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- <text id=93TT2251>
- <link 93TO0110>
- <title>
- Dec. 20, 1993: A Murderer's Journey Toward Madness
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 20, 1993 Enough! The War Over Handguns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 25
- A Mass Murderer's Journey Toward Madness
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis--Reported by Patrick E. Cole/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Speaking with a Jamaican accent, Colin Ferguson said he was
- from Louisiana and needed a room. The India-born general manager
- of the Royal Motel in Long Beach, California, looked at his
- would-be guest, a bulky black man who admitted to being unemployed,
- and said, "O.K., but if you're not good I won't let you stay
- here." "But," Nick Bhakta recalls, "he was good. Every day he
- did not stay in the room. He came only in the nighttime." Bhakta
- charged $35 a night; Ferguson stayed three weeks. In retrospect,
- all he really needed was 15 days--the time it took to clear
- his application to buy the 9-mm Ruger semiautomatic handgun
- he used last week on a rush-hour commuter train in New York.
- </p>
- <p> Last spring, when Colin Ferguson traveled from Brooklyn to California
- and back, he had already meandered through misfortune and failure
- and was perhaps on the brink of madness. Family, school, work,
- health, everything seemed to have withered away. "He had the
- `American Dream,' and when it fell apart, he looked to blame
- somebody," his landlord told the New York Daily News. In the
- end, all Ferguson had left was rage.
- </p>
- <p> He was born with many advantages. In his native Jamaica, Ferguson
- attended the exclusive Calabar boys' high school, an academy
- that numbers among its alumni Percival Patterson, the island's
- Prime Minister. The Fergusons lived in a two-story home protected
- by walls and wrought-iron gates in Kingston's elite suburb of
- Havendale. His father Von Herman Ferguson was one of the most
- prominent businessmen in Jamaica. When the elder Ferguson died
- in a car accident in 1978, his funeral was attended by government
- and military luminaries. However, that passage--and the subsequent
- death of Ferguson's mother from cancer--shattered the family's
- fortunes. In 1982 Ferguson, then 24, left for the U.S. He was
- never able to re-create the life he had led on the island.
- </p>
- <p> At first, though, there had been hope. He met Audrey Warren,
- an American of Jamaican descent, married her in 1986, and qualified
- for permanent U.S. residency. The couple moved into a house
- on Long Island and had a son. Enrolled in a local community
- college, Ferguson made the dean's list three times. But that
- approximation of bliss collapsed in 1988, when Warren sued for
- divorce and won custody of their child. By last week, Ferguson
- was jobless and living in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn,
- in a tiny $175-a-month room with a communal bath down the hall.
- </p>
- <p> His descent was precipitous. At the time of his divorce, Ferguson
- began working for Ademco, a burglar-alarm manufacturer. A year
- into his job, however, he fell from a stool, receiving a back
- injury that led to his termination. He sued for compensation,
- won a $26,250 judgment but, for some reason, tried to reopen
- proceedings with the New York State workers' compensation board.
- He complained that he was a victim of racial prejudice and rejected
- state-appointed doctors sent to examine him because their surnames
- sounded ethnic and not black. Eventually, Ferguson, who wrote
- and called incessantly, was put on a list of possible troublemakers
- security guards at the board were to watch out for.
- </p>
- <p> In the fall of 1990 Ferguson enrolled at Adelphi University
- and got into angry confrontations with teachers and students,
- accusing white students of racism and black activists of being
- "Uncle Toms." "Black rage will get you," he told a black professor.
- He talked loudly of violent race wars and revolution. He interrupted
- a lecture by yelling "Kill everybody white!" By 1991, he was
- suspended. In 1992 his ex-wife, who has not spoken to him since
- their divorce, filed a complaint with police charging that Ferguson
- had pried open the trunk of her car. Ferguson also clashed with
- police when he got into a shoving match with a woman over a
- subway seat. He had compiled a list of complaints and enemies,
- as did other recent mass murderers--including Alan Winterbourne,
- who shot four people in Oxnard, California, two weeks ago, and
- Gian Luigi Ferri, who killed eight people in a San Francisco
- office building last July. But while officials on the compensation
- board and at Adelphi were on Ferguson's list, to him almost
- everyone--white, Asian or black--had become a racist and
- particularly prejudiced against him. (Ferguson had "friends"
- too. Out of regard for outgoing Mayor David Dinkins, who is
- black, and police commissioner Raymond Kelly, who is white,
- he did not open fire until he was beyond New York City limits.)
- </p>
- <p> Early this year Ferguson went to California in search of new
- opportunities. There were only new humiliations. "He did not
- like competing with immigrants and Hispanics for jobs," James
- Clement, a friend, told the Washington Post. When Ferguson applied
- at a car wash, said Clement, the manager laughed at him. The
- next day, Ferguson walked into Turner's Outdoorsman and made
- a downpayment on a gun. As proof of residency, he used a California
- driver's license he had received on a previous visit and the
- Royal Motel address. Fifteen days later his security check was
- completed, and Ferguson paid the balance. By the end of May,
- he was back in New York City--with the Ruger. Ferguson thought
- that the compensation board was going to reopen his case on
- Dec. 3. On the following Tuesday, when he learned that the news
- was false, he boarded the 5:33 train to Hicksville.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-