Cop-Killers, Terrorists and Mamdani and Cuomo by Ronald Kolb-10/25/25
On September 25, infamous fugitive terrorist and
cop-killer Joanne Chesimard a.k.a. Assata Shakur passed away in
Havana. She had been given asylum by the Castro government after her conviction
and life sentence for killing a New Jersey State Trooper in 1973 and her
subsequent breakout from prison aided by other terrorists in 1979.
Two of the terrorists who helped her escape, David Gilbert
and Judith Clark, were later convicted of killing three, including two police
officers, and would later be released with a huge assist from former New York
Governor Andrew Cuomo and a current New York mayoral candidate. They were among
the first of 43 cop-killers that the Cuomo's hand-picked State
Parole Board have released since 2017.
Fellow mayoral candidate Curtis Sliwa brought that stunning fact up at a recent
mayoral debate, yet Cuomo said nothing. And the Democratic Socialists of
America, who are huge supporters of Queens Assemblyman and mayoral candidate
Zohran Mamdani (and who is a proud member of the far-left group), recently
honored Chesimard's legacy, yet he has refused to comment on their
action or on Chesimard herself.
Politicians from both parties and law enforcement from
around the tri-state denounced her as a terrorist and cop-killer, and Mamdani
had to know who she was because she has been celebrated by the left for
decades.
Chesimard was born in Queens, New York in 1947. She joined
the Black Panthers briefly in 1970 but left them the following year for the
more radical Black Liberation Army (BLA), and being one of the few female
members, she was considered as the "soul of the group."
Their most notable actions in the 1970's was the targeting
and assassination of at least a dozen police officers, usually killed in pairs.
At about 1 a.m. on May 2nd, 1973, Chesimard was in a car on the New Jersey
Turnpike with two other BLA members. They had false ID's and were all
wanted--Chesimard for two bank robberies and two bar robberies--and one of
which included a murder.
They were speeding, had a broken taillight and were stopped
by State Troopers James Harper and Werner Foerster. A shootout quickly ensued
and all were hit. Foerster went down with his pistol lying nearby and Chesimard
picked it up and discharged a fatal headshot. Foerster was 34 and left behind a
widow and three-year old son.
The three terrorists then fled. One of them was quickly
found dead after suffering fatal injuries. Chesimard and her other
companion were found after an extensive manhunt, and she was convicted in 1977
and eventually sent to the Clinton (N.J.) Correctional Facility for Women.
While Chesimard was in prison, the May 19th group, who were
remnants of the Weather Underground and after Vietnam named themselves after
the birthdays of Ho Chi Minh and Malcolm X, wanted to rob banks and
"expropriate money for the struggle," and wanted to
"liberate" Chesimard from prison and use funds to harbor her and then
smuggle her to Cuba for asylum.
The May 19th group were mostly white females and included
former Weather members Susan Rosenberg and Judith Clark (who had both even
attended some of her New Brunswick murder trial), Kathy Boudin and her
companion David Gilbert, with whom she would share a son, and Marilyn Buck, who
would consider herself BLA. They joined forces with the BLA and spent nine
months planning the jailbreak--and it was a success.
On November 2nd, 1979, Chesimard had left four phony names
of BLA members as "visitors" and they smuggled guns in through lax
security, and giving a .357 Magnum to Chesimard and took two guards hostage in
a prison van, and driving out of the prison (which had no gates) they
transferred to vehicles rented by Gilbert and driven by Rosenberg, Clark and
Buck and then released the two hostages. Chesimard hid at an address with
Buck in Pittsburgh and eventually arrived in Havana, receiving asylum.
In 1980, after the success of the Chesimard breakout, the
May 19th group decided to graduate from robbing banks to robbing armored trucks
to continue their activity and also fund their drug addictions. A pattern soon
developed. Jeral Wayne Williams a.k.a. Mutulu Shakur was the leader of the BLA
"action five." He would command a stolen truck, and the others would
assault the targeted truck with M16 rifles, jump back into the stolen vehicle
and flee with the proceeds.
They would be accompanied by two backup/getaway cars driven
by Rosenberg and Clark and would go to a designated decoy U-Haul rented by
Gilbert (and accompanied by Boudin) and the five BLA members would hide in the
back with the proceeds. They had a number of successful robberies and on June
2nd, 1981, they opened fire on a Brinks truck in the Bronx, killing guard
William Moroney and seriously injured another Brinks guard, and they made off
with about $200,000.
Susan Rosenberg had been trolling another Brinks route and
reported to the group they would make millions during their last pick up at the
bank at Nanuet Mall in suburban Rockland County. Gilbert rented a U-Haul and
parked behind an abandoned Korvettes department store (with Boudin) about a
mile from the mall. Shakur drove a stolen red Chevy van to the Brinks truck as
Guards Peter Paige and Joseph Trombino were loading bags into the truck and the
five jumped out firing their M-16 rifles, killing Paige and seriously injuring
Trombino.
They drove off, followed by Rosenberg driving a white
Oldsmobile and Clark driving a tan Honda to meet with Gilbert. When they
arrived, two bags containing $800,000 were put in the Honda's trunk and four
sacks containing another $800,000 were put in the back of the U-Haul. Shakur
and the five other robbers then jumped in the back. The red van was abandoned
as the U-Haul and two back-up cars headed back toward New York City.
But what they didn't realize was that a young woman living
nearby witnessed the transfer and had called the police. The U-Haul soon
approached the New York State Thruway entrance in nearby Nyack and four
officers armed with a rifle and three pistols had just set up a roadblock and
approached the U-Haul. Boudin got out and approached Nyack Detective Arthur
Keenan saying there were no black people there while Officer Brian Lennon was
returning his shotgun to his car while Keenan still insisted on seeing into the
back of the truck.
The six in the back of the U-Haul heard Keenan and got their
rifles ready, flung open the door and began firing at the officers. Keenan was hit twice and
took cover behind a tree and began returning fire. Officer Waverly
"Skipper" Brown, the only black member of the Nyack force, was hit
and returned fire. He was hit and fell again, while one of the shooters pumped
more bullets into him. Sergeant Ed O'Grady took cover behind his vehicle
returning fire. Kneeling while reloading, one of the shooters coolly walked
over to him and shot him three times with his M-16.
Lennon, still in his patrol car, started firing at the
U-Haul with his rifle, then drew his pistol and started firing as the U-Haul
tried to ram his vehicle. They were stuck by the roadblock and the patrol car
and fled, abandoning the U-Haul and the money. Lennon was stuck in his car,
blocked by the U-Haul on one side and O'Grady, who was dying, blocking the
other.
Meanwhile, Michael Koch, an off-duty officer who had been
stuck in the roadblock, saw Kathy Boudin start running along the side of the
Thruway and pursued her and tackled her as she shouted and tried to resist.
David Gilbert jumped in the passenger seat of Clark's Honda while BLA shooter
Sam Brown jumped in the back.
Marilyn Buck had strapped a gun to her leg and in her haste
to remove it during the shootout shot herself in the leg. She staggered to
Rosenberg's Olds and sat in the passenger's seat. Then BLA shooter Solomon
Bouines jumped in the back seat. Both cars then fled the scene at a high rate
of speed.
Meanwhile, in nearby South Nyack, Police Chief Alan Colsey
had been monitoring the police radio and heard that O'Grady and Lennon intended
to stop the U-Haul and he began racing toward the scene and arrived just when
the Honda and Olds were fleeing and a high-speed chase began, including weaving
through other traffic.
During the pursuit, they approached a sharp turn at an
intersection. Rosenberg in the Olds negotiated the turn, but Clark in the Honda
crashed into a wall, totaling it. Colsey pulled over to focus on the Honda
while Rosenberg continued on. Using his car as a shield, Colsey pulled out his
gun and ordered the terrorists to come out with their hands up.
Gilbert emerged but kept slowing walking toward Colsey until
he repeatedly ordered him to stop. Clark kept searching under her seat until
backup arrived and was arrested. A gun was found under her seat, and a magazine
was found in her purse. Brown was injured during the crash and was eventually
removed.
The two bags were found in the Honda and the four bags were
found in the abandoned U-Haul. All $1.6 million was recovered. Three people
were dead and four terrorists were under arrest and several more were now
fugitives.
Gilbert bitterly complained about his treatment in prison
and even that prisons existed. Sam Brown was severed from the trial and he and
Clark were joined by Donald Weems a.k.a. Kuwasi Balagoon, who was arrested in
early 1982. Kathy Boudin, at the urging of her father the leftist super lawyer
Leonard Boudin, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 20 years.
Gilbert, Clark and Weems argued that the government had no
right to try them, with Gilbert saying that "we are neither terrorists nor
criminals...we became freedom fighters." Often during the trial, the three
would cause disruptions so they had the audio piped into their cells. After the
three were convicted in 1983, Judge David Ritter gave them the maximum, 75-years-to-life (25 for each murder) meaning they
would have to serve at least 75 years. Ritter said the three defendants
"hold society in contempt and have no respect for human life," and
there was "no chance for future rehabilitation." Weems would
later die in prison from aids in 1986.
But in 1985, Clark was sentenced to two years of solitary confinement for plotting with Marilyn Buck
and fellow terrorists Linda Sue Evans and Laura Whitehorn to escape. The three
had already been involved with several bombings in New York and Washington
including the U.S. Capitol in 1983 with Susan Rosenberg, who was arrested a
year earlier, and they were plotting more.
In 2006, Clark renewed her attempts to gain freedom by
attempting to overturn her conviction in 1983 because she had no legal counsel,
even though she had refused one, but the effort failed. In 2010, Clark
again renewed her attempts to gain freedom. She asked then Governor David
Paterson for clemency, but on his last day in office, he denied her. Then in
2012, she had a favorable profile in the New York Times where she wanted to
bond with her daughter who was less than a year old during the Brinks arrest. In
2014, she sent letters to then Governor Cuomo and applied for clemency.
In 2016, she approached Governor Cuomo to meet with her in
prison. He went to Bedford Hills Prison for Women to meet Clark but refused to
meet with any Brink's survivors and victims. She now claimed remorse for the
victims and mentioned her work against aids and with service dogs. Cuomo said,
"that she had been a "a 20-year-old accessory" (actually
about to turn 32) and he got "a sense of her sole" and granted her
clemency, and a stunned Michael Paige (son of Peter Paige), and others
responded.
Without his action, she would have to serve her full
sentence but now would have to face the State Parole Board. Cuomo, who had
appointed many of them to six-year terms said, "she has a hell of a
case." Letter-writing campaigns to Cuomo ran ten-to-one against her
parole, including police organizations and law enforcement.
Her parole hearing took place in April 2017. Three of the
fifteen Commissioners were chosen at random, and it was obvious that Clark
thought she would be freed, but the questions were direct. Clark admitted
the money would be used to buy deadly weapons, that her fellow perpetrators
were armed, and they hoped to steal millions of dollars.
She reluctantly admitted hearing the shots during the
robbery at the bank and didn't know there was a pistol under her car seat after
she had fled--which was found after she was arrested after Officer Colsey said
she was searching for it while he demanded that she surrender. She also didn't
know how the magazine clip for the gun got in her purse. She also admitted
having no remorse for O'Grady, Brown and Paige or their three widows and nine
children for years but now claimed she did.
Clark, Cuomo and others were stunned when they voted 3-0
to deny her parole. They noted her previous criminal
activity when she was jailed for nine months in 1969 during the violent Vietnam
"Days of Rage" protests; later during the Brinks robbery where she
was in her mid-thirties; her lack of remorse for the victims for several years;
that she had conspired with other terrorists to break out of prison; that there
was overwhelming opposition from law enforcement and the public to her release
and that she was a "symbol of violent and terroristic crime."
That December, Clark sued the Parole Board for bias. Her lawyers claimed,
"she had accepted responsibility for her crimes" and demanded the
decision be overturned. By the time of her next Parole Hearing in April 2019,
Cuomo had appointed two members of the Parole Board, including Tana Agostini,
who it was found had married a convicted murderer.
When the hearing began, Agostini took control, and Clark
repeatedly expressed remorse and mentioned she wanted to bond with her
daughter. Clark again claimed she didn't know there was a gun under her seat or
how the magazine ended up in her purse and claimed she came out of the Honda
with her hands up, but Officer Colsey said she was removed from the car by
backup officers.
Commissioner W. Walter Smith, Jr appointed by George Pataki,
asked about her letters with Buck and others about a prison break, but she
repeatedly lost her memory. Most of the rest of the hearing involved Cuomo
appointees Agostini and Ellen Alexander focusing on Clark's social work,
including on AIDS and service animals.
The decision was 2-1 to release Clark, with Smith
dissenting. He noted her criminal behavior during protests during the war, the
excessive violence of the Brinks robbery and plotting with other terrorists to
escape. He finished by saying, "media coverage will lessen. What will not
diminish is the loss of the loved ones of O'Grady, Brown and Paige. The sounds
of their weeping will remain. I vote to deny your release at this
time."
The reaction from law enforcement and family members was swift, bitter and angry. Michael Paige, son of
Brink's driver Peter Paige said "my entire family by this
decision...Judith Clark should never see the light of day. She should remain in
prison the rest of her life." Patrick Lynch of the Police Benevolent
Association said, "Judith Clark is a murderer and terrorist...she will be
allowed to escape accountability for her crimes. This is not
justice."
Arthur Keenan bitterly said, "Cuomo took it upon
himself to give her clemency in 2016, but he never spoke to me or any of the
families," even though Keenan repeatedly asked. Keenan and Paige
later sued the Board because Agostini had hidden that she was married to a
murderer. The decision stood, but she is no longer on the Board
after serving her allotted six years.
In 2021, after a New York State investigation reported that
Cuomo had harassed 11 women mostly on his own staff (and later include two more), and was facing removal by the
New York Senate, he was contacted by San Francisco D.A. Chesa Boudin for a
favor. Boudin's parents were David Gilbert and Kathy Boudin, and he asked Cuomo
if he could give issue clemency to his father for the Brinks murders and make
him eligible for parole by the board Cuomo now had complete control over (Chesa
would be recalled in a landslide a year later as a failed D.A.). So, Cuomo
issued clemency for Gilbert in his final hours in office on August 23.
The parole hearing took place on October 19, 2021, which was
just one day before the 40th anniversary of the Brinks murders. The three
commissioners were all Cuomo appointees. They spent the first half reminiscing
about Gilbert's anti-war activity (even though he was twice convicted of
assaulting the police) and the second half about his AIDS work and other social
activity in prison. They only briefly talked about the Brinks murders, where
Gilbert admitted hearing the shots in the distance from the robbery while he
waited for them in the U-Haul. It was like a talk among old friends.
They made the decision on October 26 and released him on
November 4 but kept both actions private at the time because, like Judith
Clark, there was anger and disgust expressed at Gilbert's possible release.
O'Grady's son, Edward the third, wrote that Cuomo's last-minute grant of
clemency was an act of cowardice, and that Gilbert "wasn't an activist or
symbol", but just a "thief and a murderer."
Four years later, Cuomo is desperate to make a political
comeback after his forced resignation as Governor to become Mayor of New York
and still purports to support law enforcement and the police in spite of his
direct and indirect history of letter cop killers go free.
Mamdani is anxious to begin his path to power in that same
lofty position even with his ties to the Democratic Socialists of America and
his attempts to downplay his brutal history of ugly comments about law
enforcement. I reached out to his Assembly offices in Albany and in Queens and
his campaign if he wished to make a statement about Chesimard or DSA's praise
of her and have received no response.