American activist
Alprentice "Bunchy" Carter
(October 12, 1942 ? January 17, 1969) was an American
activist
. Carter is credited as a founding member of the
Southern California
chapter of the
Black Panther Party
. Carter was shot and killed by a rival group,
Ron Karenga's "Us"
, and is celebrated by his supporters as a
martyr
in the
Black Power
movement in the United States. Carter is portrayed by
Gaius Charles
in the 2015 TV series
Aquarius
.
[2]
Early life
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]
In the early 1960s Carter was a member of the
Slauson
street gang in
Los Angeles
. He became a member of the Slauson "Renegades", a hard-core inner circle of the gang, and earned the nickname "Mayor of the Ghetto". Carter was eventually convicted of
armed robbery
and was imprisoned in
Soledad prison
for four years. While incarcerated Carter became influenced by the
Nation of Islam
and the teachings of
Malcolm X
, and he converted to
Islam
. He would later renounce Islam after an encounter with
Eldridge Cleaver
citing contradictions and focus on the black liberation struggle. After his release, Carter met
Huey Newton
, one of the founders of the
Black Panther Party
and was convinced to join the party in 1967.
Southern California chapter of the Black Panthers
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In early 1968, Carter formed the Southern California chapter of the Black Panther Party (BPP) and became a leader in the group. Like all Black Panther chapters, the Southern California chapter studied politics, read Party literature, and received training in
firearms
and
first aid
. They also began the "
Free Breakfast for Children
" program which provided meals to the poor in the community. The chapter was very successful, gaining 50?100 new members each week by April 1968. Notable members included
Elaine Brown
and
Geronimo Pratt
. The Black Panthers were referred to as "the greatest threat to the internal security of the country" by
FBI
director
J. Edgar Hoover
, and the party was targeted by the secret FBI operation known as
COINTELPRO
. As later revealed in Senate testimony, the FBI worked with the
Los Angeles Police Department
to harass and intimidate party members.
In 1968 and 1969, numerous false arrests and warrantless searches were documented, and several members were killed in altercations with the police. "The Breakfast for Children Program," wrote Hoover in an internal FBI memo in May 1969, "represents the best and most influential activity going for the BPP and, as such, is potentially the greatest threat to efforts by authorities to neutralize the BPP and destroy what it stands for." The breakfast program was effectively shut down by daily arrests of members; however, those charges were usually dropped within a week. Later in 1969, Hoover sent orders to
FBI field offices
: "exploit all avenues of creating dissension within the ranks of the BPP", and "submit imaginative and hard-hitting counterintelligence measures aimed at crippling the BPP". In Southern California, the Black Panthers were also rivals of a
black nationalist
group called
Organization Us
(usually referred to as "US"), founded by
Ron Karenga
. The groups had very different aims and tactics, but often found themselves competing for potential recruits. This rivalry came to a head in 1969, when the two groups supported different candidates to head the Afro-American Studies Center at
UCLA
.
Assassination
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During a meeting of the Black Student Union at UCLA's Campbell Hall on January 17, 1969, Bunchy Carter and another BPP member named
John Huggins
were heard making derogatory comments about Ron Karenga, the head of Organization US. Other accounts mention a heated argument between US members and Panther Elaine Brown. An altercation ensued during which Carter and Huggins were shot to death.
BPP members originally insisted that the event was a planned assassination, claiming that there was a prior agreement that no guns would be brought to the meeting, that BPP members were not armed, and that Organization Us members led by Ron Karenga were. Organization Us members maintained the meeting was a spontaneous event. Former BPP deputy minister of defense Geronimo Pratt, Carter's head of security at the time, later stated that rather than a conspiracy, the UCLA incident was a spontaneous shootout. The person who allegedly shot Carter and Huggins, Claude Hubert, was never found.
Following the UCLA incident, brothers George and Larry Stiner and Donald Hawkins turned themselves in to the police, who had issued warrants for their arrests. They were convicted for conspiracy to commit murder and two counts of second-degree murder, based on testimony given by BPP members. The Stiner brothers both received life sentences and Hawkins served time in California's Youth Authority Detention. The Stiners escaped from San Quentin in 1974. George Stiner has not been recaptured. Larry Stiner survived as a fugitive for 20 years, living in
Suriname
. He surrendered in 1994 in order to try to negotiate help for his family suffering from turmoil in Suriname. He was immediately returned to San Quentin to serve out his life sentence. The State Department reneged on the agreement to let his family come to the U.S., saying he did not qualify as a sponsor due to being incarcerated. His children remained in precarious and impoverished circumstances for eleven years, until they were able to come to the U.S. in 2005. His wife died before she could come herself. Larry Stiner was paroled in 2015.
[3]
FBI Involvement
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During the
Church Committee
hearings in 1975, evidence came to light that under the FBI's COINTELPRO actions, FBI agents had deliberately fanned flames of division and enmity between the BPP and Organization US. Death threats and humiliating cartoons created by the FBI were sent to each group, made to look as if they originated with the other group, with the explicit intention of inciting deadly violence and division.
[4]
[5]
Aftermath
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The LAPD responded to the attack by raiding an apartment used by the Black Panthers and arresting 75 members, including all remaining leadership of the chapter, on charges of conspiring to murder US members in retaliation. (These charges were later dropped.) This reaction fueled claims that US was being used by the FBI to target the Black Panthers. Later in 1969, two other Black Panther members were killed, and one other was wounded by US members.
The Black Student Union (BSU) at UCLA was shocked and devastated by the murders. The chair of communications, Webster Moore, filled the void by reopening Campbell Hall. As the acting chair, Webster organized a Central Committee that interviewed and facilitated the hiring of a former Freedom Rider in Mississippi, Dr. Robert Singleton, as the Director of the Center for African American Studies. Singleton also became the founding Director of UCLA's Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies. As BSU Chair, Webster also served on the committee that brought
Angela Davis
as the 1st Black Philosopher Professor to UCLA. The BSU, while working with the EOP, provided a channel for high school students to eventually enroll into UCLA. The first Black Student Unions were established in the participating high schools. On December 9, 1969, Webster and Angela walked together down Central Avenue to bring a halt to the massive shootout between 6 Black Panthers and over 200 police. The Panthers surrendered before they reached them, but there were no casualties. Webster Moore was later beaten unconscious at UCLA by Police during a campus demonstration against the
Kent State shootings
.
[6]
Richard Held was promoted to Special Agent in Charge of the San Francisco office. In the years following the deaths of Carter and Huggins, the Black Panther party became more suspicious of outsiders and became more focused on defense rather than community improvement. The group was more marginalized and officially disbanded in 1982. Bunchy Carter had a son who was born in April 1969, after Carter was murdered. His son, coincidentally, attended California State University Long Beach (1987?1992), while Ron Karenga was the chairman of the Black Studies Department.
References
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Further reading
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- Alex A. Alonso
, Territoriality Among African-American Street Gangs in Los Angeles, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, 1999.
- Elaine Brown
,
A Taste of Power: A Black Woman's Story
, Doubleday, New York, 1992.
- Scot Brown
,
Fighting for US: Maulana Karenga, the US Organization, and Black Cultural Nationalism
, NYU Press, New York, 2003.
- The Black Panther: Black Community News Service newspaper
, Berkeley, Spring 1991.
- Kit Kim Holder,
The History of the Black Panther Party 1966?1972: A Curriculum Tool for Afrikan Amerikan Studies
, 1990, Amherst College Library, Amherst, Mass.
- Huey Newton
,
War Against the Panthers: A Study of Repression in America
, University of California Santa Cruz, June 1980.
- Ward Churchill and Jim Vander Wall,
Agents of Repression: The FBI's Secret Wars Against the Black Panther Party and the American Indian Movement
, South End Press: Boston, 1990.
- University Archives. Subject Files (Reference Collection)
External links
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