Jesse Louis Jackson, Sr. (born October 8, 1941) is
an American
civil rights activist and
Baptist
minister.
He was a candidate for
the Democratic
presidential nomination in
1984 and 1988 and served as shadow
senator for the District of Columbia
from 1991 to 1997. He was the founder of
both entities that merged to form
Rainbow/PUSH. Representative
Jesse Jackson, Jr. is his eldest son. In
an AP-AOL "Black Voices" poll in February 2006, Jackson was voted
"the most important black leader" with 15% of the vote.
Early life
Jackson was born Jesse Louis Burns in , to Helen Burns. Helen Burns
was a 16-year old single mother when he was born. His biological
father, Noah Louis Robinson, a former professional boxer and a
prominent figure in the black community, was married to another
woman when Jesse was born. He was not involved in his son's life.
In 1943, two years after Jesse's birth, his mother married Charles
Henry Jackson, who would adopt Jesse 14 years later. Jesse went on
to take the surname of his stepfather.
Education
Jackson attended Sterling High School, a segregated high school in
Greenville, where he was a student-athlete. Upon graduating in
1959, he rejected a contract from a professional baseball team so
that he could attend the racially integrated
University of Illinois on a football
scholarship.
However, one year later, Jackson transferred
to North Carolina A&T located in
Greensboro
, North
Carolina
.
There are differing accounts for the reasons behind this transfer.
Jackson claims that the change was based on the school's racial
biases which included his being unable to play as a quarterback
despite being a star quarterback at his high school. ESPN.com
however suggests that claims of racial discrimination on the
football team may be exaggerated because Illinois's starting
quarterback that year was an African American, although it does not
mention factors besides the quarterback's race which may have
contributed to this perception (such as team dynamics or
interpersonal interactions with other players on the team). Jackson
also mentions being demoted by his speech professor as an alternate
in a public speaking competition team despite the support of his
teammates who elected him a place on the team for his superior
abilities. Jackson left Illinois at the end of his second semester
after being placed on academic probation.
Following his
graduation from A&T, Jackson attended the Chicago
Theological Seminary
with the intent of becoming a minister, but dropped
out in 1966 to focus full-time on the civil rights movement.
He was ordained in 1968, without a theological degree; awarded an
honorary theological doctorate from Chicago in 1990; and received
his Master of Divinity Degree based on his previous credits earned,
plus his life experience and subsequent work, in 2000.
Family
Jackson married Jacqueline Lavinia Brown (born 1944) on, December
31, 1962, and they had five children: Santita (1963),
Jesse Jr. (1965), Jonathan Luther (1966),
Yusef DuBois (1970), and Jacqueline Lavinia (1975).
In 2001, Jackson was shown to have had an affair with a staffer,
Karin Stanford, that resulted in the
birth of a daughter, Ashley, in May 1999. According to CNN, in
August 1999, The Rainbow Push Coalition had paid Stanford $15,000
in moving expenses and $21,000 in payment for contracting work. A
promised advance of an additional $40,000 against future
contracting work was rescinded once the affair became public. This
incident prompted Jackson to withdraw from
activism for a short time. Separate from the 1999
Rainbow Coalition payments, Jackson pays $4,000 a month in child
support.
Civil rights activism
In 1965, he participated in the
Selma to Montgomery marches
organized by
James Bevel, Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr., and other
civil rights leaders in Alabama. When Jackson returned from Selma,
he threw himself into SCLC's effort to establish a beachhead of the
Southern
Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) in Chicago.
In 1966, King and Bevel selected Jackson to be head of the SCLC’s
Operation Breadbasket in
Chicago, and SCLC promoted him to be the national director in 1967.
Following the example of
Reverend
Leon Sullivan of Philadelphia, a key goal of the new group was
to foster “selective buying” (boycotts) as a means to pressure
white businesses to hire blacks and purchase goods and services
from black contractors. One of Sullivan's precursors was Dr. T.R.M.
Howard, a wealthy South Side doctor and entrepreneur and key
financial contributor to Operation Breadbasket. Before he moved to
Chicago from Mississippi in 1956, Howard, as the head of the
Regional Council of Negro Leadership, had successfully organized a
boycott against service stations that refused to provide restrooms
for blacks.
When King was assassinated on April 4, 1968, in , the day after his
famous "I’ve been to the mountaintop" speech at the
Mason Temple, Jackson was in the parking lot
one floor below. Jackson's appearance on NBC's
Today Show,
wearing the same blood-stained turtleneck that he had worn the day
before, drew criticism from several King aides; some King
associates also dispute Jackson's description of his personal
involvement and also of the sequence of events surrounding the
assassination.
Jackson has been known for commanding public attention since he
first started working for King in 1966. His primary goal for this
attention has been to give blacks a sense of self-worth.
Beginning in 1968, Jackson increasingly clashed with
Ralph Abernathy, King's successor as
chairman of SCLC. In December, 1971, they had a complete falling
out. Abernathy suspended Jackson for “administrative improprieties
and repeated acts of violation of organizational policy.” Jackson
resigned, called together his allies, and
Operation PUSH was born
during the same month. The new group was organized in the home of
Dr.
T.R.M. Howard who also became a member of the board
of directors and chair of the finance committee.
In 1984, Jackson organized the
Rainbow
Coalition, which later merged, in 1996, with Operation PUSH.
The newly formed Rainbow PUSH organization brought his role as an
important and effective organizer to the mainstream.
Al Sharpton also left the SCLC in protest to
follow Jackson and formed the
National Youth Movement.
In March
2006, an African-American woman accused three white members of the
Duke
University
men's
lacrosse team of raping her. During the ensuing controversy
, Jackson stated that his Rainbow/PUSH Coalition
would pay for the rest of her college tuition regardless of the
outcome of the case. The case against the three men was
later thrown out and the players were declared innocent by the
North Carolina Attorney General.
In 1995, Jackson made headlines again when he wrote to the
Fox network protesting an episode of
Mighty Morphin Power Rangers in
which one protagonist, the "White Ranger," appeared to extol the
virtues of "
White Power". Jackson later
retracted his statement, but Fox nonetheless censored the line in
future airings.
Jackson took a key role in the scandal caused by comedic actor
Michael Richards' racially charged
comments in November 2006. Richards called Jackson a few days after
the incident to
apologize; Jackson accepted Richards' apology and met with him
publicly as a means of resolving the situation. Jackson also joined
black leaders in a call for the elimination of the "
N-word" throughout the entertainment industry.
International activism
During the 1980s, he achieved wide fame as an African American
leader and as a politician, as well as becoming a well-known
spokesman for civil rights issues. His influence extended to
international matters in the 1980s and 1990s.
In 1983,
Jackson traveled to Syria
to secure
the release of a captured American pilot, Navy Lt. Robert Goodman who was being held by the
Syrian government. Goodman had been shot down over Lebanon while on
a mission to bomb Syrian positions in that country. After a
dramatic personal appeal that Jackson made to
Syrian President Hafez al-Assad, Goodman was released.
Initially, the Reagan administration was skeptical about Jackson's
trip to Syria. However, after Jackson secured Goodman's release,
United States President
Ronald Reagan welcomed both Jackson
and Goodman to the White House on January 4, 1984. This helped to
boost Jackson's popularity as an American patriot and served as a
springboard for his 1984 presidential run.
In June 1984, Jackson
negotiated the release of twenty-two Americans being held in
Cuba
after an invitation by Cuban president Fidel Castro.
He
traveled to Kenya
in 1997 to
meet with Kenyan President
Daniel arap Moi as United States
President Bill Clinton's special envoy
for democracy to promote free and fair elections.
In April
1999, during the Kosovo War, Jackson
traveled to Belgrade
to negotiate the release of three U.S.
POWs
captured on the Macedonian
border while patrolling with a UN peacekeeping
unit. He met with the then-Yugoslav president
Slobodan Milošević, who later
agreed to release the three men.
His international efforts continued into the 2000s.
On February 15, 2003,
Jackson spoke in front of over an estimated one million people in
Hyde Park,
London
at the culmination of the anti-war demonstration
against the imminent invasion
of Iraq
by the U.S.
and the United Kingdom. In November 2004, Jackson visited senior
politicians and community activists in Northern Ireland
in an effort to encourage better cross-community
relations and rebuild the peace process and restore the
governmental institutions of the Belfast Agreement. In August 2005,
Jackson traveled to Venezuela
to meet Venezuelan President
Hugo Chávez, following
controversial remarks by televangelist Pat
Robertson in which he implied that Chávez should be
assassinated. Jackson condemned Robertson's remarks as
immoral. After meeting with Chávez and addressing the Venezuelan
Parliament, Jackson said that there was no evidence that Venezuela
posed a threat to the U.S. Jackson also met representatives from
the Afro Venezuela and indigenous communities.
In 2005, he was enlisted as part of the United Kingdom's "Operation
Black Vote", a campaign run by Simon Woolley to encourage more of
Britain's ethnic minorities to vote in political elections ahead of
the May 2005 General Election.
Jackson inherited the Crown prince of the Agni people of Côte
d'Ivoire from
Michael Jackson.
On
August, he was crowned Prince Côte Nana by Amon N'Douffou V, King
of Krindjabo
, who rules more than a million Agni
tribespeople.
Political activism
1984 presidential campaign
On November 3, 1983, he announced his campaign for presidency. In
1984, Jackson became the second African American (after
Shirley Chisholm) to mount a nationwide
campaign for
President of
the United States, running as a
Democrat.
In the primaries, Jackson, who had been written off by pundits as a
fringe candidate with little chance at winning the nomination,
surprised many when he took third place behind Senator
Gary Hart and former
Vice President Walter Mondale, who eventually won the
nomination. Jackson garnered 3,282,431 primary votes, or 18.2
percent of the total, in 1984, and won five primaries and caucuses,
including Louisiana, the District of Columbia, South Carolina,
Virginia, and one of two separate contests in Mississippi.
As he had gained 21% of the popular vote but only 8% of delegates,
he afterwards complained that he had been handicapped by party
rules. While Mondale (in the words of his aides) was determined to
establish a precedent with his vice presidential candidate by
picking a woman or visible minority, Jackson criticized the
screening process as a "
p.r. parade
of personalities". He also mocked Mondale, saying that
Hubert Humphrey was the "last significant
politician out of the St. Paul–Minneapolis" area.
Remarks about Jews
Jackson referred to Jews as "Hymies" and to New York City as
"Hymietown" in January 1984 during a conversation with Washington
Post reporter Milton Coleman. Jackson at first denied the remarks,
then accused Jews of conspiring to defeat him. When he finally did
acknowledge that it was wrong to use the term, he said he did so in
private to a reporter. Finally, Jackson apologized during a speech
before national Jewish leaders in a
synagogue, but continuing suspicions have led to
an enduring split between Jackson and many Jews.
Among Jackson's other remarks were that
Richard Nixon was less attentive to poverty in
the U.S. because "four out of five [of Nixon's top advisors] are
German Jews and their
priorities are on Europe and Asia"; that he was "sick and tired of
hearing about
the Holocaust"; and that
there are "very few Jewish reporters that have the capacity to be
objective about
Arab affairs".
In 1979, Jackson said
on a trip to the Middle East that Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin was a "terrorist," and
Israel
was a
"theocracy." Jackson has since
apologized for at least some of these remarks and was later invited
to speak in support of
Al Gore and
Joe Lieberman at the
2000 Democratic National
Convention.
1988 presidential campaign
Four years later, in 1988, Jackson once again offered himself as a
candidate for the Democratic Party presidential nomination. This
time, his successes in the past made him a more credible candidate,
and he was both better financed and better organized. Although most
people did not seem to believe he had a serious chance at winning,
Jackson once again exceeded expectations as he more than doubled
his previous results, prompting
R.W.
Apple of the
New York Times to call 1988 "the Year of
Jackson".
He captured 6.9 million votes and won 11 contests; seven primaries
(Alabama, the District of Columbia, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Puerto Rico and Virginia) and four caucuses (Delaware,
Michigan, South Carolina and Vermont). Jackson also scored March
victories in Alaska's caucuses and Texas's local conventions,
despite losing the Texas primary.
Briefly, after he won 55% of the vote in
the Michigan
Democratic caucus, he was considered the
frontrunner for the nomination, as he surpassed all the other
candidates in total number of pledged delegates.
In early
1988, Jackson organized a rally at the former American Motors assembly plant in Kenosha,
Wisconsin
, approximately two weeks after new owner Chrysler announced it would close the plant by the
end of the year. In his speech, Jackson spoke out against
Chrysler's decision, stating "We have to put the focus on Kenosha,
Wisconsin, as the place, here and now, where we draw the line to
end economic violence!" and compared the workers' fight to that of
the civil rights movement in Selma, Alabama
. As a result, the UAW Local 72 union voted
to endorse his candidacy, even against the rules of the
UAW.
However, Jackson's campaign suffered a
significant setback less than two weeks later when he was defeated
handily in the Wisconsin
primary by Michael
Dukakis. Jackson's showing among white voters in
Wisconsin was significantly higher than in his 1984 run, but was
also noticeably lower than pre-primary polling had indicated it
would be. The discrepancy has been cited as an example of the
so-called "
Bradley effect."
Jackson's campaign had also been interrupted by allegations
regarding his half-brother Noah Robinson, Jr.'s criminal activity.
Jackson had to answer frequent questions about his brother, who was
often referred to as "the
Billy Carter
of the Jackson campaign".
On the heels of Jackson's narrow loss to Dukakis the day before in
Colorado, Dukakis' comfortable win in Wisconsin terminated
Jackson's momentum. The victory established Dukakis as the clear
Democratic frontrunner, and he went on to claim the party's
nomination, but lost the general election in November.
Campaign platform
In both races, Jackson ran on what many considered to be a very
liberal
platform. Declaring that he wanted to create a "Rainbow Coalition"
of various
minority groups, including
African Americans,
Hispanic Americans,
Arab-Americans,
Asian Americans,
Native American,
family farmers, the
poor and
working class,
and
homosexuals, as well as
European American progressives who fit into none of those
categories, Jackson ran on a platform that included:
With the exception of a resolution to implement sanctions against
South Africa for its apartheid policies, none of these positions
made it into the party's platform in either 1984 or 1988.
Stand on abortion
Although Jackson was one of the most liberal members of the
Democratic Party, his position on abortion were originally more in
line with
pro-life views. Jackson once
endorsed the
Hyde Amendment, which
bars the funding of abortions through the federal
Medicaid program. He wrote an article published in
a 1977
National Right
to Life Committee News report:
"There are those who argue that the right to privacy is
of [a] higher order than the right to life...that was the premise
of slavery. You could not protest the existence or treatment of
slaves on the plantation because that was private and therefore
outside your right to be concerned.
What happens to the mind of a person, and the moral fabric of a
nation, that accepts the aborting of the life of a baby without a
pang of conscience? What kind of a person and what kind of a
society will we have twenty years hence if life can be taken so
casually? It is that question, the question of our attitude, our
value system, and our mind-set with regard to the nature and worth
of life itself that is the central question confronting mankind.
Failure to answer that question affirmatively may leave us with a
hell right here on earth."
However, since then, Jackson has adopted a
pro-choice view, believing that abortion is a
right and that the government should not prevent a woman from
having an abortion.
Later political activities
He ran for office as "
shadow senator"
for the District of Columbia when the position was created in 1991,
and served as such through 1997, when he did not run for
re-election. This unpaid position was primarily a post to lobby for
statehood for the District of Columbia.
In the mid-1990s, he was approached about being the
United States
Ambassador to South Africa but declined the opportunity in
favor of helping his son,
Jesse
Jackson, Jr., run for the
United States House of
Representatives.
While Jackson was initially critical of the "
Third Way" or more moderate policies of
Bill Clinton, he became a key ally in gaining African American
support for Clinton and eventually became a close advisor and
friend of the Clinton family. Clinton awarded Jackson the
Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest
honor bestowed on civilians.
His son, Jesse
Jackson, Jr., also emerged as a political figure, becoming a
member of the United States House of
Representatives from Illinois
. In 2002, scholar
Molefi Kete Asante listed Jesse Jackson
on his list of
100
Greatest African Americans. In 2003, Jackson surprised many
observers by declining to endorse the campaigns of either
Al Sharpton or former Senator
Carol Moseley Braun, the two African
American candidates, in the race for the Democratic Party's 2004
presidential nomination.
Instead, Jackson remained largely silent
about his preference in the race until late in the primary season,
when he allowed Democratic Representative Dennis Kucinich of Ohio
, another
presidential candidate, to speak at a Rainbow/PUSH forum on March
31, 2004. Although he did not explicitly voice an
endorsement of Rep. Kucinich, Jackson described Kucinich as
"assuming the burden of saying 'you make the most sense, but you
can't win.'" He also writes for
The Progressive
Populist.
Jackson was a target of the
2002 white supremacist terror
plot.
2004 presidential election
Jackson gathered information and support to investigate the
2004 U.S.
presidential election controversy, particularly the voting
results in Ohio and its recount. He called for a congressional
debate on the matter, asking for a fair count and national voting
standards, saying that the elections in the United States are each
run with different standards by different states with partisan
tricks, racial bias, and widespread incompetence and are an open
scandal.
Jackson said that he held some hope that the election could be
overturned, although he admitted that that was very
doubtful.
Jackson compared the voting irregularities
of Ohio
to that of
the 2004 Ukrainian
presidential election, saying that if Ohio were Ukraine
, the U.S. presidential election would not have been
certified by the international community. Jackson called
Ohio Secretary of State
Kenneth Blackwell inappropriately
partisan and said that Blackwell may have been pressured by
President
George W. Bush and Vice-President
Dick Cheney to deliver Ohio to the
Republican Party.
Based on information obtained in hearings held by Rep.
John Conyers (D-MI) and discovered during a
flawed recount of the Ohio presidential vote called for by
Green Party candidate
David Cobb and
Libertarian Party
candidate
Michael Badnarik, Jackson
suggested that the Ohio voting machines were "rigged" and that some
African-Americans were forced to stand in line for six hours in the
rain before voting. When asked for evidence, Jackson did not give
facts, but replied, "Based on distrusting the system, lack of paper
trails, the anomaly of the exit polls."
On January 6, 2005, the U.S. House Judiciary Committee Democratic
staff released a 100 page report on the Ohio election. This
challenge to the Ohio election was rejected by a vote of 74-1 by
the United States Senate and 267-31 in the
House. Many
high-ranking Democrats chose to distance themselves from this
debate, including
John Kerry, despite
Jesse Jackson personally asking Kerry for help. The call for
election reform legislation and voting rights protection
nonetheless continued.
Terri Schiavo case
In early 2005, Jackson visited the parents in the
Terri Schiavo case; he supported their
unsuccessful bid to keep her alive.
Firearms protest and arrest
On June 23, 2007 Jackson was arrested in connection with a protest
at a gun store in Riverdale, a poor suburb of Chicago, Illinois.
Jackson and others were protesting due to allegations that the gun
store had been selling firearms to local gang members and was
contributing to the decay of the community. According to police
reports, Jackson refused to stop blocking the front entrance of the
store and let customers pass. He was charged with one count of
criminal trespass to property.
2008 presidential election
In March 2007, Jackson declared his support for then-Senator
Barack Obama in the
2008
democratic primaries. Jackson later criticized Barack Obama in
2007 for "acting like he's white," in response to the
Jena 6 beating case.
On July 6, 2008, during an interview with
Fox News, a microphone picked up Jackson
whispering to fellow guest Dr. Reed Tuckson: "See, Barack's been,
ahh, talking down to black people on this faith-based... I want to
cut his nuts out." Jackson was expressing his disappointment in
Obama's
Father's Day speech
chastisement of Black fathers. Only a portion of Jackson's comments
were released on video. A spokesman for Fox News stated that
Jackson had "referred to blacks with the N-word" in his comments
about Obama; Fox News did not release the entire video or a
complete transcript of his comments. Subsequent to his Fox News
interview, Jackson apologized and reiterated his support for
Obama.
On November 4, 2008, Jackson was present at the Obama victory
rally, waiting for Obama to appear. In the several moments before
Obama spoke, Jackson was in tears.
Electoral history
New York
State Right to Life Party Presidential convention,
1980:
1984
Democratic presidential primaries
- Walter Mondale - 6,952,912
(38.32%)
- Gary Hart - 6,504,842 (35.85%)
- Jesse Jackson - 3,282,431 (18.09%)
- John Glenn - 617,909 (3.41%)
- George McGovern - 334,801
(1.85%)
- Unpledged - 146,212 (0.81%)
- Lyndon LaRouche - 123,649
(0.68%)
- Reubin O'Donovan Askew -
52,759 (0.29%)
- Alan Cranston - 51,437
(0.28%)
- Ernest Hollings - 33,684
(0.19%)
1984
Democratic National Convention:
1988
Democratic presidential primaries:
- Michael Dukakis - 9,898,750
(42.47%)
- Jesse Jackson - 6,788,991 (29.13%)
- Al Gore - 3,185,806 (13.67%)
- Dick Gephardt - 1,399,041
(6.00%)
- Paul M. Simon - 1,082,960 (4.65%)
- Gary Hart - 415,716 (1.78%)
- Unpledged - 250,307 (1.07%)
- Bruce Babbitt - 77,780
(0.33%)
- Lyndon LaRouche - 70,938
(0.30%)
- David Duke - 45,289 (0.19%)
- James Traficant - 30,879
(0.13%)
- Douglas E. Applegate - 25,068 (0.11%)
1988
Democratic National Convention:
Shadow Senator from District of Columbia, 1990
Two candidates who won the highest number of vote takes two shadow
seats.
- Jesse Jackson (D) - 105,633 (46.80%)
- Florence Pendleton (D) -
58,451 (25.89%)
- Harry T. Alexander (I) - 13,983 (6.19%)
- Milton Francis (R) - 13,538
(6.00%)
- Joan Gillison (R) - 12,845
(5.69%)
- Keith M. Wilkerson (D.C. Statehood) - 4,545
(2.01%)
- Anthony W. Peacock (D.C. Statehood) - 4,285
(1.90%)
- John West (I) - 3,621 (1.60%)
- David L. Whitehead (I) - 3,341 (1.48%)
- Sam Manuel (Socialist Workers) -
2,765 (1.23%)
- Lee Black (I) - 2,728 (1.21%)
See also
References
- Dudley, K. (1994). The End of the Line: , Chicago:
University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-16908-1
- Jackson, Jesse L., Jr., with Frank E. Watkins, A More
Perfect Union: Advancing New American Rights.., ISBN 1-56649-186-X,
Welcome Rain Publishers: New York, 2001.
Notes
- CBSNews.com
- Archived 2009-10-31.
- ESPN.com: GEN - Edwards: The man who would be King
in the Sports Arena
- Gale - Free Resources - Black History - Biographies
- Jesse Jackson
- "Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. Receives Master's Degree
From Chicago Theological Seminary"
- "Jackson Closes A Chapter"
- NNDB: Jesse Jackson.
- Voices & Viewpoints: Jesse Jackson.
- CNN.com - Operation PUSH documents financial ties
with Jackson lover - February 1, 2001
- Salon.com Politics | Jackson retreats
- David T. Beito and Linda Royster Beito, Black Maverick:
T.R.M. Howard's Fight for Civil Rights and Economic Power
(Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2009)
- Joyce Purnick and Michael Oreske, Jesse Jackson
Aims for the Mainstream, New York Times, November 29, 1987
- Interview with Al Sharpton, David Shankbone,
Wikinews,
December 3, 2007.
- Sharpton: Comedian's apology not enough -
CNN.com
-
http://www.cnn.com/2006/SHOWBIZ/TV/11/27/michaelrichards.ap/index.html
- Jesse Jackson's Mission to Damascus
- New York Times
- PBS Frontline chronology
- Jesse Jackson Says Venezuela No Threat, Praises
Venezuelan Government Concerns | venezuelanalysis.com
- Operation Black Vote - Jesse Jackson tour kick
starts!
- Jackson and White, p. 33.
- Purnick, Joyce, and Michael Oreskes. "Jesse Jackson
Aims for the Mainstream". The New York Times, November
29, 1987
- "1984 Texas Jackson-for-President Campaign
Collection: An Inventory of Records at the Houston Metropolitan
Research Center, Houston Public Library"
- Thomas, Evan. "Trying to Win the Peace",
Time, July 2, 1984
- "Keep Hope Alive". Jesse Jackson, pages 234-235.
-
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE7DD123FF933A15750C0A96E948260
-
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE2DC1039F931A25750C0A96E948260
- Dudley (1994)
- Robinson had a long running feud with a criminal named Leroy
"Hambone" Barber who had been convicted of armed robbery against
Robinson. While Barber was imprisoned Robinson had written letters
to him stating that he would enact a violent revenge upon him upon
his release from prison. (These letters would come back to haunt
Robinson at a future date). Noah Robinson had made good on his
violent promise by contacting imprisoned gang leader and longtime
friend Jeff Fort and wiring him $10,000 to assemble a hit team to
hunt down Leroy Barber and have him murdered. Through a
HUMINT asset in Jeff
Fort's El Rukn gang, the Illinois State Police was able to
conclude that Robinson had ordered the murder, and he was convicted
of first degree murder and sentenced to
life
imprisonment.
- "Shakedown" by Kenneth Timmerman
- Dionne, E. J. Jr. (1988, April 6). " Dukakis Defeats Jackson Handily in Wisconsin
Vote", The New York Times
- Reprint of a Washington Post article from
1988
- Asante, Molefi Kete (2002). 100 Greatest African Americans: A
Biographical Encyclopedia. Amherst, New York. Prometheus Books.
ISBN 1-57392-963-8.
- CNN.com - Terri Schiavo's mom pleads: 'Give my
child back' - Mar 29, 2005
- Rev. Jesse Jackson Arrested During Anti-Gun Protest
- CommonDreams.org
- Jesse Jackson backs Obama for 2008 - Barack Obama News -
MSNBC.com
- Jackson regrets vulgar Obama comment, Michael
Calderone, Politico, July 10, 2008
- Jesse Jackson reportedly also used n-word in
off-air gaffe - CNN.com
- Our Campaigns - NY US President - RTL Convention Race -
Aug 23, 1980
- Our Campaigns - US President - D Primaries Race - Feb 20,
1984
- Our Campaigns - US President - D Convention Race - Jul 16,
1984
- Our Campaigns - US President - D Primaries Race - Feb 01,
1988
- Our Campaigns - US President - D Convention Race - Jul 18,
1988
- Our Campaigns - DC Shadow Senator Race - Nov 06,
1990
External links