170 175 176 On April 8 1978 Shakur was transferred to Alderson Federal Prison Camp in Alderson West Virginia where she met Puerto Rican nationalist Lolita Lebron 10 and Mary Alice a Catholic nun who introduced Shakur to the concept of liberation theology 177 At Alderson Shakur was housed in the Maximum Security Unit which also contained several members of the Aryan Sisterhood as well as Sandra Good and Lynette Squeaky Fromme followers of Charles Manson 178 On February 20 1979 179 after the Maximum Security Unit at Alderson was closed 177 Shakur was transferred to the Clinton Correctional Facility for Women in New Jersey 10 According to her attorney Lennox Hinds Shakur understates the awfulness of the condition in which she was incarcerated which included vaginal and anal searches 180 Hinds argues that in the history of New Jersey no woman pretrial detainee or prisoner has ever been treated as she was continuously confined in a men s prison under twenty four hour surveillance of her most intimate functions without intellectual sustenance adequate medical attention and exercise and without the company of other women for all the years she was in custody 134 Shakur was identified as a political prisoner as early as October 8 1973 by Angela Davis 181 and in an April 3 1977 The New York Times advertisement purchased by the Easter Coalition for Human Rights 182 An international panel of seven jurists were invited by Hinds to tour a number of U S prisons and concluded in a report filed with the United Nations Commission on Human Rights that the conditions of her solitary confinement were totally unbefitting any prisoner 183 134 Their investigation which focused on alleged human rights abuses of political prisoners cited Shakur as one of the worst cases of such abuses and including her in a class of victims of FBI misconduct through the COINTELPRO strategy and other forms of illegal government conduct who as political activists have been selectively targeted for provocation false arrests entrapment fabrication of evidence and spurious criminal prosecutions 63 184 Amnesty International however did not regard Shakur as a former political prisoner 185 Escape editIn early 1979 the Family a group of BLA members began to plan Shakur s escape from prison They financed this by stealing 105 000 from a Bamberger s store in Paramus New Jersey 186 On November 2 1979 Shakur escaped the Clinton Correctional Facility for Women in New Jersey when three members of the Black Liberation Army visiting her drew concealed 45 caliber pistols and a stick of dynamite seized two correction officers as hostages commandeered a van and with the assistance of members of the May 19 Communist Organization made their escape 187 188 No one was injured during the prison break including the officers held as hostages who were left in a parking lot 39 According to later court testimony Shakur lived in Pittsburgh until August 1980 when she flew to the Bahamas 186 Mutulu Shakur Silvia Baraldini Sekou Odinga and Marilyn Buck were charged with assisting in her escape Ronald Boyd Hill was also held on charges related to the escape 189 190 In part for his role in the event Mutulu was named on July 23 1982 as the 380th addition to the FBI s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list where he remained for the next four years until his capture in 1986 State correction officials disclosed in November 1979 that they had not run identity checks on Shakur s visitors 191 and that the three men and one woman who assisted in her escape had presented false identification to enter the prison s visitor room 192 before which they were not searched 63 Mutulu Shakur and Marilyn Buck were convicted in 1988 of several robberies as well as the prison escape 193 nbsp Shakur in a 1982 photo issued by the FBIAt the time of the escape Kunstler had just started to prepare her appeal 159 After her escape Shakur lived as a fugitive for several years The FBI circulated wanted posters throughout the New York New Jersey area her supporters hung Assata Shakur is Welcome Here posters in response 194 In New York three days after her escape more than 5 000 demonstrators organized by the National Black Human Rights Coalition carried signs with the same slogan At the rally a statement from Shakur was circulated condemning U S prison conditions and calling for an independent New Afrikan state 190 195 For years after Shakur s escape the movements activities and phone calls of her friends and relatives including her daughter walking to school in upper Manhattan were monitored by investigators in an attempt to ascertain her whereabouts 196 In July 1980 FBI director William H Webster said that the search for Shakur had been frustrated by residents refusal to cooperate and a New York Times editorial opined that the department s commitment to enforce the law with vigor but also with sensitivity for civil rights and civil liberties had been clouded by an apparently crude sweep through a Harlem building in search of Shakur 197 In particular one pre dawn April 20 1980 raid on 92 Morningside Avenue during which FBI agents armed with shotguns and machine guns broke down doors and searched through the building for several hours while preventing residents from leaving was seen by residents as having racist overtones 198 In October 1980 New Jersey and New York City Police denied published reports that they had declined to raid a Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn building where Shakur was suspected to be hiding for fear of provoking a racial incident 199 Since her escape Shakur has been charged with unlawful flight to avoid imprisonment 200 Political asylum in Cuba editShakur was in Cuba by 1984 in that year she was granted political asylum there 194 The Cuban government paid approximately 13 a day toward her living expenses 196 201 In 1985 her daughter Kakuya who had been raised by Shakur s mother in New York came to live with her In 1987 her presence in Cuba became widely known when she agreed to be interviewed by Newsday 12 10 202 In an open letter Shakur has called Cuba One of the Largest Most Resistant and Most Courageous Palenques Maroon Camps that has ever existed on the Face of this Planet 203 She has praised Fidel Castro as a hero of the oppressed 12 and referred to herself as a 20th century escaped slave 203 Shakur is also known to have worked as an English language editor for Radio Havana Cuba 204 Books edit In 1987 she published Assata An Autobiography which was written in Cuba Her autobiography has been cited in relation to critical legal studies 205 and critical race theory 206 The book does not give a detailed account of her involvement in the BLA or the events on the New Jersey Turnpike except to say that the jury c onvicted a woman with her hands up 45 79 It gives an account of her life beginning with her youth in the South and New York Shakur challenges traditional styles of literary autobiography and offers a perspective on her life that is not easily accessible to the public 207 208 The book was published by Lawrence Hill amp Company in the United States and Canada but the copyright is held by Zed Books Ltd of London due to Son of Sam laws which restrict who can receive profits from a book 209 In the six months preceding the publications of the book Evelyn Williams Shakur s aunt and attorney made several trips to Cuba and served as a go between with Hill 202 Her autobiography was republished in Britain in 2014 130 and a dramatized version performed on BBC Radio 4 in July 2017 210 In 1993 she published a second book Still Black Still Strong with Dhoruba bin Wahad and Mumia Abu Jamal In 2005 SUNY Press released The New Abolitionists Neo Slave Narratives and Contemporary Prison Writings edited and with an added introduction by Joy James in which Shakur s Women in Prison How We Are 1978 is featured 211 Extradition attempts edit In 1997 Carl Williams the superintendent of the New Jersey State Police wrote a letter to Pope John Paul II asking him to raise the issue of Shakur s extradition during his talks with President Fidel Castro 212 During the pope s visit to Cuba in 1998 Shakur agreed to an interview with NBC journalist Ralph Penza 213 Shakur later published an extensive criticism of the NBC segment which inter spliced footage of Trooper Foerster s grieving widow with an FBI photo connected to a bank robbery of which Shakur had been acquitted 214 On March 10 1998 215 New Jersey Governor Christine Todd Whitman asked Attorney General Janet Reno to do whatever it would take to return Shakur from Cuba 216 Later in 1998 U S media widely reported claims that the United States State Department had offered to lift the Cuban embargo in exchange for the return of 90 U S fugitives including Shakur 217 The United States Congress passed a non binding resolution in September 1998 asking Cuba for the return of Shakur as well as 90 fugitives believed by Congress to be residing in Cuba House Concurrent Resolution 254 passed 371 0 in the House and by unanimous consent in the Senate 218 219 The Resolution was due in no small part to the lobbying efforts of Governor Whitman and New Jersey Representative Bob Franks 124 Before the passage of the Resolution Franks stated This escaped murderer now lives a comfortable life in Cuba and has launched a public relations campaign in which she attempts to portray herself as an innocent victim rather than a cold blooded murderer 124 In an open letter to Castro chair of the Congressional Black Caucus Representative Maxine Waters of California later explained that many members of the Caucus including herself were against Shakur s extradition but had mistakenly voted for the bill which was placed on the accelerated suspension calendar generally reserved for non controversial legislation 220 In the letter Waters explained her opposition calling COINTELPRO illegal clandestine political persecution 220 On May 2 2005 the 32nd anniversary of the Turnpike shootings the FBI classified her as a domestic terrorist increasing the reward for assistance in her capture to 1 million 194 221 the largest reward placed on an individual in the history of New Jersey New Jersey State Police superintendent Rick Fuentes said she is now 120 pounds of money 222 The bounty announcement reportedly caused Shakur to drop out of sight after having previously lived relatively openly including having her home telephone number listed in her local telephone directory 223 New York City Councilman Charles Barron a former Black Panther has called for the bounty to be rescinded 224 The New Jersey State Police and Federal Bureau of Investigation each still have an agent officially assigned to her case 225 Calls for Shakur s extradition increased following Fidel Castro s transfer of presidential duties 223 in a May 2005 television address Castro had called Shakur a victim of racial persecution saying they wanted to portray her as a terrorist something that was an injustice a brutality an infamous lie 226 In 2013 the FBI announced it had added Shakur to its list of most wanted terrorists the first time that a woman was so designated The reward for her capture and return was also doubled to 2 million 227 In June 2017 President Donald Trump gave a speech cancelling the Cuban thaw policies of his predecessor Barack Obama A condition of making a new deal between the United States and Cuba is the release of political prisoners and the return of fugitives from justice Trump specifically called for the return of the cop killer Joanne Chesimard 228 Cultural influence editA documentary film about Shakur Eyes of The Rainbow written and directed by Cuban filmmaker Gloria Rolando appeared in 1997 10 The official premiere of the film in Havana in 2004 was promoted by Casa de las Americas the main cultural forum of the Cuban government 204 Assata aka Joanne Chesimard is a 2008 biographical film directed by Fred Baker The film premiered at the San Diego Black Film Festival and starred Assata Shakur herself The National Conference of Black Lawyers and Mos Def are among the professional organizations and entertainers to support Assata Shakur the Hands Off Assata campaign is organized by Dream Hampton 222 Numerous musicians have composed and recorded songs about her or dedicated to her Common recorded A Song for Assata on his album Like Water for Chocolate 2000 after traveling to Havana to meet with Shakur personally 229 Nas listed her name in the booklet of his album Untitled among important black figures who inspired the album 230 Paris Assata s Song in Sleeping with the Enemy 1992 Public Enemy Rebel Without A Pause in It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back 1988 2Pac Words of Wisdom in 2Pacalypse Now 1991 Digital Underground Heartbeat Props in Sons of the P 1991 The Roots The Adventures in Wonderland in Illadelph Halflife 1996 Piebald If Marcus Garvey Dies Then Marcus Garvey Lives in If It Weren t for Venetian Blinds It Would Be Curtains for Us All 1999 Asian Dub Foundation Committed to Life in Community Music 2000 Saul Williams Black Stacey in Saul Williams 2004 Rebel Diaz Which Side Are You On in Otro Guerrillero Mixtape Vol 2 2008 Lowkey Something Wonderful in Soundtrack to the Struggle 2011 Dead Prez I Have A Dream Too in RBG Revolutionary But Gangsta 2004 Murs Tale of Two Cities in The Final Adventure 2012 Jay Z Open Letter Part II in 2013 Digable Planets The Underachievers and X Clan have also recorded songs about Shakur 190 Shakur has been described as a rap music legend 223 and a minor cause celebre 231 On December 12 2006 the Chancellor of the City University of New York Matthew Goldstein directed City College s president Gregory H Williams to remove the unauthorized and inappropriate designation of the Guillermo Morales Assata Shakur Community and Student Center which was named by students in 1989 A student group won the right to use the lounge after a campus shutdown over proposed tuition increases 232 CUNY was sued by student and alumni groups after removing the plaque 233 As of April 7 2010 the presiding judge has ruled that the issues of students free speech and administrators immunity from suit deserve a trial 234 Following controversy in 1995 Borough of Manhattan Community College renamed a scholarship that had previously been named for Shakur 235 In 2008 a Bucknell University professor included Shakur in a course on African American heroes along with figures such as Harriet Tubman Sojourner Truth John Henry Malcolm X and Angela Davis 236 Her autobiography is studied together with those of Angela Davis and Elaine Brown the only women activists of the Black Power movement who have published book length autobiographies 237 Rutgers University professor H Bruce Franklin who excerpts Shakur s book in a class on Crime and Punishment in American Literature describes her as a revolutionary fighter against imperialism 238 Black NJ State Trooper Anthony Reed who has left the force sued the police force because among other things persons had hung posters of Shakur altered to include Reed s badge number in a Newark barracks He felt it was intended to insult him as she had killed an officer and was racist in nature 239 According to Dylan Rodriguez to many U S radicals and revolutionaries Shakur represents a venerated if sometimes fetishized signification of liberatory desire and possibility 240 The largely Internet based Hands Off Assata campaign is coordinated by Chicago area Black Radical Congress activists 241 In 2015 New Jersey s Kean University dropped hip hop artist Common as a commencement speaker because of police complaints Members of the State Troopers Fraternal Association of New Jersey expressed their anger over Common s A Song For Assata 242 In 2015 Black Lives Matter co founder Alicia Garza writes When I use Assata s powerful demand in my organizing work I always begin by sharing where it comes from sharing about Assata s significance to the Black Liberation Movement what its political purpose and message is and why it s important in our context 243 The Chicago Black activist group Assata s Daughters is named in her honor 244 In April 2017 former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick s foundation donated 25 000 to the group 245 In July 2017 the Women s March official Twitter feed celebrated Shakur s birthday leading to criticism from some media outlets 246 247 248 In April 2018 a North Carolina court ordered that payment of 15 000 be made to Shakur s representative her sister Beverly Goins as part of a land deal 249 See also editList of fugitives from justice who disappeared Elizabeth Ann DukeNotes edit a b The Federal Bureau of Investigation notes that Shakur has also used August 19 1952 as her birthdate 1 Note that the New York Times source given here reverses the roles of Zayd Shakur and Acoli References edit Most Wanted Terrorists Federal Bureau of Investigation Archived from the original on June 11 2008 Retrieved July 16 2021 Cuba still harbors one of America s most wanted fugitives What happens to Assata Shakur now The Washington Post The Washington Post Retrieved November 28 2016 Joanne Chesimard Reward Poster PDF Official Site of the State of New Jersey Black Liberation Army Understanding Monitoring Controlling Retrieved December 14 2021 Joanne Chesimard First Woman Named to Most Wanted Terrorists List Federal Bureau of Investigation Retrieved July 22 2020 JOANNE DEBORAH CHESIMARD Federal Bureau of Investigation Mueller Robert S III Wanted by the FBI Fugitive Joanne Deborah Chesimard Federal Bureau of Investigation Archived from the original on June 11 2008 Retrieved June 6 2008 According to the FBI Shakur has also used August 19 1952 as a birthdate Castellucci John 1986 The Big Dance the untold story of Kathy Boudin and the terrorist family that committed the Brink s robbery murders Dodd Mead ISBN 9780396087137 Eyes of the Rainbow Dir Gloria Roland Perf Asset Shakur 1997 May 4 2013 Accessed May 15 2017 a b c d e f Scheffler 2002 p 203 a b c d Gates Henry Louis Anthony Appiah 1999 Africana The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience Basic Civitas Books pp 1697 1698 ISBN 0 465 00071 1 a b c d e f g Howell Ron October 11 1987 On the Run With Assata Shakur Newsday Shakur Assata 1987 Assata An Autobiography Zed Books ISBN 9781556520747 Hands Off Assata Shakur Angela Davis Calls for Radical Activism to Protect Activist Exiled in Cuba Democracy Now Accessed May 16 2017 Williams 1993 p 7 Maryland State Police Criminal Intelligence Division The Black Liberation Army Understanding Monitoring Controlling October 1991 Perkins 2000 p 103 a b James Matthew Thomas James Joy James eds 2005 The New Abolitionists Neo slave Narratives And Contemporary Prison Writings SUNY Press p 77 ISBN 0 7914 6485 7 a b Gale Product Login galeapps galegroup com Retrieved March 8 2019 Shakur 1987 p 221 4 Finkelman Paul 2009 Encyclopedia of African American History 1896 to the Present From the Age of Segregation to the Twenty first Century Five volume Set Oxford University Press USA ISBN 9780195167795 Harris Paul May 3 2013 FBI makes Joanne Chesimard the first woman to appear on most wanted list The Guardian James Joy 2003 Imprisoned Intellectuals America s Political Prisoners Write on Life Liberation and Rebellion Rowman amp Littlefield p 104 ISBN 0 7425 2027 7 a b Van Deburg William L 1997 Modern Black Nationalism From Marcus Garvey to Louis Farrakhan NYU Press p 269 ISBN 0 8147 8789 4 Shakur Assata Assata an autobiography London Zed 2014 Print Waggoner Walter H April 7 1971 Woman Shot in Struggle With Her Alleged Victim The New York Times p 40 Retrieved June 12 2008 The New York Times November 23 1977 Plea by Joanne Chesimard p 23 Seedman Albert and Peter Hellman 1975 Chief Avon ISBN 0 380 00358 9 pp 451 452 Williams 1993 pp 4 5 2 Suspects Named In Grenade Attack The New York Times December 22 1971 p 23 Pace Eric December 27 1971 Police See More Military Arms in Use The New York Times p 10 The New York Times January 1 1972 A Suspect in Panther s Death Here Is Slain by F B I in South p 6 Kaufman Michael T February 9 1972 9 in Black Army Are Hunted in Police Assassinations The New York Times p 1 Kaufman Michael T January 30 1973 Police by Hundreds Comb 2 Boroughs for 6 Suspects in Ambush Shootings The New York Times p 43 Kaufman Michael T May 3 1973 Seized Woman Called Black Militants Soul The New York Times p 47 a b Williams 1993 p 5 Daly Michael December 13 2006 The Msgr amp the Militant New York Daily News a b c d e Churchill and Vander Wall 2002 p 308 Churchill and Vander Wall 2002 p 409 Seedman Albert A 1975 Chief New York Avon Books Jones Robert A May 3 1973 2 Die in Shootout Militant Seized Los Angeles Times p 22 Camisa Harry 2003 Inside Out Fifty Years Behind the Walls of New Jersey s Trenton State Prison Windsor Press and Publishing ISBN 0 9726473 0 9 p 197 Williams 1993 p 6 a b Burrough Bryan 2016 Days of Rage America s Radical Underground the FBI and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence Penguin Publishing Group ISBN 9780143107972 Kaufman Michael T February 17 1972 Evidence of Liberation Army Said to Rise The New York Times p 1 McFadden Robert D February 19 1972 Warrant Issued In Police Slaying The New York Times p 1 Montgomery Paul L February 20 1972 3D Suspect Linked To Police Slayings The New York Times p 43 Perlmutter Emanuel January 29 1973 Extra Duty Tours For Police Set Up After 2D Ambush The New York Times p 61 McShane Joseph Stepansky Thomas Tracy Larry March 5 2015 Death of cop Richard Rainey could have been due to 1981 shooting could mean life in jail for shooter Abdul Majid New York Daily News Retrieved February 14 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link According to Churchill and Vander Wall 2002 What had emerged in the 1980s was a formal amalgamation of FBI COINTELPRO specialists and New York City red squad detectives known as the Joint Terrorist Task Force JTTF consolidating the more ad hoc models of such an apparatus which had materialized in cities like Chicago and Los Angeles during the late 1960s p 309 JTTF The Joint Terrorist Task Force created in the late 1970s as an interlock between the FBI and New York City red squads to engage in COINTELPRO type activities p xiii Williams 1993 p 3 It was the spring of 1973 and for the last two years the nationwide dragnet for her capture had intensified each time a young African American identified as a member of the BLA was arrested or wounded or killed The Joint Terrorist Task Force made up of the FBI and local police agencies across the country issued daily bulletins predicting her imminent apprehension each time another bank had been robbed or another cop had been killed Whenever there was a lull in such occurrences they leaked information allegedly classified as confidential to the media repeating past accusations and flashing her face across television screens and newspapers with heartbeat regularity lest the public forget a b Cleaver and Katsiaficas 2001 p 16 Cleaver and Katsiaficas 2001 p 13 a b Marable Manning and Mullings Leith 2003 Let Nobody Turn Us Around Voices of Resistance Reform and Renewal an African American Anthology Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 8476 8346 X pp 529 530 Zinn Howard and Anthony Arnove 2004 Voices of a People s History of the United States Seven Stories Press ISBN 1 58322 628 1 p 470 O Reilly Kenneth 1989 Racial Matters The FBI s Secret File on Black America 1960 1972 Collier Macmillan ISBN 0 02 923681 9 Wolf Paul 2001 COINTELPRO The Untold American Story PDF Archived PDF from the original on August 17 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l Sullivan Joseph F May 3 or 4th 1973 Panther Trooper Slain in Shoot Out The New York Times p 1 a b c d e Waggoner Walter H February 14 1977 Jury in Chesimard Murder Trial Listens to State Police Radio Tapes The New York Times p 83 Burrough Bryan 2016 Days of Rage America s Radical Underground the FBI and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence Penguin Publishing Group p 246 ISBN 9780143107972 a b Johnston Richard J February 20 1974 Squires Jurors Hear Chase Tape The New York Times p 78 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Kirsta Alix May 29 1999 A black and white case Investigation Joanne Chesimard The Times a b c d e Johnston Richard J February 14 1974 Trooper Recalls Shooting on Pike The New York Times p 86 Retrieved June 17 2008 a b c d e f g Sullivan Joseph E March 25 1977 Chesimard Jury Asks Clarification of Assault Charges The New York Times p 50 Johnston Richard J H March 9 1974 Jury Deliberations Begin in Murder Trial of Squire The New York Times p 64 Johnston Richard H February 13 1974 Squire Charged With Execution The New York Times p 84 a b c d Sullivan Joseph F February 24 1977 Chesimard Attorney Acts to Call Kelley Wants F B I Director and Others to Testify on Program Aimed at Harassing Activists The New York Times p 76 column 1 a b Sullivan Joseph F May 4 1973 Gunfight Suspect Caught in Jersey The New York Times p 41 Kupendua Marpessa January 28 1998 Sundiata Acoli Revolutionary Worker No 94 Retrieved on May 9 2008 a b c d e Sullivan Joseph F March 16 1977 Mrs Chesimard on Stand Denies Having Weapon in Turnpike Shooting The New York Times p 57 Tomlinson 1994 p 144 Jones 1998 p 397 Davis Angela Yvonne 2003 Are Prisons Obsolete Seven Stories Press ISBN 1 58322 581 1 p 62 Dandridge Rita B 1992 Black Women s Blues A Literary Anthology 1934 1988 Maxwell Macmillan International ISBN 0 8161 9084 4 p 113 The New York Times May 15 1973 Miss Chesimard Transferred p 83 The New York Times June 5 1973 Black Militant Transferred p 88 Wahad Dhoruba Bin et al 1993 Still Black Still Strong Survivors of the U S War against Black Revolutionaries Semiotext e pp 205 206 a b c d Nelson Jim February 29 1988 The Soul Survivor Assata Shakur on the Making of a Radical The Washington Post p B6 a b Hershberger James March 24 2006 Assata Shakur Case of oppression in U S Daily Toreador The New York Times March 12 1974 News Summary and Index The Major Events of the Day p 39 a b c d e f Perkins 2000 p 81 a b The New York Times December 14 1973 Chesimard Verdict Still Awaited Here p 31 Chesimard v Gagliardi 489 F 2d 271 2d Cir 1973 per curiam Los Angeles Times August 23 1973 9 Black Liberation Suspects Indicted p 2 Butler Vincent August 24 1973 Black Liberation leaders indicted Chicago Tribune p A16 The New York Times December 30 1973 Chesimard Acquitted p 104 a b c Prial Frank J December 12 1973 Prosecution Rests Case on Chesimard Robbery Trial Defendant Ejected The New York Times p 54 The New York Times December 7 1973 Miss Chesimard Ill Trial Here Delayed p 55 Lichtenstein Grace December 6 1973 New Outbursts Mark Chesimard Trial The New York Times Retrieved on 2008 06 12 Dugan George January 27 1974 Mrs Chesimard Expects a Child The New York Times Retrieved on 2008 06 12 The New York Times December 8 1973 Order in Court p 34 a b Lichtenstein Grace December 11 1973 Judge and Defendants Clash Again as Chesimard Jury Is Chosen The New York Times p 31 a b Prial Frank J December 15 1973 Mistrial Declared in Chesimard Case as Jury Splits 11 1 The New York Times p 28 Prial Frank J December 13 1973 Chesimard Trial Goes To The Jury The New York Times p 42 The New York Times December 18 1973 2d Chesimard Trial Delayed p 45 a b The New York Times December 19 1973 Second Chesimard Jury Being Picked p 47 The Hartford Courant December 19 1973 Court Ejects Defendant Again p 74B The New York Times December 20 1973 Jury Picked for New Chesimard Trial p 43 a b Prial Frank J December 21 1973 Mrs Chesimard Is Ousted Again as 2d Trial for Robbery Begins The New York Times p 8 a b c Chambers Marcia December 29 1973 Mrs Chesimard Wins Acquittal The New York Times p 16 The New York Times December 22 1973 U S Witness Tells Of Faking Insanity p 29 The New York Times December 25 1973 Robbery Defendant Questions Witness p 19 Chambers Marcia December 27 1973 Mrs Chesimard in Summation Terms Holdup Case Contrived The New York Times p 41 Chambers Marcia December 28 1973 2d Jury Here Begins Weighing Chesimard Bank Robbery Case The New York Times p 24 Smothers Ronald October 24 1973 Chesimard Case Gets A Jury Shift The New York Times p 98 Joy James 1999 Shadowboxing Representations of Black Feminist Politics Macmillan ISBN 0 312 29449 2 p 118 Chesimard v Kuhlthau 370 F Supp 473 D N J 1974 a b c Kamau Sadiki born Fred W X Hilton a co defendant who shared a cell with Shakur during their trial for armed robbery in the Bronx of which both were acquitted is believed to be the father See Kirsta Alix May 29 1999 A black and white case Investigation Joanne Chesimard The Times The New York Times February 2 1974 Chesimard Pregnancy Leads to Mistrial p 63 column 6 a b Hinds Lennox October 26 1998 The injustice of the trial Covert Action Quarterly Retrieved on May 9 2008 The New York Times January 1 1974 Chesimard And Four Named In Shootings p 16 The New York Times March 6 1974 2 More Named in Attempt On Police Officers Lives p 16 The Hartford Courant May 1 1974 Woman Balks At Extradition p 16 The New York Times May 7 1974 Joanne Chesimard Is Extradited p 96 column 5 a b The Hartford Courant May 30 1974 Accused Police Slayer Arraigned in 2 Cases p 29D The New York Times November 2 1974 Judge Quashes Indictment Against Joanne Chesimard p 36 column 4 a b c The New York Times December 20 1975 Acquittal Is Won By Miss Chesimard p 54 Christol 2001 p 140 Her other texts in the book are a July 4 1973 speech To My People which was broadcast on many radio stations an exposition on the theory of armed revolutionary struggle and many poems a b c The New York Times January 7 1976 Miss Chesimard Goes on Trial p 36 The New York Times July 21 1973 Miss Chesimard Pleads Not Guilty p 60 Gupte Pranay July 21 1973 Joanne Chesimard Pleads Not Guilty in Holdup Here The New York Times p 56 a b c d e f g The New York Times January 17 1976 Joanne Chesimard Is Acquitted In Robbery of a Bank in Queens p 18 a b c Rodriguez 2006 p 63 a b Shakur 1987 p 161 Taylor Mark Lewis January 17 1999 Soapbox Flight From Justice The New York Times Retrieved on October 18 2007 Los Angeles Times January 17 1976 Woman Cleared In Bank Robbery p A3 The New York Times January 30 1976 Joanne Chesimard Moved for Trial p 63 a b Sullivan Joseph F March 18 1977 Doctor Testifies On Bullet Scars in Chesimard Trial The New York Times Section 2 p 24 column 1 a b Adewunmi Bim July 13 2014 Assata Shakur from civil rights activist to FBI s most wanted The Guardian Janson Donald February 19 1977 Mrs Chesimard Bids U S Court Bar Trial Sessions on Her Sabbath The New York Times p 51 column 1 The New York Times January 27 1977 Chesimard Plea Rejected p 76 column 2 New Jersey v Chesimard 555 F 2d 63 3d Cir 1977 en banc a b c Browder 2006 p 159 a b c d e f g h i Waggoner Walter H February 16 1977 Chesimard Murder Trial Opens in New Brunswick The New York Times p 46 a b c James Joy p 144 Berger Joseph Raymond A Brown Civil Rights Lawyer Dies at 94 The New York Times October 11 2009 Accessed October 12 2009 Shakur 1987 p 247 a b c d e f g Waggoner Walter H March 26 1977 Joanne Chesimard Convicted in Killing Of Jersey Trooper The New York Times Retrieved October 18 2007 Williams 1993 pp 162 163 Kunstler 1994 pp 275 276 The New York Times May 9 1977 Black Legal Group Assails U S Courts Lawyers at Conference Find Bias Still Exists Against Blacks Despite Constitutional Bans p 67 column 6 The New York Times March 2 1977 Complaint on Lawyer Section 2 p 21 column 2 In the Matter of Hinds 449 A 2d 483 N J 1982 Middlesex County Ethics Committee v Garden State Bar Ass n 457 U S 423 1982 a b Kunstler 1994 p 276 Waldron Martin December 3 1976 Kunstler and the Courts in a Battle On Right to Discuss Pending Trial The New York Times Section 2 p 21 column 1 The New York Times December 15 1976 Judge Approves Kunstler Section 2 p 53 column 1 Christol 2001 p 139 a b c d e f Williams Evelyn A June 25 2005 Statement of Facts in the New Jersey trial of Assata Shakur Archived 2006 12 14 at the Wayback Machine The Talking Drum Collective Retrieved on May 9 2008 Schuppe Jonathan February 8 2004 In parole bid Chesimard cohort denies killing trooper The Star Ledger The New York Times February 15 1977 Chesimard Jury Chosen p 67 column 5 Browder 2006 p 157 Daley Robert 1973 Target Blue An Insider s View of the N Y P D Delacorte Press ISBN 978 0 440 08489 1 The New York Times January 25 1974 Chesimard Panelist Out For Reading Daley Book p 71 column 7 The New York Times April 20 1977 Chesimard Retrial Asked Section 2 p 23 column 3 The New York Times May 10 1977 Law Group Urges Grand Jury Change p 71 column 2 Krebs Alan February 3 1978 Notes on People The New York Times p 16 column 5 a b c Kunstler 1994 p 277 a b c Waggoner Walter H March 17 1977 Neurosurgeon s Testimony Backs Mrs Chesimard The New York Times Section 2 p 20 column 3 James Joy and Sharpley Whiting T Denean 2000 The Black Feminist Reader Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 21007 5 p 279 Perkins 2000 pp 80 81 Shakur Assata 2016 Assata An Autobiography Zed Books Ltd ISBN 9781783606818 a b c Sullivan Joseph F April 26 1977 Assault Charges Add 26 Years To Mrs Chesimard s Life Term The New York Times p 83 column 4 Retrieved on June 16 2008 a b c Seigel Max H October 26 1977 Chesimard Murder Case Dropped Because of Delay in Holding Trial The New York Times p 25 column 5 a b c Chicago Tribune November 24 1977 Black lib army chief denies 1971 robbery p C23 Shakur 1987 p xiv Churchill and Vander Wal 2002 p 410 Muhammad Nisa Islam May 16 2005 Assata The stakes are raised Final Call News Retrieved on May 9 2008 a b The New York Times April 12 1977 Suit Seeks Transfer For Mrs Chesimard p 71 column 2 The New York Times September 1 1974 Heavy Security for Mrs Chesimard p 40 The New York Times March 31 1977 Sheriff Says He Lied About Transfer Of Mrs Chesimard to Aid Security Section 2 p 6 column 3 Krebs Albin April 8 1978 Notes on People The New York Times p 21 column 3 Retrieved on June 15 2008 Waggoner Walter H April 8 1977 Trenton Topics Court Absolves Felons in Killings Of Accomplices by Their Victims The New York Times Section 2 p 13 column 4 The New York Times May 6 1977 Mrs Chesimard s Bid to Transfer To Another Prison Denied by Judge Section 2 p 4 column 3 Chesimard v Mulcahy 570 F 2d 1184 3d Cir 1978 a b Scheffler 2002 p 206 Scheffler 2002 p 204 The New York Times November 3 1979 Miss Chesimard Escapes in New Jersey p 25 Jones 1998 p 379 Cummings Judith October 8 1973 Angela Davis Asks Support for Political Prisoners The New York Times p 70 The New York Times April 3 1977 Display Ad 68 No Title p 46 Meyer Matt 2008 Let Freedom Ring A Collection of Documents from the Movements to Free U S Political Prisoners PM Press ISBN 9781604860351 permanent dead link Covert Action Quarterly October 26 1998 The U N Petition Retrieved on May 9 2008 Friedly Jock January 13 1999 Waters seeks asylum for cop killer The Hill p 1 a b Burrough Bryan 2015 Days of Rage America s Radical Underground the FBI and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence Penguin pp 476 479 ISBN 9780698170070 Hanley Robert November 3 1979 Miss Chesimard Flees Jersey Prison Helped By 3 Armed Visitors The New York Times Retrieved on October 19 2007 Tomlinson 1994 p 146 The New York Times November 29 1979 Bail Set at 2 500 In Chesimard Case Section 2 p 4 column 4 a b c Jones 1998 p 425 Hanley Robert November 6 1979 No Checking Was Done On Chesimard Visitors Identification Required of Visitors Security Review Ordered The New York Times Section 2 p 2 column 1 Hanley Robert November 4 1979 F B I to Aid Search for Miss Chesimard Jersey Authorities Tell Magistrate She Apparently Fled the State After Her Prison Escape Visitors Were Not Searched Drove Across a Field Visitation Policies Under Review Official Account of Escape The New York Times p 31 column 6 Lubasch Arnold H May 12 1988 2 Ex Fugitives Convicted of Roles In Fatal Armored Truck Robbery The New York Times Retrieved on May 26 2008 a b c Cleaver Kathleen August 2005 The Fugitive Essence archived from the original on March 17 2006 Cleaver Kathleen Katsiaficas George 2014 Liberation Imagination and the Black Panther Party A New Look at the Black Panthers and Their Legacy Routledge p 15 ISBN 9781135298326 a b Sterling Guy and Forero Juan May 7 1998 On the lam Chesimard is hardly on her own The Star Ledger p 31 The New York Times Editorial Board July 2 1980 A Cloud Over the New F B I Retrieved on July 2 2008 Emery Richard and LaMarche Gara June 11 1980 Our tinderboxes for radical violence The New York Times Section A p 30 column 4 The New York Times October 15 1980 The City Chesimard Report Called Unfounded Section B p 3 column 1 Thompson Krissah May 8 2013 Assata Shakur was convicted of murder Is she a terrorist The Washington Post Davison Phil May 2 1998 Cuba s American refugees The Independent London p 13 a b McQuiston John T October 12 1987 Fugitive murderer reported in Cuba The New York Times Section A Page 1 Column 1 Retrieved on June 1 2008 a b Rodriguez 2006 p 64 a b Wilfredo Cancio Isla December 18 2007 U S fugitive a hero to Fidel but a curiosity to many McClatchy Newspapers via Houston Chronicle The Miami Herald published this article as Fugitive a curiosity in Cuba Farley Anthony Paul March 2001 Symposium Critical Legal Histories Lilies of the Field A Critique of Adjudication Cardozo Law Review 22 1013 Farley Anthony Paul Fall 2005 Going Back to Class The Reemergence of Class in Critical Race Theory Symposium Essay Accumulation Michigan Journal of Race amp Law 11 51 Hames Garcia Michael 2004 Fugitive Thought Prison Movements Race and the Meaning of Justice Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 0816643148 Perkins Margo 1999 Autobiography as Activism Three Black Women of the Sixties Jackson University Press of Mississippi ISBN 9781578062645 Ravo Nick October 13 1987 Officials Can t Confirm Chesimard Is in Havana The New York Times Section B Page 3 Column 5 BBC Radio 4 15 Minute Drama Assata Shakur The FBI s Most Wanted Woman Episode 4 BBC The New Abolitionists Retrieved April 19 2018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Chicago Sun Times December 28 1997 N J cops enlist pope Seek help in getting fugitive out of Cuba p 34 Shakur Assata An Open Letter from Assata The Talking Drum Collective p 2 Retrieved on May 9 2008 Shakur Assata and Lewis Ida E November 1 2000 Assata Shakur Profiled and on the Run New Crisis 107 6 The 85th anniversary of the death of Harriet Tubman according to Brath 1998 Brath Elombe March 13 1998 N J Bloodhounds on Assata s Trail NY Daily Challenge Retrieved on May 9 2008 James Joy p 115 H Con Res 254 105th Congress 1997 1998 Congress gov October 21 1998 Retrieved November 30 2020 Batista Carlos March 18 2002 Cuba seeks deals with US to fight terror migrant smuggling Agence France Presse a b Waters Maxine September 29 1998 Congresswoman Waters issues statement on U S Freedom Fighter Assata Shakur HYPE Information Service Retrieved on May 9 2008 Cleaver Kathleen 2005 The Fugitive Why has the FBI placed a million dollar bounty on Assata Shakur The Talking Drum Collective Retrieved on May 9 2008 a b Williams Houston May 2 2005 U S Government Declares 2 Million Bounty For Assata Shakur Tupac s Godmother a b c Allen Mills Tony May 27 2007 Bounty hunt for US cop killer on Cuba The Sunday Times p 27 Parry Wayne May 24 2005 NY councilman plans rally against Chesimard bounty AP Wood Sam May 15 2006 Always a priority Fugitive cop killers Philadelphia Inquirer Associated Press May 12 2005 Castro won t hand over killer of N J trooper Boston Globe Castro did not refer to Shakur by name but did describe a woman placed on the U S government terrorist watch list on May 2 Griego Tina December 20 2014 Cuba still harbors one of America s most wanted fugitives What happens to Assata Shakur now Washington Post Trump calls on Cuba to return U S fugitives including cop killer Chesimard The Washington Times washingtontimes com June 16 2017 Retrieved June 17 2017 Neal Mark Anthony May 5 2000 Like Water for Chocolate Common s Recipe for Progressive Hip Hop Pop Matters Retrieved on April 7 2007 Robinson Eugene July 18 2004 Exiles The Washington Post W23 Arenson Karen W December 13 2006 CUNY Chief Orders Names Stripped From Student Center The New York Times Retrieved on May 9 2008 Zambito Thomas January 7 2007 CUNY sued in cop killer naming flap New York Daily News p 3 Wise Daniel April 8 2010 First Amendment Violation Claim Proceeds Against College Over Removed Plaque New York Law Journal Retrieved on April 8 2010 Honan William H April 12 1995 Two Scholarships Given New Names After Controversy The New York Times Section B p 11 column 4 Retrieved on June 1 2008 Bucknell University April 1 2008 Superhero Inspiration for Course on Black Heroes Perkins 2000 Hepp Rick October 31 2004 Chesimard still stirs admiration and scorn The Star Ledger p 23 The Star Ledger January 19 1996 Black Ex Trooper Tells Trial of Poster of Killer Chesimard Made to Mock Rodriguez 2006 p 61 Boyd Herb 2002 Race and Resistance African Americans in the Twenty first Century South End Press ISBN 0 89608 652 6 p 116 Frydenlund Zach Common Pulled From Kean University Commencement Speech After Police Complaints Complex com Retrieved April 3 2015 Garza Alicia A Herstory of the BlackLivesMatter Movement The Feminist Wire Retrieved August 28 2015 Zacharias Michelle February 17 2016 Activists of every stripe unite in ICE civil disobedience People s World Retrieved March 14 2016 Colin Kaepernick April donations Archived from the original on October 12 2017 Retrieved October 13 2017 Assata Shakur birthday honored by Women s March organizers Fox News July 18 2017 When the Resistance Gets Reprehensible National Review Lampen Claire July 21 2017 Six months after the Women s March on Washington the Resistance Revival has a message for Trump Mic Retrieved July 22 2017 County pays 15K to FBI fugitive part of Freeman Park land deal Sources edit Browder Laura 2006 Her Best Shot Women and Guns in America UNC Press ISBN 0 8078 3050 X Burrough Bryan Days of Rage America s Radical Underground the FBI and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence Penguin Publishing Group 2016 ISBN 9780143107972 Christol Helene Gysin Fritz and Mulvey Christopher eds 2001 Militant Autobiography The Case of Assata Shakur in Black Liberation in the Americas LIT Verlag Berlin Hamburg Munster ISBN 3 8258 5137 0 Churchill Ward and James Vander Wall 2002 The Cointelpro papers documents from the FBI s secret wars against dissent in the United States South End Press ISBN 0 89608 648 8 Cleaver Kathleen and Katsiaficas George N 2001 Liberation Imagination and the Black Panther Party A New Look at the Panthers and Their Legacy Routledge ISBN 0 415 92783 8 James Joy 2003 Imprisoned Intellectuals America s Political Prisoners Write on Life Liberation and Rebellion Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 7425 2027 7 Jones Charles Earl 1998 The Black Panther Party Reconsidered Black Classic Press ISBN 0 933121 96 2 Kunstler William Moses 1994 My Life as a Radical Lawyer Secaucus New Jersey Birch Lane Press ISBN 1 55972 265 7 Perkins Margo V 2000 Autobiography as Activism Three Black Women of the Sixties Univ Press of Mississippi ISBN 1 57806 264 0 Rodriguez Dylan 2006 Forced Passages Imprisoned Radical Intellectuals and the U S Prison Regime University of Minnesota Press ISBN 0 8166 4560 4 Scheffler Judith A 2002 Wall Tappings An International Anthology of Women s Prison Writings 200 to the Present Feminist Press ISBN 1 55861 273 4 Shakur Assata 1987 New edition November 1 1999 Assata An Autobiography Chicago Lawrence Hill Books ISBN 1 55652 074 3 Tomlinson Gerald 1994 Murdered in Jersey Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 2078 9 Williams Evelyn 1993 Inadmissible Evidence The Story of the African American Trial Lawyer Who Defended the Black Liberation Army Brooklyn N Y Lawrence Hill Books ISBN 1 55652 184 7 Further reading editBelton Brian A 2007 Assata Shakur A Voice from the Palenques in Black Routes Legacy of African Diaspora Hansib Publications Ltd ISBN 978 1 870518 92 5 Tenorio Sam C 2021 Assata s escape as disincarceral practice Cultural Dynamics 33 1 2 1 17 doi 10 1177 0921374020935137 ISSN 0921 3740 S2CID 225743651 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Assata Shakur nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Assata Shakur New Most Wanted Terrorist Joanne Chesimard First Woman Added to List May 2 2013 Federal Bureau of Investigation Assata Shakur Speaks website in support of Shakur The Story of Joanne Chesimard May 2003 editorial NJLawman com The Eyes Of The Rainbow documentary Immoral Bounty for Assata by Michael Ratner Covert Action Quarterly October 27 1998 Why Cuba will never send Assata Shakur to the U S by Achy Obejas Chicago Tribune December 29 2014 Most Wanted Terrorists JOANNE DEBORAH CHESIMARD Federal Bureau of Investigation Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Socialism nbsp Law nbsp United States nbsp Cuba Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Assata Shakur amp oldid 1198991162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.