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<font face="arial" size=3><b>New York Daily News -
<a href="http://www.nydailynews.com">http://www.nydailynews.com<br>
</a></font><font face="arial" size=2>Flight from justice</b> <br>
BY DAVID J. KRAJICEK<br>
SPECIAL TO THE NEWS <br>
Sunday, November 21st, 2004 <br><br>
A nondescript Pontiac sedan with Vermont tags tooled south along the New
Jersey Turnpike just after midnight on May 2, 1973. <br><br>
The car stood out in a single detail: a bum taillight. <br><br>
Trooper James Harper noticed the defect in East Brunswick, not far from
the Turnpike Administration Building. He could not let the safety
infraction pass. <br><br>
He flipped on chase lights and directed the Pontiac to the side of the
highway. <br><br>
This would not be a routine pullover. <br><br>
Harper had no way of knowing, but the occupants of the car - Clark
Squire, James Costan and Joanne Chesimard - were at war with the United
States. <br><br>
They were soldiers in the Black Liberation Army, an East Coast group that
had fractured away from the Oakland-based Black Panthers. Their stated
goal was "liberation and self-determination" for American
blacks. <br><br>
They chose to use robbery, violence and terrorism in a quixotic, 15-year
trip toward achieving those goals. Their trophy targets were
"pigs" - law enforcement officers. <br><br>
<b>Trouble afoot</b> <br><br>
Harper sensed trouble and radioed for backup. Squire, the driver, got out
of the Buick and walked back to speak with the trooper. <br><br>
When Trooper Werner Foerster arrived, Harper left Squire with him and
went to the car to seek identification from Chesimard, riding shotgun,
and Costan, in the backseat. <br><br>
Foerster found a gun clip while frisking Squire. As the trooper shouted a
warning to his colleague, Chesimard pulled a gun and began shooting,
hitting Harper in the left shoulder. <br><br>
Amid the bedlam, Harper ran for cover behind his radio car. He said he
saw Squire and Trooper Foerster wrestling on the ground as both Chesimard
and Costan fired handguns. Harper shot both passengers, then ran for help
to the police office in the Turnpike Building, one-tenth of a mile away.
<br><br>
The radicals scrambled into the Pontiac and fled south. <br><br>
Authorities rushed back to the shooting scene. Trooper Foerster, 34, a
husband, father and Vietnam veteran from Old Bridge, was found shot dead.
Evidence would reveal he took four bullets, including two in the head
from his own gun. <br><br>
Meanwhile, Squire bailed out of the Buick 8 miles south of the shooting,
leaving his gravely wounded comrades behind. He fled into woods at the
edge of the turnpike and was captured the next day after a manhunt.
<br><br>
Troopers found Chesimard and Costan in the escape car. She was bleeding
from gunshot wounds to the right arm and shoulder, and he was dead.
Foerster's pistol was found in the car. <br><br>
Squire, a former NASA engineer, and Chesimard, born in Brooklyn and
attracted to radical politics at Manhattan Community College, were
charged with murder. At separate trials, they made the case they were
victims of conspiratorial government harassment orchestrated by the FBI.
<br><br>
They said they were set up in the traffic stop. Both denied shooting
Trooper Foerster. <br><br>
Prosecutors made a much simpler case: They were cop-killers. The jury
agreed. <br><br>
Each was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison, with
add-ons designed to keep them locked away forever. <br><br>
Squire, now 67 and known as Sundiata Acoli, is still in prison, 31 years
after the shooting. He was denied parole in 1993, when he declared he was
a prisoner of war and an advocate of revolution. <br><br>
He softened his rhetoric this year in a new parole gambit. He announced
regret and accepted responsibility for the death of Foerster, although he
continued to deny that he shot the trooper. <br><br>
The state parole board turned down his application. <br><br>
In a sense, Acoli is serving time for two. <br><br>
In 1979, Joanne Chesimard was housed at the Edna Mahan Correctional
Facility for Women in Clinton, N.J. The prison had medium security, but
Chesimard and seven other women were housed in a separate, secure cell
block for offenders considered high risks for violence or escape.
<br><br>
<b>Cuba-bound</b> <br><br>
Chesimard was undeterred. <br><br>
"I was like Houdini," she would later tell Essence magazine.
"I plotted day and night. There was no way I was going to spend the
rest of [my] life in prison for something I didn't do." <br><br>
That October, three men used fake IDs to request visits with Chesimard on
the same day, Nov. 2. The prison had four weeks to verify the identities
of the prospective visitors but failed to do so. <br><br>
When the date arrived, the three men were registered as visitors and
driven by van to the visiting room at Chesimard's secure cellblock.
Although prison policy called for body searches of visitors, the men were
allowed into the heart of the prison without so much as a cursory
pat-down. <br><br>
The men pulled pistols and took guards hostages. Using hostages as
shields, they hustled Chesimard outside to the van, then raced across a
field to the nearby Hunterdon State School, where two women were waiting
at the wheels of getaway cars. <br><br>
The embarrassing escape made Chesimard the FBI's No. 1 female fugitive -
and a radical icon. <br><br>
She disappeared into the underground, which further burnished her
reputation as the woman who managed to make a mockery of American
criminal justice. <br><br>
As a final insult, she turned up in Cuba in 1986 as a special resident
guest of Fidel Castro. <br><br>
And there she sits 18 years later, a piece of unfinished business from a
troubling era that most Americans would rather forget. <br><br>
But Trooper Foerster's colleagues have not forgotten. A furious
letter-writing campaign led by New Jersey State Police helped keep Squire
in prison during the parole-hearing process earlier this year. <br><br>
And the state police keep Chesimard at the top of their most-wanted list,
with a $100,000 reward. <br><br>
"This will never be a closed case as long as Joanne Chesimard is not
incarcerated," a New Jersey State Police spokesman said recently.
<br><br>
<b>Name change</b> <br><br>
Chesimard, now 57 and known as Assata Shakur, wrote a biography and works
occasionally as a translator, although she told Essence she has
"tried as much as possible to avoid the standard 9-to-5 thing."
<br><br>
Until recently, Chesimard freely gave interviews to visiting American
journalists. She was easy to find: Her name and number were in the Havana
phone book. <br><br>
New Jersey cops gnash their teeth at her pronouncements and euphemisms.
She describes herself as a political exile and escaped prisoner of war.
<br><br>
In one recent canard, she said, "How dare they call us terrorists
when we were being terrorized? Terror was a constant part of my
life....We lived under police terror." <br><br>
She says she was persecuted in the United States for being a
"political person." Cops point out that she was convicted by a
jury and sentenced to life in prison because she caused the death of
another human being. <br><br>
Politics, they say, had nothing to do with it. <br><br>
Chesimard's profile has been much lower in Cuba for the past year. Some
believe Castro was miffed after she gave too many interviews in which she
groused about living conditions in Havana. <br><br>
Like some 70 other fugitives from American justice, Chesimard lives in
Cuba at the whim of Castro, who has faced modest pressure from the United
States to turn her over. <br><br>
Before she clammed up, Chesimard told a reporter that a regime change in
Cuba "will be devastating for people worldwide who believe in
justice." <br><br>
And, she added, "I'll be up a creek without a paddle."
<br><br>
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