Note: BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member Chuck Turner is writing this
column from the U.S. Federal Prison in Hazelton, West Virginia
where he is serving a three year term for a bribery conviction.
This
is the first of eight chapters� in which I discuss my two
and a half year experience with the Justice Department that
has led to my being a convicted felon at the work camp at
USP Hazelton, Bruceton Mills, West Virginia.
My
first reaction was that I was dreaming; no, I was having
a nightmare but I couldn't wake up. After a lifetime of
fighting for justice, I was in handcuffs being led out of
City Hall. I didn't even know what I was being accused of.
Later, it became all too clear, not only from the prosecutor
describing me as a corrupt politician but also from the
newspaper headlines the next morning screaming that I had
been indicted for conspiracy to extort money from a local
community business man and lying about it to the FBI.
How
could this happen? I knew I hadn't done what they said but
there were the camera trucks in front of our house. Reporters
knocking at the door, urging me to talk to them as if it
was my responsibility to answer their questions. Sure, they
were just doing their job but they were part of an establishment
that I had been fighting for decades. Yet, here they were
ridiculing me, mocking me, gloating over my alleged hypocrisy.
I felt like Alice in Wonderful and I had no idea how to
get out of the rabbit hole.
The
situation was totally absurd. Just eighteen months earlier
I had declared my intention to launch a Peace and Prosperity
Campaign. I had said to my constituents that after eight
years in office, I was convinced that we needed to revise
our strategy. It was not enough to organize and fight against
the external forces of oppression, those who believed they
had the right to abuse us. It was not enough to use the
City Council process to establish new laws and regulations.
We had to recognize that we had to do for self. We had to
be the source of our strength and development.
We
had to recognize, I said, that through our own individual
and collective actions we had to create the foundation for
the future that we needed and desired not only for ourselves
but also for our children and their children's children.
I argued that we needed to recognize that the prosperity
that we hungered for as a community and individually could
only be realized by establishing peace in our community
and dedicating ourselves to using our talents and resources
to regenerate ourselves. I said we needed a Campaign for
Peace and Prosperity. We needed to put into action a pledge
to constantly work to develop ourselves and our community.
There was even a motto, "Do No Harm".
I
wondered what would be the questions in the minds of people
who had heard and remembered my call. What would be the
thoughts of those who had slowly begun to get involved in
the strategy I was urging? While I was trusted in the community
that I had lived and worked in for over forty years, how
would they withstand the media bombardment. How would they
resist the accusations that their Councilor was an extortionist,
conspiring with our first female black state senator to
extort money from a local businessman, attempting to get
a liquor license for a club that he planned to open in the
community's new and first hotel.
What
could I say to my constituents that could allay their fears
and doubts? How could I convince them that I was not a hypocrite?
I knew I was innocent but I also knew that the constant
barrage of convicting information would make even those
close to me wonder what had happened. At least, I knew that
eventually the truth would come out and I would be able
to laugh at what a horrible mistake had been made. I hadn't
done what they said so how could I be convicted. Even the
FBI's affidavit was full of holes that would allow my lawyer
to quickly end the nightmare.
Yet,
today 31 months after my arrest, I am an inmate at the Hazelton
Federal Prison work camp in the mountains of West Virginia.
I am ending the third month of my 36 month sentence. Despite
my optimism that the truth would come out; despite the fact
that the U.S. Attorney's Cooperating Witness said in the
Boston Globe 6 months after my arrest that as far as he
was concerned I was innocent, naive but innocent; despite
the constant display of support from friends, constituents
and allies before, during, and after the trial; and despite
over 700 letters to the judge saying that I should be put
on probation, here I sit a convicted felon.��
However,
I have learned during my 71 years that the art of living
is not demonstrated by how you celebrate your victories
but by your ability to� turn seeming defeats into victories.
Yes, I feel battered but certainly not broken. The struggle
for justice is a continuing one and my commitment to devote
my life as a warrior to that struggle still burns bright.
The question as always is what to do and as usual the answer
is clear. Even before I entered USP Hazelton, I knew I needed
a plan to guide my actions. My plan would have to focus
on preparing myself to reenter the struggle stronger on
every level than when I left. It would have to enable me
to continue to share my thinking with my community, and
finally it would need to enable me to fulfill a commitment
made to my community at a rally in front of my community
office six days after my arrest on the day before Thanksgiving,
2008.�
At
the rally, energized by having survived a plot initiated
by the City Council President (and others I assume) to drive
me from office on the day after my arrest, I decided to
focus on the opportunities that the situation presented
us. I urged my supporters to build a communications network
among friends, coworkers, and colleagues. I talked about
talking points that they should raise to counter the media's
incessant attacks on my character. It was an opportunity,
I declared, to stimulate critical thinking and increase
our community's capacity to see through the smoke screens
put out by the establishment's mouthpieces.
I
emphasized that while I was fighting for my survival, the
struggle is more important than anyone one individual. I
stressed that those of us who commit ourselves to struggle
for justice have to be prepared to use the attacks to strengthen
our community despite the casualties that will inevitably
take place. From that perspective, I knew that regardless
of what happened to me, i had a responsibility to turn this
attack into a learning experience through which we all could
learn and grow.�
Since
it was obvious that US Attorney Sullivan and his police
force, the FBI, were conspiring to frame me for a crime
that I didn't commit, I pointed out the golden opportunity
we were presented to examine up close and personal how they
operate. They continuously study us to assess our strengths
and weaknesses. We should do no less if we are serious in
our pursuit of justice. Through such a rigorous analysis
and examination of their tactics, we could help our brothers
and sisters in the struggle become wiser in evading the
"criminal justice system's" continuous attempts
to thwart justice and use prison to turn us into a permanent
underclass and thus re enslave us.
With
this focus on education, I will share with you each week
over the next seven weeks an installment exploring the twists
and turns of the Frame Up that led to my incarceration.
As with all initial attempts to deepen the understanding
of our experiences, I know that there will be gaps and issues
that others will see the need to explore. The objective
of this exercise is to stimulate our thinking and sharpen
our ability to critically analyze the stratagems that are
used against us. It is clear to me that if we are to be
successful in ending the use of the "criminal justice
system" to perpetuate injustice, we have to sharpen
our thinking so that we can act more effectively.
In
1975, there were 500,000 people of all races in jail in
this country. Today, there are 2.3 million and the numbers
are growing. Over a million are of African-American descent.
The correction officers union, I've been told, is the fastest
growing union in this country. It is clear that if we are
to lay the foundation for justice for future generations
we have to stop the prosecutorial terrorism that is plaguing
us all. In that spirit, please view this as an initial attempt
to use my personal experience to broaden the needed national
dialogue on how to end this terrorism.
In
the remainder of this installment, I am going to share my
background and the life of activism and service that it
inspired. I have always believed that a fundamental principle
of organizing is that the organizer should not be the focus.
Campaigns are successful when the focus is on the goals
to be achieved, the plan to achieve them, and the process
of analyzing successes and failures. Too much attention
on the organizer is distracting and dims the organization's
focus. However, since one of the objectives of former US
Attorney Sullivan's plot was to create the image that I
was a fraud, hypocrite, and fundamentally corrupt, I think
it is important that I begin by helping people better understand
who I am.
I
was born in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1940. I was blessed to have
been born into a family that had two predominant passions
- a thirst for knowledge and a desire to serve. Education
was the "family business" on both my mother's
and my father's side of the family. My mother's mother was
a teacher who became an elementary school principal. My
mother was a school teacher and my brother became a college
professor and dean. My father's father was a high school
biology teacher by day and a scientist by night having earned
a PHD in Zoology from the University of Chicago in 1907.
Upon his death in 1923, he was honored by the St. Louis
Science Society for his work on animal behavioral psychology.
Later the City of St. Louis named a school after him.
While
education was viewed as a service, other members of the
family found other ways to serve. My mother's sister was
a social worker, focusing her work on children. Her brother,
my uncle, was a landscaper. My father was a pharmacist and
owned with his brother, my uncle, a drug store that had
the unique feature of having a pharmacy on one side managed
by my father and a bar on the other, managed by his brother.
Other members of the family sorted themselves out along
the same lines of education and business with service to
our people as the link. One of my grandmother's brother
was at Niagara Falls in 1909 as a participant in the founding
of the NAACP.
My
father and mother divorced when I was young and I grew up
in Cincinnati with my mother and her family while my father
lived in Chicago where he operated his business. Given Cincinnati's
location on the Ohio River, I remember as a child hearing
stories of my grandmother going with friends and her children
down to the landing where the river boats would bring new
arrivals from the South. My grandmother's purpose was to
welcome the new families into Cincinnati and help them establish
a new life as part of the community. I remember going with
my family to Ms. Stewart's Home for Young Women which was
a boarding house for young "colored" women coming
to Cincinnati. Outings to Ms. Stewart's where we would have
dinner with the young women were a delight not only because
of the food but also because of the beautiful young women
and delightful conversations.
While
I grew up with a sense of community, sharing, and service,
there also was the other side of life for the African-American
community. The time was the 40s, so segregation was the
way of life once you crossed the river and it had a strong
influence on life in Cincinnati despite the strong and wealthy
Jewish community that flourished in the city. The local
amusement park was not integrated until I was 10 years old
and I grew up hearing stories of the times when you couldn't
try on clothes in a store or had to sit upstairs in the
movie theatre.� Black children living in a public housing
development in a white neighborhood were bussed to a black
school miles away.
By
the time I was a teenager, overt discrimination was not
legal in the city; yet that didn't prevent the manager of
a coffee shop in downtown Cincinnati refusing me service
when I was 13 and looking for a job in the market area.
When she asked me to leave because they didn't "serve
Negroes", I said that the law said I didn't have to
leave so she called the police. Upon arriving, the policeman
apologized to her that there was nothing he could do. She
then closed the coffee shop. By that time, I was enjoying
the game and waited until she opened and again entered.
At this point, she decided I think that business was more
important than showing me who was in control and served
me.
So
I grew up in two worlds: one warm, supportive, and nurturing;
the other cold and hostile. That is not to say that there
were no shades of gray. I went to an integrated high school
where I had friends of all races. I participated in organizations
designed to bring people of all races together to understand
our differences and to work collectively on the problems
confronting us. Yet, the sense of living in two worlds was
always there. Even more disturbing was the fact that there
were constant reminders that as African-Americans, we had
to understand that we were inferior. It was even said that
the Bible documented the sin that had led to our eternal
inferiority. Yet, my mother was the youngest graduate of
the University of Cincinnati, graduating at 18 in 1928 until
my brother graduated from U.C. in 1947 at 16. It all seemed
like a bad dream - a nightmare in fact.
With
an ingrained two world perspective, I headed off to Harvard
at 18 with a full scholarship in my pocket. My years there
resulted in a Harvard BA in government and a thorough exposure
to the glories of the Anglo-Saxon culture and its contributions
to the world. In addition, it further ingrained the fact
that I lived in two worlds that did not mesh. Probably,
the most frustrating� part was that with a Harvard degree,
I was viewed as having a excellent education. However, given
the constant emphasis on the inferiority of my people, I
gained no knowledge that helped me understand why this Christian
nation behaved in such a devilish way. I was looking for
answers to the questions: Where do we come from; why are
we here; and where do we go after our spirits leave our
bodies. They were questions that I thought were reasonable
for an educated man but Harvard had no answers.
So
off into the world I went. Harvard degree at the bottom
of a box of books. My family's warning imprinted on my mind.
Despite the impressive individual accomplishments that family
members had achieved, there was a constant reminder that
what we had accomplished had only been possible because
of the sacrifices and struggles of countless unknown others
who had laid a foundation upon which we could build. In
other words, no matter how much individual success and how
many accomplishments I might achieve, they would have no
meaning if the accomplishments didn't create a base that
future generations could use in the continuous struggle
for justice. "To whom much is given, much is expected."
I
didn't know what I was to do but at least I had a standard
to measure my success. Having majored in government and
thinking that law might provide the framework for the service
I was seeking, I headed to D.C., ironically arriving on
August 23, 1963. Thus, I had the opportunity to stand with
hundreds of thousands and hear Dr. King and others give
the call to action. A few days later, I was able to get
a job as a reporter on the Washington Afro-American newspaper
that granted me access to downtown and uptown life.
It
was a fascinating opportunity to be in what seemed to be
the hub of the universe, chronicling the change happening
around us. However, I soon bored of writing about what others
were doing. As if life felt my need, in November I ran into
a college classmate and Alpha brother, Bill Strickland,
at a SNCC convention I was covering who asked if i was interested
in joining him in New York as editor of the newsletter of
the organization he was heading, the Northern Student Movement
(NSM). NSM had begun as a northern group of students providing
support for the movement in the South. However, Bill and
others had changed the focus to organizing in black communities
of New York, Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia, and Hartford,
Conn.
Again,
while editing was interesting,� when the opportunity to
join a rent strike organizing project in Harlem came, I
went. I joined with a group of young organizers who were
apprenticing with Jesse Gray who had been using the rent
strike tactic to challenge landlords for decades. In 1964,
the courts had declared the strategy legal as long as certain
guidelines were followed. So into the streets of Harlem
we went ready to organize all those who previously had been
afraid but needed change.
After
a few weeks, the romance wore off. Despite deplorable conditions
and the new law, we encountered people's internal resistance
to change. Hearing our frustrations, Jesse would patiently
say to us, "People know when they are ready. You don't.
Your job is to test their readiness. If they aren't ready,
move on". As my experience grew over the years, I began
to understand how that philosophy had enabled Jesse and
others to maintain their energy and optimism despite the
frustrations and slowness of the process.
From
Harlem, I went to Hartford to replace the director at the
NSM project in Connecticut's capital city. The challenge
of building and maintaining a multifaceted organization
was fascinating and frustrating. We organized around a variety
of issues from slum landlords to job discrimination, raising
money to pay ourselves when national funds ran scarce.�
Challenging people to stand up was exciting as well as grueling
work. However, it came to a screeching halt when a demonstration
we organized to confront police brutality led to confrontations
between the police and community, resulting in my arrest
and the arrest of others in the organization and community.
We
were charged with sedition and a variety of other charges
that hadn't been used since the Sacco and Venzentti days.
In view of the media focus around outside organizers, the
national organization suggested that those of us who were
not from Hartford should leave until the trial to allow
for the situation to cool down. Given that there was an
NSM project in Boston's black community I went there.� By
the time the cases were heard and I received probation,
I had obtained a job as an organizer with a local poverty
program and was ready to plant my roots in Roxbury, the
heart of Boston's black community.
During
the three years between my leaving Cambridge in 1963 and
returning to Boston in 1966, I gave up the idea of becoming
a lawyer. While organizing was tough, demanding work, I
was convinced that organizing people always needed to be
at the core of my work. I had come to realize that through
organizing I would be able to meet my family commitment
to have my life's work have benefit and meaning for the
African-American struggle for justice. It� was also beginning
to become clear that organizing could be a means to bring
together the two worlds that I lived in. Perhaps, most important,
it satisfied my growing appreciation for our human ability
to create new realities as we come together to focus our
physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual energy on a common
purpose.
During
the last forty five years, I have been driven by a desire
to both fight back against oppression and to demonstrate
the power of organized action to bring justice. My motto
could have been, "Have a need, let's organize".
Organizing the burning of trash as a community worker in
Lower Roxbury in the late 60s led to an agreement with my
boss to leave the organization but pushed the City to clean
an area, ignored for years.
The
need for unity in the late sixties in the Black and Latino
community led to the formation of the Boston Black United
Front which became the voice of the progressive community
of color in Boston. A highway threatening our community
spurred the development of Operation Stop, the joining of
a regional transportation alliance against the highway,
and the formation of the Southwest Corridor Land Development
Coalition which produced a plan that guided the development
of the land once the Governor rerouted the highway around
Boston.
The
need for a greater share of the construction jobs in Roxbury
stimulated the development of a state wide black, Latino,
and Asian alliance, The Third World Jobs Clearing House
with offices in Boston, Cambridge, Worcester, and Springfield
that operated for five years until the Reagan administration
eliminated the funding base.��
At
the same time the need for a multiracial political alliance
in Boston to protect affirmative action in the construction
industry led to the formation of the Boston Jobs Coalition,
an alliance of black, white, Latino, and Asian community
groups, that led the fight for a local jobs policy, guaranteeing
a share of all City financed and aided projects to Boston
workers of all races, people of color, and women. This policy,
linking affirmative action to residency, became a national
model that is used today in cities across the country under
the name, the First Source Program.
My
need to see workers develop economic power by pooling their
talents led to my becoming education director of the Industrial
Cooperative Association, a nonprofit consulting firm, focused
on aiding workers in the formation of businesses that they
could own cooperatively. I then spent the next five years
helping workers throughout the country develop the capacity
to be owners as well as workers.
Organizing
around the need for a community voice in the land use decisions
in Roxbury led in 1983 to Mayor Flynn granting the Roxbury
Neighborhood Council a guaranteed role in all land use decisions
and granting five other communities the right to establish
such Councils with similar powers.
The
need to assure that community workers would get jobs as
part of the Boston Jobs Policy led to the formation of the
Greater Roxbury Workers' Association which became a major
force in securing construction jobs for community workers
for the next fifteen years.
Frustration
with the level of violence in the community and the need
to develop strategies to change the thinking of the perpetrators
led me to take a job as a counselor and eventually a manager
at Emerge, the nation's first organization to provide counseling
services to men, convicted of domestic violence. My objective
was to develop an understanding of the psychological dynamics
that lead to violence in order to develop behavior modification
strategies.
The
need to educate the community on the devastating effects
and extent of domestic violence in the community, led to
the development of the Community Task Force on Domestic
Violence, as a vehicle through which education and organizing
could be initiated.
After
35 years of fighting against injustice from outside of government,
a need to strengthen organizing in the community led me
to attempt to use elective office as an organizing tool.
In 1999, I ran for and won a Boston City Council seat representing
the community in which I had lived and worked for decades.�
Once
in office, the need for a vehicle through which to link
my political representation to community organizing led
to the development of the District 7 Roundtable, a monthly
forum bringing residents and activists together to discuss
issues, exchange ideas, and develop policy initiatives that
could lead to political organizing and legislative action.
The
2000 Census showing that people of color were now the majority
population in the City put a spotlight on the need for more
political operational unity. To strengthen the unity between
groups and people of color, the institutes at U Mass Boston
focused on the black, Latino, and Asian communities sponsored
a conference which led to organization of the New Majority
Coalition.
The
need to end the discrimination against those with criminal
records led to the formation of the Boston Workers' Alliance
(BWA) which played a leadership role in the development
and passage of a state law combating such discrimination
as well as� removing the question of criminal conviction
from the state job application.
Knowing
that political victories alone are not enough, the BWA in
its six year history has also established a worker staffing
agency to provide income to the organization and jobs for
its members. In addition it has helped its members establish
businesses based on the philosophy that a job is not enough.
The
recognition of an opportunity for additional community resources
in an era of shrinking dollars led to my advocacy for the
City to lease rather than sell City owned land in Roxbury
designated for economic development.� Eventually the City
agreed to the policy on the city owned parcels in the Dudley
Square area and to share the lease fees with the community.
Negotiations are now taking place regarding the size of
the community's share and the vehicle for the determination
of use and distribution of the funds.
Obviously,
those of us who seek to institutionalize the practice of
justice in this country are far from our goal. Therefore,
the struggle for justice and a civilized society must continue
through the development of new forms of organization and
strategies. As Maulana Ron Karenga said in the January 11,
2011 issue of the Final Call, "...to be organized is
to be in ongoing structures that harness our energies and
house and advance our interests and aspirations and unite
us into an aware and active social force for African and
human good in the world". Former Massachusetts U.S.
Attorney Michael Sullivan has temporarily succeeded in removing
me from the front lines of the Boston struggle for justice.
However, while I rest and prepare myself my return to the
battle, others are continuing relentlessly to struggle to
make Boston and this country a beacon for the practice of
justice throughout the world.
As
I look back over my 48 years of activism and service, I
realize that I have been walking in the footsteps of my
grandfather, Charles Henry Turner*, for whom I was named.
His passion focused on studying the behavior of mice, roaches,
insects of all kinds, and particularly bees and ants with
their highly organized group behavior. He focused his life
on understanding the behavior of life forms that many consider
as "pests", unwanted intrusions into their space
rather than seeing them as my grandfather saw them, as an
essential aspect of God's creation.
My
passion has been and continues to be the study of the innate
ability of human beings to create new realities through
organized action. Because of my African-American ancestry,
I have focused on the demonstration of those capabilities
by those human beings considered by many in this country
as inferior life forms, an unwanted intrusion into their
space. Hopefully, we will soon learn to recognize all human
beings as beings created "in the image of God",
each possessing a divine creative spirit.
A
Luta Continua--The Struggle Continues,
Chuck�
*
The following books have more information on my grandfather's
scientific work:
1)
Bug
Watching With Charles Henry Turner (Naturalist's Apprentice
Biographies),
Michael Elsohn Ross, 1997 (A children's book)
2)
Selected
Papers and Biography of Charles Henry Turner 1867-1923:
Pioneer of Comparative Animal Behavior Studies (Black Studies),
Professor Charles Abramson, The Edward Mellon Press, 2003
(An academic study of his life and work including a history
of the Troy-Knight-Turner Family that I wrote at the author's
request)
Next Week: Chapter Two: The Keystone Cops Strike Again
Click here to
read any part in this BC series.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board Member Chuck
Turner - Served as a member of the Boston City Council
for ten years and eleven months. He was a member and founder
of the Fund the Dream campaign and was the Chair of the
Council�s Human Rights Committee, and Vice Chair of the
Hunger and Homelessness Committee. Click here to
contact Mr. Turner. Your email messages will be passed on
to Mr. Turner by BC. You may also visit SupportChuckTurner.com.
You
may also write to Mr. Turner. The address is:
Charles
Turner #80641038
Hazelwood Penitentiary, P.O. Box 2000
Bruceton Mills, West Virginia 26525
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