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- NATION, Page 17American NotesOAKLANDThe Panthers' Lost Leader
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- It was not surprising that Huey P. Newton ended the way he
- did: lying in a pool of blood on a sidewalk in a crack-infested
- Oakland neighborhood with three bullets in his head. For much of
- his 47 years, Newton had preached and practiced violence as a
- necessary means of self-defense for blacks in urban America. He
- will be remembered most as the co-founder of the Black Panther
- Party, enthroned in a rattan chair, wearing a black beret, with
- a rifle in one hand and a spear in the other.
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- For a short time, Newton seemed to embody the spirit of
- ghetto uplift that the Panthers preached. After serving time in a
- celebrated case involving the shooting of an Oakland policeman,
- he earned a doctorate from the University of California. But
- after J. Edgar Hoover's FBI targeted the group, many of his
- fellow Panther leaders were killed, jailed or driven
- underground, and Newton's life returned to its meaner roots.
- Charges of murder and assault led to conviction for possessing a
- gun. There followed a string of drug offenses, drunk driving and
- embezzling $15,000 from a Panther-operated school.
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- At 5:30 a.m. last Tuesday, officers investigating a report
- of gunfire only two blocks from one of the Panthers' original
- headquarters found him dying in the street. On Friday police
- arrested a suspected drug dealer, who told them he shot Newton
- in self-defense after they argued over a cocaine sale.
- Investigators found no gun near Newton's body.
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