Showing posts with label Sharon Poole. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sharon Poole. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

An Exoneration of Convenience

 

December 7, 2021

 

The sudden death of Malikah Shabazz on November 23 was an emotional shock to millions around the globe. Malikah and her twin sister, Malaak, were the youngest of six girls when their father, Malcolm X (Shabazz), was assassinated in 1965. Her death was all the more poignant because it came a few days after the New York Supreme Court announced the exoneration of Thomas 15 X Johnson and Norman 3X Butler, two of three men convicted in 1966 for killing Malcolm.

   The exoneration of Johnson and Butler was a surprise to almost no one familiar with recent events in the bizarre quest to dismiss legally and morally just convictions. Johnson and Butler exhibited immense chutzpah in proclaiming their innocence. Both were arrested less than a week after the February 21 assassination of Malcolm X. At the time of the arrest, both men were on bond in the shooting of Benjamin Brown, another Black Muslim who broke with the Nation of Islam to start his own cult.

 

 

 


 

  The Innocence Project entered the Johnson-Butler fight for exoneration following the release of “Who Killed Malcolm X,” a six-part Netflix documentary which aired in 2020. The series was based on a fallacy about neither man being present at the Audubon Ballroom the day Malcolm lost his life to three armed assassins.

   Thomas Johnson, who died in 2009, testified in the 1966 trial that he was at home with his leg elevated at the time of the assassination, which occurred shortly after three o’clock during a rally attended by approximately 300 people. Oddly enough, Butler claimed that he too was at home with his leg elevated at the time of the assassination.

   If the alibis sound suspicious to you, welcome to reality. The odds of two running buddies and Muslim enforcers from the same mosque being laid up with leg injuries on the date that the man they hated was killed were about a billion to one. The jury convicted both men at the end of a trial lasting nearly three months. The difference between Johnson’s alibi and Butler’s is that Johnson had medical records as evidence showing that he had been in the hospital several times in the past two years for circulatory problems in his right leg.

 Butler could produce no evidence establishing that he was disabled at any time prior to the assassination. His defense attorneys called a physician who claimed that he had treated Butler for a leg injury around the time of the assassination, but when pressed for specifics, the doctor admitted that he had not treated Butler for the injuries until five days after the assassination.

 

 


 

  Butler’s motive in seeking exoneration is clear. He had become a pariah to his many in his family. Indeed, he confessed that some of his children were ashamed of him for his reported role in the assassination, and for which he served twenty years in prison.

   Based on statements by Benjamin Goodman [Karim], most scholars concluded decades ago that Johnson and Butler were framed. In the last decade, however, the claim has proved false. During a series of interviews, Johnson admitted on the record to this writer that he was aware of at least two teams of assassins in the ballroom on that fateful day, while denying his own presence. When I asked him why he was so certain of it, he replied that once Nation of Islam officials confirmed that security around Malcolm X would be lax on February 21, they decided to send in teams of assassins. “It was decided that Malcolm was not going to leave the ballroom alive that day,” he said.

   Earlier this year, I discovered why Johnson was so sure that at least two teams of assassins were present in the Audubon. Johnson’s medical records from Jacobi Hospital in the Bronx reveal that most of the men whom Thomas Hagan, the only assassin arrested at the scene, visited Johnson on several occasions after the assassination but before his trial which began in January 1966 and ended two months later. Johnson, Butler, and Hagan were found guilty of first degree murder and sentenced to life terms.

  Goodman, who was cowering behind stage like most of the men who should have been protecting Malcolm and his family that day, insisted that Johnson and Butler could not have been in the Audubon Ballroom during the assassination. He was adamant that he or other top aides would have recognized them had either man been present. This is a ridiculously self-serving opinion, since Goodman makes no mention of the three men on the center front row who were hiding their faces behind newspapers moments before the assassination.

 

 

 


 

   Sharon 6X Poole, and teenager with whom Goodman was having an extramarital affair, was appalled by the latter’s statements. Unlike Goodman, Poole was a couple of feet away from Malcolm X when the gunmen struck. She positively identified Norman Butler as the man in the brown suit holding an overcoat over his arm as he fired a handgun toward the assembly during his escaped. Another woman who was a few feet from the stage, Yuri Kochiyama, also identified Butler as one of the assassins. Despite these eyewitness accounts, sloppy scholars have decided that they were mistaken and that Goodman, who was not an eyewitness, was more credible.

 

 


 

    Thus, with questionable black scholarship in Johnson and Butler’s favor, the Innocence Project took on the latter’s case. In addition, author Davis Garrow has been pressing the federal government and the state of New York to release the unredacted files on Malcolm X. Since there is abundant proof of federal and state involvement in the assassination of Malcolm X, an obvious decision was made to exonerate the two men.

   Why? Because it meant that the New York Police Department, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Central Intelligence would not have to release their covert files on Malcolm X. Moreover, it wasn’t an abortion of justice in their eyes since both men served a full life sentence following their conviction for the assassination. There was no public outcry because most of Malcolm X’s daughters were duped into believing that Johnson and Butler were framed. Some of them appeared on stage at the Audubon one year ago when the Netflix series debuted.

   The end result is that Butler’s exoneration is a Pyrrhic victory, an exoneration of convenience. Sure, he may fool his family for a while into believing that he was framed, but anyone with an iota of common sense will know better. He will likely file a wrongful conviction suit against New York and probably laugh all the way to the bank with a million dollars or two. But history, for what it’s worth (and that isn’t much these days), will prove that Johnson and Butler got exactly what they deserved in 1966: a life [sentence] for a life.

 

Scenes From A Homicide: Note these still frames of a man fitting Butler's description which were captured outside the Audubon Ballroom moments after the assassination of Malcolm X.

 

 




 

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

New Documents Confirm Role of Convicted Malcolm X Assassins Butler and Johnson

 By Karl Evanzz

Newly discovered documents related to the assassination of Malcolm X confirm that Norman 3X Butler was one of the assassins and that his sidekick, Thomas 15X Johnson, was also involved in the conspiracy.

   The plot to kill Malcolm X was hatched in the spring of 1964 by Elijah Muhammad, leader of the Nation of Islam (NOI), after Malcolm X discovered that Muhammad had fathered more than six children by his teenage secretaries.

   Malcolm X officially split with the Nation of Islam in March 1964. He planned to testify against Muhammad in a paternity suit filed by two of the secretaries in Los Angeles. However, he was gunned down near New York City on February 21, 1965, before the case came to trial.  The secretaries, fearful of being killed, dropped the lawsuit soon after the assassination.

   On the day of the assassination, eyewitnesses said that three men on the front center row of the Audubon Ballroom shot Malcolm X to death immediately after two men stood up in the mid-section of the ballroom and began arguing.

   Numerous eyewitnesses identified one of the shooters as Thomas Hagan, a member of a Newark-area mosque who was captured inside the ballroom after being shot in the left thigh. His left leg was broken during a pummeling by audience members.

The second shooter was identified as Norman 3X Butler, a lieutenant in the Harlem mosque where Malcolm X was once chief minister. Butler and Thomas 15X Johnson, another lieutenant in the Harlem mosque, were arrested on February 26. They were out on bail at the time of their arrest pending trial for shooting Benjamin Brown, a dissident NOI member.

   Johnson, who maintained his innocence until he died in 2009, claimed that he was at home at the time of the assassination. He said that he was temporarily disabled due to circulatory problems in his right leg.

    “I had nothing to do with the assassination,” Johnson told this writer in 2005. He also claimed to not know who was involved. He did admit to knowing, however, about the Nation of Islam’s plan to kill Malcolm X on February 21, and added that there was more than one team of assassins in the Audubon Ballroom that day.

“Once they [the NOI] we found out that they weren’t searching people at the door, there was no way Malcolm was going to leave alive that day,” he said, because multiple teams of assassins were present in the audience.

   Despite his protestations of innocence and not knowing who the actual assassins were, his hospital records reveal that several of the men named in two affidavits by Hagan as his co-conspirators visited Johnson. The hospital records dispel any notion of Johnson’s innocence. Even though he might not have been in the Audubon on February 21, he knew Butler and the team of assassins from Muhammad's Mosque No. 25 in Newark.


 

 

James 3X [McGregor] Shabazz, minister of Mosque No. 25, also visited Johnson. He was believed to be a key player in organizing the assassination. He was shot to death outside his home in 1973 by a rival group of Muslims in Newark.

 

 

 During the joint trial of Hagan, Butler, and Johnson in February 1966, Butler claimed that he, too, was laid up with a debilitating leg injury on the day of the assassination and that his physician could prove it. However, when his doctor was called to the stand, he testified that he did not see Butler until February 25, which was four days after the assassination.

He testified further that Butler’s injury was consistent with someone having fallen down steps. Eyewitnesses told police minutes after the assassination that one of the assassins appeared to have injured his leg when he jumped down steps leading to the exit of the ballroom.

   Some scholars insist that both Butler and Johnson were framed, but these discoveries confirm eyewitness accounts of Butler’s role as an assassin and further refute the contention that Butler was given an unfair lineup.

 

 

 


   As this document and others prove, Butler was in most instances subjected to a standard lineup in which a witness was asked to determine whether anyone in the lineup was the person they saw commit the crime. Butler was selected by numerous eyewitnesses. He also fits the description given by eyewitnesses moments after the assassination of Malcolm X.

 Moreover, Sharon 6X Poole, a former member of the Harlem mosque, distinctly recalled seeing one of the assassins at the Harlem mosque. She later identified Norman 3X Butler as the person she saw shoot Malcolm X.

Even more incriminating is documentary footage captured moments after the assassination. It shows a person fitting Butler’s description forcing his way through a crowd to get a look at Malcolm X’s body as it is taken to the hospital across the street from the Audubon.

 


 

 


The footage also shows a tall, bearded black man fighting to free Hagan from the clutches of the police and eyewitnesses. This man was later identified as William Bradley of the Newark mosque.

   In an affidavit signed in 1977, Hagan swore that neither Butler nor Johnson were involved in the assassination. Instead, he claimed that an individual named Leon Davis was one of the shooters who used a handgun. He also claimed that a “Ben Thomas” and a “Wilbur McKinley” also participated along with William Bradley.

 

https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Hayer_affidavits

  

   A document from Johnson’s hospital records show that he was visited by the following NOI members from New Jersey  between August 1964 and December 1965:

·                     Earl Davis, 166 Wells Street in Paterson, New Jersey.

·                     Leon 3X Davis, 166 Wells Street, Paterson.

·                     James 3X McGregor (Shabazz), Newark minister.

·                     Captain John 3X Nash, Newark mosque.

·                     Edwina X McCallum, Newark mosque.

·                     Benjamin 2X Thomas, 288 Hamilton Avenue, Paterson.

·                     Willard X McQueen [Wilbur McKinley], 246 So. Orange Avenue, Newark.


Four people implicated by Hagan and other reliable sources on the assassination also visited Johnson. As such, Hagan's trial testimony and his subsequent affidavits are riddled with fabrications and half-truths. Butler’s attempt to receive exoneration (after which he could file a lawsuit seeking millions) has been championed by the Innocence Project and others, who clearly have not examined the evidence closely.

https://innocenceproject.org/malcolm-x-murder-innocent-aziz-butler/