home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT0312>
- <link 90TT3079>
- <link 90TT1642>
- <title>
- Feb. 05, 1990: Run, Barry, Run
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 05, 1990 Mandela:Free At Last?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 19
- Run, Barry, Run
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>While Washington's indicted mayor takes a cure in Florida, who
- inherits the mess he left behind?
- </p>
- <p>By Julie Johnson--With reporting by Jerome Cramer and Michael
- Riley/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. Conference of Mayors opened its midwinter meeting
- in Washington last week, ironically with drugs as the focus of
- discussion. Conspicuously absent was the conference host,
- Washington Mayor Marion Barry, who shortly before was captured
- on a grainy FBI videotape apparently sipping cognac and smoking
- crack cocaine from a pipe. Three days after being charged with
- possession of cocaine, Barry retreated to the Hanley-Hazelden
- Center for drug and alcohol abuse in West Palm Beach, Fla.,
- declaring that he sought healing in "body, mind and soul."
- Behind him, the still stunned capital wrestled with questions
- about the propriety of his arrest and the political future of
- a battered city.
- </p>
- <p> Even as a loyal remnant of Barry's once formidable
- constituency pleaded for sympathy for the man, attention
- shifted to his sometime ally, Jesse Jackson. Jackson moved to
- Washington last summer amid calls for him to challenge his old
- civil rights compatriot. Yet three days before Barry's arrest,
- Jackson used Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday to launch a
- national campaign for D.C. statehood--a campaign that could
- put him into the U.S. Senate rather than the District Building.
- </p>
- <p> Jackson, who spoke with Barry by telephone after the arrest,
- almost immediately came under intense pressure to run for mayor
- from the same Washington power brokers who earlier shunned him
- as a carpetbagger. But Jackson was wary, suspecting that his
- political opponents were hoping to bury him in a no-win job.
- Jackson's public statements have been typically coy and evasive--prudent politicians "never say never," he declared--but
- privately, for now, he is heeding the counsel of friends and
- his wife Jackie to stay out of it. Settling into the mayor's
- office would mean being tied down by the Lilliputian strings
- of Washington's troubled municipal bureaucracy. Speaking before
- the Barry arrest, Jackson said, "It's just too small a stage
- for me." And his friends note that Jackson is well aware that
- Capitol Hill has as much to say about the District's budget as
- does the mayor. He would be tugged this way and that by members
- of Congress, some of whom he outpolled in his 1988 bid for the
- Democratic presidential nomination.
- </p>
- <p> Jackson, who can stall until the July filing deadline for
- the September Democratic primary, has made it clear he will not
- challenge Barry--and the mayor has not ruled out a
- rehabilitated run for a fourth term after he emerges from
- Hanley-Hazelden, as farfetched as that may seem. Barry, 53,
- pleaded with reporters to "back away" while he recovers from
- an unspecified "problem" that aides say centers on alcoholism.
- But even the tearful news conference that preceded his retreat
- to Hanley-Hazelden seemed calculated. The mayor, sweating
- profusely and looking to wife Effi for support, artfully
- excluded any mention of drugs. Barry's disappearance extricated
- him from legal wrangling over a possible plea bargain and from
- defense preparations that may hinge on the FBI videotape.
- Investigators, protesting that the tape needs enhancing, have
- resisted showing it to Barry's lawyer.
- </p>
- <p> Even if Barry is convicted on the misdemeanor charge of drug
- possession, he could continue to hold office if he is sentenced
- to less than the one-year maximum term. And precedent exists
- for the jailhouse election of a municipal official. In 1903
- Boston's four-time mayor, James Michael Curley, was elected
- alderman from jail. In fact, an us-against-them argument could
- appeal to Barry's populist base in a city fractured along
- racial and class lines.
- </p>
- <p> Many Barry supporters have long asserted that the mayor's
- problems with federal prosecutors were racially motivated.
- Cathy Hughes, a Washington businesswoman who owns a radio
- station and is host of a popular call-in talk show, scoffed
- that the best prosecutors could come up with was "a
- multimillion-dollar misdemeanor charge." Hughes, who is
- informally polling listener support for Barry, said, "The
- community is saying to him, `Get well, come home, we're
- waiting.'"
- </p>
- <p> One target of the criticism is U.S. Attorney Jay Stephens,
- formerly a White House deputy counsel. His public statements
- hinting at a plea bargain in exchange for Barry's resignation
- have sparked criticism that he is an overzealous Republican
- prosecutor. Even controversy-shy N.A.A.C.P. Executive director
- Benjamin Hooks cited a "pattern of harassment of black elected
- officials by law-enforcement authorities."
- </p>
- <p> The FBI sting came after repeated investigations into
- broader corruption among Barry associates had failed to snare
- the mayor. The FBI's inability to pin a charge on Barry
- bolstered the belief among some in Washington that Hazel Diane
- (Rasheeda) Moore lured the mayor to the Vista International
- Hotel only after authorities pressured her to do so.
- </p>
- <p> One law-enforcement official conceded that the FBI "had
- leverage" over Moore. Reportedly Moore told a grand jury last
- year that she had not used drugs and was only a casual friend
- of Barry's. But she renewed talks with authorities after a
- drunk-driving arrest in Los Angeles on New Years' Day; once
- before, she served six months in prison for unauthorized use
- of a motor vehicle. Another explanation for her cooperation is
- that she feared being charged with perjury for her grand jury
- testimony about Barry and Charles Lewis, a convicted drug
- dealer. In December 1988 the Washington police were about to
- arrest Lewis, when Barry turned up in the man's hotel room. The
- bust was aborted, but police reportedly found traces of cocaine
- in the room. Last summer Lewis told federal investigators he
- had smoked crack with the mayor.
- </p>
- <p> After the Lewis incident, Barry is said to have joked among
- friends that they would never again see him in a local hotel.
- Why he went to the Vista to visit Moore remains a mystery. For
- now, however, Washington's mayor is checked into a very
- different residential facility. For 28 days, his routine will
- be filled with exercise, tough-love group therapy and chores
- such as vacuuming and mopping.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile the District is left to fend for itself, its
- neighborhoods echoing with gunfire from drug dealers, its
- hospitals increasingly overburdened by abandoned, drug-addicted
- newborns and many other babies who die before their first
- birthday.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-