» > • • ’» • • *< t •r*’* <«r ♦ ♦ ♦-* •»* • • •■•»•*• * < P O RTLfì NÖ ’b ßSE RV E R Introducing: Let’s Stop The Violence “ Who Killed by: Ms. Azzie Winston (Mother of Ray Ray Winston) By: Jim Redden-Associate Edit or Willamette Week Newspaper Valerie Currie Valerie Currie is the new Employment Coordinate for the Internal Revenue Service. Currie began her career as a revenue agent in 1985 after graduating from Portland State University with a degree in Business Administrator. Currie stated that a few of the goals of the program w ill be to establish recruitment sites within the Community, pro­ mote the IRS as a career oppor­ tunity, and to continue VITA, the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program. Alive & Well! Mattie Ann Callier-Spears After a speedy recovery from a recent illness, Ms. Mattie Ann Callier-Spears w ill be perform­ ing at the Oregon State Fair, this Saturday, Sept. 3, at 3 p.m. and on Sunday, Sept. 4, at 11 a.m. The performance w ill take place on the Showcase Stage. Also appearing on the show will be the Byron Davis Singers nad the very talented Brown Singers. Don’t miss the power­ ful and inspiring concert! Announcement: As of today, all news items, calendar events, photographs etc., must arrive at the Portland Observer’s News Desk by 12 Noon each Monday. All submit­ ted material , including un­ solicited articles, must be (1) signed, and (2) typed double­ spaced with a name and a tele­ phone number for verification. All subm itted photographs must be black and white. Color photographs w ill no longer be accepted. Once submitted, all photographs becom es the p ro p e rty o f th e Portland Observer. Before consideration for publication, all news Items and articles will be researched for verification and edited for clari­ ty. Priority will be given to com­ munity news and news that di­ rectly impact the community. News from and about role m odels, fa m ilie s, seniors, young achievers, etc. is welcomed. Unsigned material will not be considered. And lastly, columns that usually appear on the editor­ ial/opinion page w ill be moved to other sections pf the paper. In the future, the editorial page will focus on commentary, analysis, guest editorials and letters to the editor. We welcome your letters ... Now. Thanks for your unrelenting support. Editor’s Note: The following article appeared in the August 25-31 issue of the W illam ette W eek N ewspaper, The Portland Observer determin­ ed that the information contained in this article is valuable for gaining needed insight to recent incidents at Columbia Villa. It is reprinted with permission of the Willamette Week Newspaper. environment that did not seem to offer much of a way out. He was the kind of person that the government says it wants to help. But the one public agency that W inston actually came in to contact with, the Housing Auth­ ority of Portland, evicted him from his mother’s home one week before his death. The fact is, the word “ gang” has become such a toaded label tate Penitentiary, in Salem, for attempted murder. A brother, Stanley Jr., 19, is in a Salem work- release center serving a five-year term for first-degree robbery. The mother, Azzie, 34, has relied largely on public support to raise her family. There were signs that Joseph W inston had already begun making the wrong choices. His mother says that her son was not One cannot explain the pain and grief of losing their child. It is like a part of you has gone, too. You feel this emptiness, the loss of one of your children is hard to express, the hurt and lonliness you feel inside. My son, Ray-Ray was loved by everyone. He enjoyed his life some, his family, his school and classmates. He loved his sports activities, he helped out and work­ ed hard to help at home. He wasn’t a problem child, he gave respect to everyone. He had high hopes of attending college and wanted to be a professional ball player someday. I hope that no one would have to feel the pain and suffering that I have gone through since the loss of my son. The shock and grief that I felt at the time of his death caused a lot of feelings to run through me, but I have to put it in the hands of the Lord. My son was deeply loved by his brothers and sisters and all the kids that knew him; he will be greatly miss­ ed by us all. Nothing or no one could ever replace what we had or what we feel for Ray-Ray. We, the family of Ray-Ray Winston, in no way seek any revenge and hope that this will bring an end to all the violence; that men will lay down their guns stop killing and start loving. wo weeks ago, Joseph Ray Winston was looking forward to his senior year at Roosevelt High School. As a junior, the 17-year-old excelled at basketball. He planned to return to the court In the fall, and also hoped to try out fo r the north Portland school’s football team. Last week, James Edward Tw ine was livin g w ith his grandmother in north Portland. He was a rifle marksman in the U.S. Army Reserves and worked at a downtown M cDonald’s, where his supervisor considered Roosevelt High School basketball team with Joseph Ray Winston (Front him a good employee with a Row, Right) cheerful attitude. a gang member. She describes that it immediately conjures up Today, Winston and Twine are him as a good boy who did not stereotyped Images of swagger­ dead, symbols of this city’s even smoke or drink. But some ing, s te e l-n e rve d c rim in a ls growing epidemic of gang-related Columbia Villa residents say that w ielding pow erful autom atic violence. On Aug. 17, Winston he had begun hanging around weapons and carrying piles of was shot to death in a small park with established members of the cash from durg sales. The in the Columbia Villa housing Columbia Villa Crips. Some time problem with this stereotype is project — near a sign erected by ago, the Portland police con- that it tends to obscure the real the p ro je c t’s la n d lo rd , the -cluded he was a gang member, people behind the label, most of Housing Authority of Portland, known to the other Crips as “ Ray whom are kids who need more that proclaims, ‘‘We protect our Ray.” The police came to this than the threat of jails if they are ow n!” Five days later, Twine died conclusion for a number of ever going to have a chance. after being shot In the chest while reasons. For starters, he appar­ The first newspaper stories of standing In a Piedmont Plaza ently bragged to police during W inston’s death promised a Townhouses parking lot at North conversations at Columbia Villa major break in Portland’s war Mississippi Avenue and Simpson that he was a gang member of against gangs. "A suspected Street. some standing. In addition, leader of the Crips gang dies in a Police are trying to determine according to Deputy Portland small park in the Columbia Villa whether the killings are related. Police Chief Dan Noelle, Winston housing project,” proclaimed the Winston reportedly called himself had been identified as a gang subhead on the front page of the a member of the Columbia Villa member by reliable informants afternoon edition of the Aug. 17 Crips, an offshoot of a black and because he wore clothing Oregonian. W inston’s role as a youth gang that originated in associated with the Crips. “ If it head of the Columbia Villa Crips California in the 1960s. Police walks like a duck and talks like a was amplified in the next day’s say Twine was an associate of duck, it’s a duck,” says Noelle, edition of the paper, which the Bloods, the Crips’ archrivals. who adds that, despite The Ore­ contained no fewer than five For months, Portlanders have gonian’s claims, the police did references to Winston as a read and heard news stories not call Winston a gangleader. gangleader, couched in such about youth gangs moving up “ They don’t have any real leaders, te rm s as " r e p u t e d ” and from California. According to except maybe the oldest and “ admitted.” some of the stories, the gangs strongest.” The designation “ leader” was have been lured to town by the In Portland, the term gang has significant. Until now, Portland’s huge profits to be generated by taken on explosive connotations. gangs have been faceless. Identi­ the sale of crack cocaine. Some Even the media have been caught fying a leader— even a dead of the reports allege the gangs up in the frenzy, occasionally one — would go a long way have already a ttra c te d 600 labeling routine acts of violence toward helping people under­ followers. as gang related. Leon Harris, stand how the gangs were The gang threat has galvanized general manager of the black- operating in the city. government leaders into action. owned Portland Observer news­ But, as details of Winston’s Oregon Gov. Neil Goldschmidt paper, says such coverage adds past came out, the image of a has already announced that he to the existing problems in north coldblooded gangleader began to will ask the 1989 session of the and northeast Portland. “ It’s vanish. He was not from out of Oregon Legislature to build more created a great deal of hysteria, state, but had grown up in jail beds. Multnomah County especially among the business Portland. Although apparently Sheriff Fred Pearce has announc­ owners,” Harris says, “Those who known to the police, he had no ed that gang members will stay in can afford to move are leaving. A criminal record. And his high jail longer than non-gang mem­ mass exodus from this communi­ school basketball coach called bers. And Mayor Bud Clark has ty serves no useful purpose.” him a gifted boy with potential on taken partial credit for the That kind of hysteria may have the basketball court. creation of a multiagency strike blinded the Housing Authority of In reality, Winston was what force to fight gangs in Portland. Portland to Joseph Winston’s social workers call an “ at risk" These plans sound promising, true needs. After being branded a youth, By that, they mean a young but it is doubtful that they would gang member, the Housing Auth­ person who could easily turn to have helped either Winston or ority threw Winston out of his crime unless given a helping Twine. Little was known about mother’s home one week before hand. When Winston was 7, his Twine by the time Willamette he was killed. Now the agency parents were divorced. His father, Week went to press, but Winston cannot cite any specific problem Stanley, 45, has a long criminal fit the classic mold of an that Winston caused to justify the record and is currently serving a underprivileged youth, handicap­ eviction. 20-year sentence in the Oregon ped by poverty and living In an The eviction of Winston de­ serves closer scrutiny than it has received to date. Judi Pitre, the Housing Authority employee who FEATURES 140433953 Pa«e 1, appeared on behalf of the agency in court eviction proceedings, RELATED STORIES.....................................................p««e 2 now says that she did not want to COMMUNITY FORUM.......................................... Page 3 evict him at all. “ He had been RELIGION................ ..................................................... P««c4 involved in a couple of disturb­ ENTERTAINMENT......................................................Page 5 ances, but they had all been BACK-TO-SCHOOL.............................................. Pages 6 -9 < resolved as far as th Housing T OBSERVER’S INDEX CLASSIFIEDS....................................................... Page 10-12 ■ Continued on Page 2 r^'» ♦■*’•’ *■*■♦’* 26C Tragedy On Roselawn by Mattie Ann Callier-Spears ast night at 10 p.m. there was another shooting in our Nor­ theast community, at 744 N.E. Roselawn. B ro th e rs Johnny L e ro y Williams, 25, and Kevin Ray Williams, 20, of the Roselawn ad­ dress were critically Injured and their step-brother, 11-year-old Kenyata Black suffered a pellet wound when caught in the hail of bullets fired by their assailants. According to Det. David Simp­ son, public Information officer for the Portland Police Bureau there were two cars in the area of N.E. 8th and Roselawn. The cars stop­ ped, and the occupants got out. The W illiams’ were in the door­ way of the residence when the attackers opened fire at close range. Handguns and a shotgun were fired. The force of the blast reportedly knocked the older men back through the doorway and In­ to the house. The police were In the area and heard the shots being fired. They gave chase and stopped a vehicle between N.E. Jarrett and Simp­ son Streets. Four juveniles were apprehend­ ed and taken into custody. No other details were available. L The three injured youths were rushed to Emanuel Hospital ■ FMS 1 Youth Gang Gang Prevention: An Exclusive Interview With The With The Rev. Clarence R. Hill R. Hill of Inglewood, California. by Stephen E. McPherson, Special Correspondent he cruel reality of Portland's tis accompanied us on Sunday growing youth gangs came and we met several young men. We Interacted with them and I into sharp focus last week when Ray Ray Winston, a popular shared my perception of the 17-year-old athlete and Columbia Black genocide they are per­ petrating. Most of the crimes we Villa resident, resident, was are experiencing are Black on eulogized by the Reverend Clar­ Black. I talked to them about what ence R. Hill of Inglewood, Cali­ we must do with the younger peo­ fornia. Rev. Hill readily admits ple to prevent them from getting that he once was a gang member caught up in such a downward who graduated to selling dope thrust. Portland Observar. In talking to some of the gang members did they Indicate why they are Involv­ ed In such activities? Did they ex­ press a desire to get back Into the main stream of society? The Rav. Hill: There Is a very In­ teresting situation here In Port­ land. The drug element Is a very strong issue. Once they have a taste of It and have experienced what money can buy, It is difficult to compete with that attraction. This is why something must be X done at a younger age where cri­ Rev. Clarence Hill sis Intervention is effective. Cer­ in Portland This Week tainly something must be done to Identify those young people who and then to running a gambling might be vulnerable to these joint. There is a difference. Rev. negative Influences. I talked with Hill got out of It and now devotes many of the Bloods and Crips his entire career to saving young who expressed a desire to do people. He Is the executive direc­ something other than what they tor of the Community Care Pro­ presently are doing. My concern gram In Inglewood. The following and question is what does is an exclusive interview he gave Portland have that will create this to the Portland Observer just alternative? Is there a business before returning to California. man, Is there a corporation who Portland Observer. I under­ will embrace one or two of these stand that you had the opportuni­ youths with financial support? It ty to talk to some of the young is my understanding that there people who identify with the are less than 200 such persons in­ Bloods and the Crips here in volved with gangs. California has Portland. at least 37.000. Is there a business The Rev. Hill: Mr. Macceo Pet­ ■ Continued on Page 2 T I