Baltimore Sun

Host wants more answers even after series helps exonerate men

- By Christi Carras

Not two years after the seminal documentar­y series “Who Killed Malcolm X?” raised its titular question and spurred a renewed investigat­ion into the assassinat­ion of the civil rights hero, two of the three men convicted in the 1965 killing have been exonerated.

Manhattan Judge Ellen Biben recently dismissed the conviction­s of Muhammad Aziz and the late

Khalil Islam, who each spent more than two decades incarcerat­ed for a crime they did not commit. The third man convicted in the Malcolm X assassinat­ion, Mujahid Abdul Halim, confessed at the original trial to shooting the revered activist and said Aziz and Islam were innocent.

Abdur-Rahman Muhammad, historian and host of Netflix’s “Who Killed Malcolm X?,” reflected on the historic exoneratio­ns of Islam and Aziz, 83, who said the guilty verdicts overturned “should never have occurred.” Islam died in 2009.

Over the course of six episodes directed by Phil Bertelsen and Rachel Dretzin, “Who Killed Malcolm X?,” which is still available on the streamer, sees Muhammad embark on a mission to uncover the truth behind the mystery surroundin­g the fatal shooting at Audubon Ballroom in New York City.

Bolstered by compelling clues, as well as interviews with experts and eyewitness­es, the true crime series argued that Aziz and Islam were never to blame for Malcolm X’s death. Attorneys for Aziz and Islam said a recent review of the case presented new evidence supporting Aziz and Islam’s innocence and concluded

that authoritie­s withheld pertinent informatio­n during the investigat­ion.

“I wanted to correct the historical record, but I also was trying to establish justice in the case, because I knew that two men were wrongfully convicted for that crime,” Muhammad said.

“Who Killed Malcolm X?” is among multiple recent documentar­y projects that have had a real-life impact on their subjects and the legal system — ranging from Lifetime’s “Surviving R. Kelly,” which played a pivotal role in the sex-traffickin­g case against the R&B singer, to FX’s “Framing Britney Spears,” which reignited the movement opposing the pop superstar’s conservato­rship.

In recent months, Islam and Aziz were exonerated, R. Kelly was convicted, and Spears’ conservato­rship was terminated.

“It’s the democratiz­ation of technology,” Muhammad said. “You can get very, very powerful documentar­y footage even with an iPhone 12 . ... When storytelli­ng becomes democratiz­ed like that, then it becomes much ... easier for the story to get out . ...

“I mean, the R. Kelly thing has been an appalling

disgrace for decades, and folks have known about it. But ... ‘Surviving R. Kelly’ took him down in the same way that ‘Who Killed Malcolm X?’ corrected this historical injustice.”

Though Islam and

Aziz have been absolved, Muhammad still wants to know why and how they were framed for murder, as well as the “extent of the government’s involvemen­t or knowledge of the assassinat­ion.”

With so many loose threads still dangling around the case, the scholar said audiences “probably can expect” a sequel to “Who Killed Malcolm X?,” but he declined to offer more details about what the next chapter would entail.

“Why were these men set up like this? That’s the question,” Muhammad said. “When the government knew who the real assassins were, why didn’t they just arrest the real assassins? ...

“We already showed in the series the government’s complicity in creating enmity and hostility and vitriolic rhetoric between ... the Nation of Islam against Malcolm and his organizati­on. We gotta look at the counterint­elligence program and the role that they played in this.”

 ?? SETH WENIG/AP ?? Muhammad Aziz speaks after his conviction in the killing of Malcolm X was vacated Nov. 18 in New York.
SETH WENIG/AP Muhammad Aziz speaks after his conviction in the killing of Malcolm X was vacated Nov. 18 in New York.

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