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What Do You Really Know About Tookie?
Stanley "Tookie" Williams, at 43, has spent the past 16
years as an inmate on San Quentin's Death Row in
Northern California. His cell window faces the Richmond
Bridge and a spectacular skyline of birds, boats, and a
rippled bay. Yet he seldom looks out. "It would make the
time I spend in prison even harder to deal with," he
says.

How
It
Started

In the spring of 1971, when Tookie was 16, he was in a
very different situation. He was a high school student
from South Central Los Angeles. He had a fearsome
reputation as a fighter and as a "general" of South
Central's west side. And, around that time, Tookie,
along with Raymond Lee Washington, created what would
one day be a super-gang, the Crips.

Back in the day when Tookie and Raymond founded the
Crips, many of the young people of South Central Los
Angeles were involved with small gangs. Those gang
members roamed South Central taking property from anyone
who feared them, including women and children. To
protect the community, Tookie and Raymond organized the
Crips.

How
It
Grew

By 1979, the Crips had grown from a small Los Angeles
gang to an organization with membership spread across
the State of California. By this time, Crips had also
become just like the gang members they had once sought
to protect themselves from -- Crips had become
gangbangers who terrorized their own neighborhoods.

Soon the Crips lost both their leaders: in 1979, Raymond
was murdered by a rival gang member, and, that same
year, Tookie was arrested. He was charged with murdering
four people. In 1981, Tookie was convicted of those
crimes and placed on death row.

Life
In
Prison

In 1987, Tookie began what became a 6 1/2-year stay in
solitary confinement. After two years there, Tookie
began to look at himself. He focused on the choices he
had made in his life and then committed himself to make
a drastic change. The long, difficult process he
undertook to rebuild his character put him in touch with
his true spirit, his own humanity. Only then could
Tookie finally begin to care about the many children,
mothers, fathers and other family members of this
country hurt by the Crips legacy and by its explosive
growth. The gang is now in 42 states and on at least one
other continent: South Africa. Youngsters in
Soweto and other South African cities have formed the
Crips copycat gangs

Tookie
Today

Tookie greatly regrets the violent history of the Crips
-- particularly how so many young black men have hurt
each other -- and he wants to do what he can to stop it.
The Tookie Speaks Out Against Gang Violence book
series for elementary-school-age children is the first
fruit of his longing to prevent young people of every
color from becoming gangbangers, from ending up in
prison, crippled by bullets, or killed.

Tookie is determined to make amends for having been a
co-founder of the Crips. He intends to try in every way
he can to guide those youngsters who have imitated him
away from the road that led him to death row where he
faces State execution. "Don't join a gang," he tells
children in his books, writing from his San Quentin
cell. "You won't find what you're looking for. All you
will find is trouble, pain and sadness. I know. I did."
http://www.tookie.com/abtookie.html
http://www.savetookie.org/
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