Times Standard (Eureka)

It’s time for full truth in Malcom X assassinat­ion

- Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!” She is the coauthor, with Denis Moynihan and David Goodman, of “Democracy Now!: 20 Years Covering the Movements Changing America.”

Malcolm X was assassinat­ed 58 years ago, on February 21, 1965, standing at the podium before a crowd in Harlem’s Audubon Ballroom. His wife Betty Shabazz, pregnant with twins, and his four daughters, aged 6, 4, 2 and five months, were in the ballroom. As Malcolm began speaking, a man shouted creating a disturbanc­e. A smoke bomb was thrown. Amidst the confusion, three gunmen at the front of the hall opened fire. Malcolm was hit 17 times in the ensuing hail of bullets. He died on the stage as chaos erupted.

Talmadge Hayer was shot in the leg by one of Malcolm X’s bodyguards as he fled the ballroom. He was caught on the scene with ammunition that matched one of the murder weapons. In the days that followed, two other men, Khalil Islam and

Muhammad Aziz, were arrested and accused of being the two additional shooters, even though they were nowhere near the ballroom that day and could prove it. Hayer testified his two codefendan­ts were innocent but he was ignored.

Aziz spent 20 years in prison, and Islam, 22 years. In 2021, more than 56 years after Malcolm X’s assassinat­ion, the two wrongfully convicted men were exonerated. Muhammad Aziz was 83 years old. Khalil Islam died in 2009. Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. opened a reinvestig­ation of the assassinat­ion and prosecutio­n that pointed not only to the innocence of Aziz and Islam but to the guilt of others.

The reinvestig­ation spanned almost two years and uncovered previously undisclose­d FBI and New York Police Department documents. It was revealed, more than half a century later, that the FBI had up to 10 informants inside the Audubon Ballroom. The NYPD had at least three undercover officers there as well, one of whom was actually on Malcolm X’s security team. Evidence gathered by both the FBI and the NYPD that was exculpator­y was “deliberate­ly withheld” from Aziz and Islam. This informatio­n and more, the Manhattan DA argued, “would have resulted in verdicts more favorable to the defendants.” The court agreed and vacated the conviction­s in late 2021.

Muhammad Aziz and the estate of Khalil Islam sued both the city and state of New York for wrongful conviction and imprisonme­nt, and, in late 2022, they reached a combined settlement of $36 million.

This brings us to 2023. Today, the Audubon Ballroom has been restored and is the Malcolm X & Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial & Education Center. On Feb. 21, the 58th anniversar­y of Malcolm’s assassinat­ion, the family, along with lawyers, held a news conference to announce a forthcomin­g $100 million wrongful death lawsuit. The suit will name the City of New York, the District Attorney, the NYPD, the FBI, the U.S.

Justice Department, and the CIA.

“We intend to have vigorous litigation of this matter,” civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump said. “To have discovery, to be able to take deposition­s of the individual­s who are still alive 58 years later, to make sure that some measure of justice can be given to Malcolm X’s daughters, who in this very room were present with their mother when he was shot at 21 times, 17 bullets hitting him. If anybody deserves justice after these decades, it is these women.”

Malcolm X’s third daughter of six, Dr. Ilyasah Shabazz, an educator and author, spoke next, her voice shaking: “On February 21, 1965, my mother came here excited to see her husband, because a week prior her home had been firebombed. She walked in here happy, and she left shattered.” Ilyasah was also there that day, just two years old.

She continued: “For years, our family has fought for the truth to come to light concerning his murder, and we’d like our father to receive the justice that he deserves. The truth about the circumstan­ces leading to the death of our father is important not only to his family but to many followers, many admirers, many who looked to him for guidance, for love. And it is our hope that litigation of this case will finally provide some unanswered questions. We want justice served for our father.”

Malcolm X was just 39 years old when he was assassinat­ed, as was Martin Luther King, Jr. three years later when felled by a sniper’s bullet in Memphis. Both men were leading revolution­ary movements for Black liberation, and both were heavily surveilled and targeted by J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI.

The time for knowing the full truth behind Malcolm X’s assassinat­ion is long past due.

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