Tue Dec 13 2005
Former Crips Gangmember Rehabilitated, but Killed Anyways
12/13/2005:
Stanley Tookie Williams III was executed early this morning by lethal injection administered by the state of California.
Williams, who was weeks from his 52nd birthday, is said to have been a co-founder of the Crips gang in Los Angeles.
In 1981, he was convicted of the 1979 murders of four people in the Los Angeles area. After 6.5 years in solitary
confinement on Death Row at San Quentin, he renounced his past gang affiliation. He wrote several books and started
programs to discourage youth from joining gangs. A film starring Jamie Foxx entitled "Redemption: The Stan Tookie Williams
Story," was made to tell his story. Williams never admitted to having committed the murders for which he was convicted.
This was one reason that Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger cited for
denying him clemency. Supporters of Williams tried to submit issues to various legal bodies in hopes of being granted a stay of
execution. If a 60-day stay had been granted, it would have given time for courts to examine the legal issues that are
outstanding in the case. It would have also given California's legislative bodies a chance to vote on AB 1121, the
California Moratorium on Executions Act. Read more
Thousands of protesters held a vigil in front of San Quentin as Williams was killed. Photos:
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Coverage of People's Clemency Hearing and 12/12 Protests
Read More about Tookie on Indybay's Police State and California News Pages
