Rapper Will Rally For Condemned Crips Co-Founder
POSTED: 10:48 am PST November 15, 2005
UPDATED: 11:13 am PST November 15, 2005
SAN QUENTIN -- Rapper Snoop Dogg will attend a rally Saturday outside San Quentin State Prison to support a former gang leader scheduled to be executed next month, according to an advocacy group. The former Crips member turned musician will be among thousands expected to protest the Dec. 13 execution of Stanley Tookie Williams, who was sentenced to death in 1981 for killing four people in two Los Angeles robberies. The rapper wanted to visit Williams, but his application for entry to the prison was denied, according to San Quentin spokesman Vernell Crittendon. "We were unable to provide him with a security clearance because of his arrest history," he said. Before turning to music, Snoop Dogg spent time in prison for drug-related offenses. In 1993, he faced charges in connection with a drive-by shooting but was later cleared. During his years on death row, Williams has earned international acclaim for his children's books urging kids to stay out of gangs, among other peace-preaching efforts. An award-winning cable television movie about Williams' life, "Redemption: The Stan 'Tookie' Williams Story," starring Jamie Foxx, also drew attention to his case. More than a dozen other rallies around the state are scheduled in the next few weeks supporting Williams, whose prison teachings have earned him several Nobel Prize nominations. The rallies include a documentary film screening about Williams in San Francisco, hosted by actor Danny Glover; a discussion led by the Dominican Sisters of San Rafael; and a round-the-clock vigil outside the prison from Dec. 4 until the execution, when people from across the country are expected to demonstrate. Saturday's rally is scheduled for 10 a.m. PST outside San Quentin's gate, according to Death Penalty Focus, the group organizing the event. Snoop Dogg, whose real name is Calvin Broadus, once associated with the Crips, the infamous Los Angeles-area street gang that Williams co-founded. His early recordings offered gritty details about Southern California gang life.Williams, 51, is in line to become one of three California condemned inmates to be executed within months. He was condemned in 1981, but has maintained his innocence. He claims, among other things, fabricated testimony sent him to death row. He also says Los Angeles County prosecutors violated his rights when they dismissed all potential black jurors from his case. The California Supreme Court, the federal trial and appellate courts, and the U.S. Supreme Court have already ruled against him. Williams also is seeking clemency from Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger for killing Owens, the 7-Eleven clerk; and Yen-I Yang, Tsai-Shai Chen Yang and Yu-Chin Yang Lin. Those three were gunned down two weeks after Owens when their motel was robbed. While in San Quentin State Prison, Williams has been nominated five times for a Nobel Peace Prize and four times for the Nobel Prize for literature for his series of children's books and international peace efforts intended to curtail youth gang violence. Williams and a high school friend, Raymond Washington, started the Crips street gang in Los Angeles in 1971.