So the trigger-man that killed Malcolm X is just chilling in Newark,NJ...

beenz

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Malcolm X’s alleged assassin hiding in plain sight in Newark 50 years after civil rights leader was killed, author claims
Pulitzer Prize-winning author and Columbia University professor Manning Marable claimed Al-Mustafa Shabazz was the man who shot and killed the activist and former Nation of Islam leader in 1965 in the book ‘Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention.’ Shabazz has never been charged for the crime.
BY Rich Schapiro
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Sunday, February 15, 2015, 2:30 AM
mystery15n-20-web.jpg
Luiz C. Ribeiro /for New York Daily News
Al-Mustafa Shabazz leaves his home in Newark, N.J., on Thursday. A Pulitzer Prize-winning author says Shabazz assassinated Malcolm X, even though he was never charged.

Life is good for Al-Mustafa Shabazz.


The 76-year-old ex-con lives in a gated two-story home in one of the nicer neighborhoods in Newark.


He drives a gold Mercedes Benz E-Class sedan. And he’s married to one of the city’s most prominent civic leaders.


But Shabazz has an even better reason to be counting his blessings: He allegedly got away with one of the most notorious murders of the 20th century.


The burly Muslim with the white beard was the chief assassin in the slaying of Malcolm X, according to the author of a Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of the slain civil rights leader.


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© Bettmann/CORBIS
Police carry out the body of Malcolm X after he was assassinated at the Audubon Ballroom in Washington Heights on Feb. 21, 1965.
In his book, ”Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention,” Columbia University professor Manning Marable identifies Shabazz as firing the first and fatal shots at the former Nation of Islam leader.

Multiple sources have told the Daily News that Shabazz’s role in the killing has been an open secret in Newark for years.

“Here’s a man who’s walking the streets of Newark with impunity, a teflon don, and nobody’s doing anything about it,” said Abdur-Rahman Muhammad, a historian and writer who was the first to publicly identify Shabazz as the main triggerman.

“It’s an affront to justice and an affront to the legacy of Malcolm.”

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The Estate of John Launois
Malcolm X was just 39 when he was killed.
Shabazz, reached outside his home last week, initially clammed up when confronted by a Daily News reporter.

“I don’t have no comment. You can call my lawyer,” Shabazz said.

Pressed further, Shabazz defended himself. “It’s an accusation,” he said. “They never spoke to me. They just accused me of something I didn’t do.”

The mystery surrounding Malcolm’s assassination has dogged scholars for decades and inspired endless conspiracy theories.

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WCBS-TV NEWS PHOTO VIA THE ASSOC/AP
Thomas Hagan struggles with police as he is arrested in Malcolm's shooting.
Three Nation of Islam members were arrested and convicted of the shooting at the Audubon Ballroom on Fed. 21, 1965.

Thomas Hagan, then known as Talmadge X Hayer, was captured at the scene. He later confessed but always maintained that the other two – Muhammad Abdul Aziz, then known as Norman 3X Butler; and Kahlil Islam, then Thomas 15X Johnson – were not involved.

But if not Aziz and Islam, then who else killed Malcolm? Malcolm’s relatives, supporters and several filmmakers wrestled with that question for years.

In the late 1970s, Hagan provided some tantalizing clues. In two affidavits filed in 1977 and 1978, he provided partial names for his four accomplices.

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Aaronson, Alan/New York Daily News
Police dust car for fingerprints during the investigation.
Hagan identified the shotgun-toting man who was the first to open fire on Malcolm as Willie X. Hagan’s lawyer, the famed William Kunstler, determined that Willie X was a man named William Bradley.

But the case quickly went cold. More than three decades passed before Bradley was identified as the towering Newark man living under the name Al-Mustafa Shabazz.

In his 2011 book, Marable wrote that he was able to confirm through sources in Essex County’s black Muslim community that the man formerly known as William Bradley was hiding in plain sight in Newark.

Bradley was 15 feet away from Malcolm when he “elevated his sawed-off shotgun from under his coat, took careful aim, and fired,” Marable wrote. “This was the kill shot, the blow that executed Malcolm X.”

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AP
Thomas Hagan seen in 2008, was paroled in 2010.
Shabazz’s criminal exploits are the stuff of legend in his hometown of Newark and beyond.

A baseball star at South Side High School, Shabazz was one of three masked gunmen who robbed a bank in nearby Livingston in April 1968, court records show.

Shabazz and a second man, James Moore, were hit with bank robbery charges the following year. But while Moore was ultimately convicted, the charges against Shabazz were dropped.

The special treatment Shabazz received, Marable wrote, “raises the question of whether he was an FBI informant, either after the assassination of Malcolm X or very possibly even before.”

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Daily News photo
Reporter looks at bullet holes in rostrum at the Audubon Ballroom after Malcolm X was shot.
Whatever connections Shabazz may have had, they failed to keep him out of prison.

He was jailed from 1977 to 1980 on conspiracy charges, officials said. Shabazz returned to prison in 1984 after being indicted on charges that included threatening to kill an East Orange cop, raping a woman and drug dealing.

In the court records, the name “William Bradley” is listed as Shabazz’s alias.

He emerged from prison in 1998. By then, Shabazz was known in Newark’s black Muslim community as an enforcer not to be trifled with.

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Anonymous/ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Audubon Ballroom was the site of Malcolm X's assassination.
“He was like a street legend. If you mention his name, it would invoke fear for blocks,” said a longtime member who asked to remain anonymous. “He was notorious.”

Shabazz turned his life around through his marriage to Carolyn Kelley, a powerful Newark activist who was instrumental in the fight to overturn the murder conviction of boxer Rubin “Hurricane” Carter.

Shabazz made an appearance in a 2010 campaign video for Newark mayor Corey Booker. Two years earlier, he delivered what now could be seen as a curious quote to the Newark Star-Ledger in a story about the prosecution of then-Newark mayor Sharpe James.

“He was too powerful politically for a black man in America," Shabazz said. "Every time a black man is in power, they send someone to get him out."

Not everybody close to Malcolm’s case believes Shabazz was the lead triggerman.

Malcolm’s nephew Rodnell Collins is convinced his uncle’s killer was a mysterious Asian man who fled the country.

“The person who fired the kill shot has gotten away,” Collins said. “If he was walking the street, he wouldn’t be alive. He would simply disappear.”

Hagan, who was paroled in 2010 and is now living a quiet life in Brooklyn, declined to comment. Aziz was paroled in 1985, and Islam in 1987.
Shabazz’s wife said the allegations against her husband are bogus. “We know nothing about that,” Kelley said.

“It’s a shame,” she added of Malcolm’s death. “We loved him. We wish he was here.”

Asked if he felt the same way, Shabazz was less effusive. “I already told you how I felt, sir,” he said.

With Seth Bookey, Michael Cruz, Scott Browne

:mindblown:

this ex-con got a mercedes, lives in a nice crib, and wifed a local civic leader!
 

360dagod

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i'm not sure Malcolm was the snake Farac00n is but he aint the AA Moses like some try to promote him as either...yeah...NOI are most lkely CIA backed....despite their extremist views their top leaders have never been targeted by the cops...they haven't survived and funded themselves all these years selling Final Call newspapers and beanpies.:comeon:

while admittedly i have't studied his life that thoroughly while i do agree with many of the points he made Malc going all Kumbaya and softening is stance on race relations after visiting sand cacs in Mecca makes me question if he genuinely believed any of the shyt said or was just preaching to the choir:francis:

actually in some ways due to his alleged honkey grandpappy I think cacs see more of themselves in Malcolm than King..Malc did get a mainstream feature length film made on him a decade before MLK:sas2:

I dont think that film gets made today on a major level..Spike would have had to go the dvd route

I was 6 at the time, but i would believe that the racial climate wasnt as hostile as it is now...

I didnt even bother to watch Selma, but im sure it made no real mention of king when he started going to the radical left...



I think his thinking evolved after he came back..

I havent read the book since i was little, but im gonna read again..
 

George's Dilemma

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If that's really the guy, your looking at the worlds biggest c00n..

His rent probly bein paid by Farakahn, some dusty ass broke down apt in Jersey, was it worth it?


I think it's a lot more complicated than some on here make it seen. The reality was, Malcolm was viewed as an heretic and apostate by the NOI. Most fundamentalist religions view apostates as the worse of the worst. Basically the way people view snitches and traitors, and in the NOI's eyes, Malcolm fit both of those shoes. I don't know if I'd necessarily label his assassin a c00n , as religious fervor and herd mentality can overtake even the most sensible of men. If I'm not mistaken, he's expressed remorse for what he did. The reality is, Malcolm's legend and legacy are larger now after all these years than when he was alive and active. I think some of us forget that and think the present day adulation is something that has always been bestowed on Malcolm, but that wasn't always the case. Even Muhammad Ali turned his back on Malcolm at one point.
 
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I think it's a lot more complicated than some on here make it seen. The reality was, Malcolm was viewed as an heretic and apostate by the NOI. Most fundamentalist religions view apostates as the worse of the worst. Basically the way people view snitches and traitors, and in the NOI's eyes, Malcolm fit both of those shoes. I don't know if I'd necessarily label his assassin a c00n , as religious fervor and herd mentality can overtake even the most sensible of men. If I'm not mistaken, he's expressed remorse for what he did. The reality is, Malcolm's legend and legacy are larger now after all these years than when he was alive and active. I think some of us forget that and think the present day adulation is something that has always been bestowed on Malcolm, but that wasn't always the case. Even Muhammad Ali turned his back on Malcolm at one point.

hes a c00n."religious fervor and herd mentality can overtake even the most sensible of men" , yet, no high ranking white officials were assassinated but the NOI played a role in helping the govt kill one of their very own, fukk their reasons.
 

richaveli83

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why else have they not been infiltrated then dismantled by government like every other prominent black militant group from there era:comeon: why is it that the government moves in on a unemployed single black mom for allegedly in sighting violence against police but Farrakhan get a pass for pass after allegedly recently making similar directions to his followers:aicmon:

look how comfortable Farac00n cheesing like a sambo with this devil:scust:

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The Nation of Islam had been infiltrated by the feds since the 1930's. FBI documents that were released showed that they had agents all in the mosque and even played a role in separating Malcolm from Elijah Muhammad.
 

richaveli83

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All these nikkas that claim they love Malcolm won't do shyt against this dude. He's walking the streets of Newark living his life freely so I'm certain it wouldn't be hard to find him. Of course nikkas talk all the pro black shyt online but won't do nothing to the man who killed your hero.
 

MJ Truth

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The difference between Farrakhan and Malcolm is the reason why one is in spirit because he got killed and the other is still here speaking without a worry in the world:francis:

I read on here that someone thinks the NOI is a CIA front...When you think about it,at first your like:mjlol:,but the further you go it becomes :jbhmm:...I would not be surprised if there isnt some "backing"behind them...

I dont necessarily see Malcolm as a "militant"tho..

He was the polar opposite of MLK at the time,who was looking for "white acceptance"..

In any movement, you need a "figure head"who represents what the movement is about..

Malcom's speaking ability had crossover appeal....To reach other nations who felt the same way

He's not as celebrated mainstream as MLK because King had a period where he was "safe"to white people..

I think thats his lane of comparison
MLK wasn't "safe" to white people until his dead, y'all gotta stop with this narrative. At this point Malcolm is safe to them too.
 

↓R↑LYB

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The Nation of Islam had been infiltrated by the feds since the 1930's. FBI documents that were released showed that they had agents all in the mosque and even played a role in separating Malcolm from Elijah Muhammad.
Watch his dumb ass come back and say "the only reason they released the documents is because they wanted to throw everyone off. FALSE FLAG :damn:"
 

George's Dilemma

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hes a c00n."religious fervor and herd mentality can overtake even the most sensible of men" , yet, no high ranking white officials were assassinated but the NOI played a role in helping the govt kill one of their very own, fukk their reasons.


Not that I'm defending the NOI, or the government, but both had different agendas and the former was looking to kill Malcolm regardless of the latter's suspicious paranoia of Black empowerment. In fact, I'd say the government sat back and watched two birds get killed with one stone, a stone they really didn't even throw. Malcolm's death had more to do with his exposing of Elijah's womanizing and deadbeat father status than the government's indifference to the NOI's threats on he and his family's lives. Also at play was Malcolm's increasing ability to network with and gain financial and moral support from foreign governments. He saw the value of Pan African unity, gave it support, and they reciprocated in kind. That along with the support recieved from Middle Eastern leaders and groups made him a potential force to be reckoned with. Elijah was already pissed about being exposed as a womanizing hypocrite, and now Malcolm is getting into position to not only eclipse Elijah, but also make his organization irrelevant. For that, he had to go. It was that simple, regardless of the government's paranoia of Black empowerment. No, he died for basically the same reasons the Hanafi murders went down, which also happened regardless of the government.
 
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