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The Beginning In the spring of 1971, when Tookie was 17, he was in a very different situation. He was a high school student from South Central Los Angeles. He had a fearsome reputation as a fighter and as a "general" of South Central's west side. And, around that time, Tookie, along with Raymond Lee Washington, created what would one day be a super-gang, the Crips. Back in the day when Tookie and Raymond founded the Crips, many of the young people of South Central Los Angeles were involved with small gangs. Those gang members roamed South Central taking property from anyone who feared them, including women and children. To protect the community, Tookie and Raymond organized the Crips. Growth
Soon the Crips lost both their leaders: in 1979, Raymond was murdered by a rival gang member, and, that same year,
Tookie was arrested. He was charged with murdering four people. In 1981, Tookie was convicted of those
crimes and placed on death row.
Life in Prison
Tookie Today
Tookie is determined to make amends for having been a co-founder of the Crips. He intends to try in every way he can to
guide those youngsters who have imitated him away from the road that led him to death row where he faces State execution.
"Don't join a gang," he tells children in his books, writing from his San Quentin cell. "You won't find what you're looking for. All
you will find is trouble, pain and sadness. I know. I did." |
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