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Tookie’s Final Hour

By Jennifer Liss, WireTap. Posted December 13, 2005.


Protesters come from different walks of life, full of hope that Williams’ life might be spared in the last minute. Many believed he was worth more to society alive than dead.
tookie_img
Protesters converge on the street that leads to San Quentin

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"I've had it." Sepideh Khosrowjah, a 45 year-old economist, couldn't sit at home in El Cerrito. She's outraged. "This country is so uncivilized: exporting democracy, practicing barbarism."

She was drawn to the East Gate of San Quentin prison to protest the December 13 execution of Stanley "Tookie" Williams, the notorious gang leader and death row inmate charged with murder, who became internationally celebrated peace advocate, children's book author, and Nobel Peace Prize nominee.

It is a just few minutes past 10 p.m. Williams is scheduled to die in less than two hours and Khosrowjah says, "I'm still hoping," and shuts her wide brown eyes.

Many vigil attendees faced a long walk from far-off parking spots to San Quentin prison. They converged on the street that leads to the East Gate, a quaint, tree-lined two-laner with handsome homes that look out onto the bay. There is an eerie sense of serenity on that street and a distinct California smell: the scent of Eucalyptus trees.

If that wasn't surreal enough, tonight, the street resembles a movie set. There are media wagons and bright lights in every driveway and along the sidewalk. It is 48 degrees outside, but much warmer under the lights and in the crowd. One police officer I asked estimated that the crowd numbered 1,000, but other reports double that number.

The crowd is diverse, and charged but somber. There are people meditating, a handful of hecklers, groups singing hymns, and many photographers, professional and not. There is a saxophonist and a man passing out bagels and tangerines. Joan Baez, Angela Davis, and other well-known opponents are said to have been on stage.

Most of them are here because they oppose the death penalty. Many of them believe that Williams is worth more to society alive than dead.

tookie_img
Many protesters were hoping for last-minute clemency.

Abdul-Karim Nasrullahi is smoking a cigarette with his back to about two dozen police officers. When I ask Nasrullahi, who has traveled up from Fresno, if he has ever supported the death penalty, he tells me a story about an electric wheelchair. The wheelchair, much fancier than the one he has now, was stolen from him. "But I don't want the guy to go to jail. I want him to be rehabilitated."

Nasrullahi's been to prison six times, and he has spent a total of 22 years behind bars. He claims he knows people who knew Williams "when he was on the street." He says he has friends who have been executed. When asked how he spends his days now, Nasrullahi says, "Trying to stop the death penalty." He's been to several execution vigils and he participates in advocacy organizations.

Nasrullahi looks around at the crowd. "I wish all these people here would have turned out in Sacramento. People come out when someone's going to die. Some people just want to say, I was there."

He takes a last drag on his cigarette and tosses it behind him. It lands on the shoe of a fellow protester. Nasrullahi nods an apology, a young woman places a "Save Tookie" sign in his lap, and he rolls off into the crowd.


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Jennifer Liss is a contributing writer to WireTap Magazine based in San Francisco.

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upset
Posted by: captainhoke87 on Dec 13, 2005 8:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
am i the only one that considers executing a man who was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize ludicrous???

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» RE: upset Posted by: picks4u2
» RE: upset Posted by: Lizka
» RE: upset Posted by: Givhan
what happens now?
Posted by: meprieb on Dec 14, 2005 6:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What I want to know is: what are all those people who protested going to do now? Are they going to go home and say, "that was sad and disgusting" but go back to their everyday lives? Probably. Are some of them going to find the next capital punishment victim and protest his/her death? Probably.

But how many of them will put effort/money/time/thought into changing the system that puts people in the lifestyle that leads them to crimes that are punishable by capital punishment. If those people spent more time trying to prevent circumstances the lead to and promote a violent/gangster lifestyle, we might see fewer people in Tookie's position.

I don't like captial punishment, and I think the protesters mean well, but let's try to get at the roots of the problem, not talk about it when people are on their lethal-injection deathbed.

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» RE: what happens now? Posted by: diana7
A Hero Taken, A Zero Lives
Posted by: malcolmartin on Dec 14, 2005 3:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Farewell Stanley “Tookie” Williams. Your life's trial is over but your people’s rage will burn for years to come against the wealthy white men who murdered you out of their perverse sense of justice. Up from poverty, deprivation and abandonment Stanley Williams you had the strength and intellect to organize your “loved ones” as you called desperate and despised youths like yourself. You then grew beyond the boundaries of gangsterism to become the kind of serious political threat that convicts like Malcolm X and George Jackson were before their executions. At that point your fate was sealed and no sham "clemency scene" starring Gov. Terminator was going to change it.

But rest assured you were a fully redeemed man in the eyes of the people, from the children you reached out to all the way up to the president of the NAACP Bruce Gordon. You were a man who met his death with such great dignity and courage and the whole of your life shames the pathetic cowardly weaklings that occupy the White House and other seats of power in America. George Bush's lies ended the lives of four more young American soldiers yesterday. That makes 2,150 murders on top of the "30,000 more or less" Iraqi dead he took credit for this week. His trial date is TBA.

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War Criminals and Common Criminals both deserve justice
Posted by: yellow on Dec 17, 2005 3:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I really don't much distinguish between a true war criminal and a common criminal who takes human life. Both deserve execution. It was just to execute Eichmann and others at Nuremburg for murder. It is also just to execute others who commit murder. I guess I just don't understand all this outrage against the death penalty in the US. We are not talking about understandable situations whereby an abused women kills her wifebeating husband or a desperate person kills a blackmailing tormenter trying to ruin his life. Such people deserve clemency! Most of the individuals on death row are remorseless killers who murder innocent people who they frequently don't even know in the most sadistic and disgusting manner often as the victim pleads in vein for his life! To hell with such bastards! How can any thinking person conclude that such people don't deserve to die. To be moved eonough to spend the time and effort to protest in attempt to save such evil people from a just death is completely beyond my comprehension. If there is a reason to feel passionately about their lives please let me know because I certainly can't find one. Let's feel more sympathy for their victims and maybe the senseless killing will cease!

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