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A Black Panther's last hurrah | page 1, 2
In an interview in the mid-'90s with Bobby Seale and his brother John, the two claimed Hilliard had landed $500,000 from left-leaning producers Paula Weinstein and her late husband Mark Rosenberg, and had meted out small sums to friends, while allegedly keeping the bulk of the money for himself. And documentary filmmakers exploring a project on Jean Seberg, the film actress who had an affair with Panther Raymond "Masai" Hewitt and openly supported the Panthers, told me Hilliard demanded to be hired as a "consultant" -- a demand they said felt like extortion. No activity, no reference, no cultural invocation involving the Panthers seemed too small to escape Hilliard's outstretched hand. The respected Oakland conceptual artist Mildred Howard thought her Oakland Art Museum installation celebrating ethnic diversity several years ago was a tribute to the Black Panthers in its depiction of the party's free breakfast program that once helped her and her kids. "Then David Hilliard showed up," she told me, "and he hits me up for money, like I'm supposed to pay him for showing the Panthers. I couldn't believe it. He really leaned on me, said he was going to get money from the Museum as well. What arrogance." In this case, Hilliard failed. The biggest source of Panther cash came from Stanford University, when Hilliard and Fredrika Newton, Huey's wife (who then became involved with Hilliard), sold his old papers and some of Hilliard's for nearly $500,000, according to tax returns obtained from the State Charitable Trust. The two set up the Huey P. Newton Foundation in l993 with themselves as the officers, letting them avoid paying taxes on the money they got from Stanford and any other Panther tribute they could exact. Although the foundation was set up for putative educational purposes (Hilliard and Fredrika Newton visited local public schools, but a promised Panther Web site never appeared), the lion's share of money from that period went into consultants' fees (to unnamed recipients) and a $12,000 salary for Hilliard the one year he served as president. In l996, when $216,174 came into the foundation coffers (the bulk of it from Stanford) unnamed "consultants" received $134,535, while a mere $50 was spent for "education/training." But Hilliard used the Newton Foundation to gain new respectability in Oakland. He began sponsoring Panther history bus tours, taking reporters and others on selective sightseeing jaunts, pointing out his and Newton's rundown boyhood homes, for instance, but not the plush Lake Merritt penthouse where Newton lived like a king while the rank and file lived like sardines in Panther slum dorms. Mayoral candidate Jerry Brown took the tour at the start of his campaign in 1997, and compared the Panthers to the Ohlone Indians, brave warriors threatened with extinction, paying lip service to the mythology that the police -- not their own violence and corruption -- exterminated the Panthers. Hilliard signed on to the Brown campaign, and was at his side election night, when he won the mayor's seat overwhelmingly. But their alliance would fall apart when Hilliard failed to get a job in the new Brown administration. Hilliard's attempts to gain respectability and profit from the Panther franchise began unraveling earlier than that. Some of the trouble began in l996, in a violent clash that eventually led to a lawsuit, which the former Panther lost last year. According to court records, Hilliard threatened Michael Swift with a knife for selling old Panther newspapers and other party paraphernalia at the Berkeley BART station. Before leaving, Hilliard snatched items from the vendor's table. An hour later, he returned with other men as backup. Hilliard slugged the vendor and the others joined in. Transit police arrested Hilliard, but Swift declined to press charges and Hilliard was let go. But then Hilliard and Fredrika Newton sent a letter to Swift on Newton Foundation stationary, threatening him if he persisted in selling his Panther trinkets. That made Swift angry enough to sue. A jury found Hilliard and the foundation liable for assault, battery, conversion of property and intentional infliction of emotional distress, and awarded Swift $45,030. Around the same period, Hilliard again pulled a knife on another man who drew his ire. This time, his adversary was a minor lefty celebrity himself -- the late Jack Scott, physical therapist and worker of wonders to a host of athletes including runner Mary Decker Slaney and onetime basketball great, his friend, Bill Walton. Scott was also famous for running Patricia Hearst and Wendy Yoshimura during SLA days across the country when both were fugitives of the law. But Hilliard knew none of this when he encountered Scott at his local copy shop in Berkeley, duplicating a stack of documents related to a recent traffic accident. Asking if he would be done soon, Scott (who died recently of esophageal cancer) answered sarcastically: "Does it look like I'm done?" That was all it took to set off Hilliard. He chased Scott around the machine with a knife, trying to stab him, before fleeing to a curbside car with Fredrika Newton at the wheel. The clerk knew Hilliard from the neighborhood and identified him to police. But Scott, once apprised of Hilliard's identity, consulted mutual lefty friends and was persuaded to, as one of them put it, "let Gus Newport [Berkeley's former left-wing African-American mayor] negotiate an apology." A group including Hilliard, Newport, Scott, Fredrika Newton and her half-brother, Mickey Phillips, went out to a reconciliation dinner; Scott admitted he picked up the tab. "I didn't press charges," Scott explained to me several years ago, "because I didn't want to see the left's business smeared all over the [San Francisco] Chronicle." That Hilliard, with such baggage, could even think about running for political office is testimony to the media's ambivalence about exposing the Panther past -- and in his case, the present. The alliance of Hilliard and Elaine Brown with Jerry Brown didn't cost the mayor, and may have helped him (although when the Chronicle referred to Hilliard as Brown's chief of staff, it was quickly retracted). More than a few observers, however, saw Brown's alliance with the ex-Panthers as a sign that "Jerry just didn't know any black people in Oakland other than the old Panthers and he needed some visible black support during the campaign." Now the pair are attacking the mayor, and trying to appeal to black voters to restore the corrupt racial spoils system that used to run Oakland. According to several Oakland political insiders Hilliard was "furious" at Brown for not rewarding his campaigning on the mayor's behalf with a job. But as another Oakland political observer put it, "Hilliard's not the only one angry with Brown." To be fair, Oakland was always a capital of political patronage, long before blacks took over the city. It was certainly true when white Republicans ran the town -- back when former Attorney General Ed Meese got a berth in the Alameda County prosecutor's office despite being in the lower half of his graduating class at Boalt Law School. But his father was an Oakland civil servant, so Meese got the job over a host of others, including one black Boalt honors graduate who had to take a job as a bellhop for the Pullman railway cars. That's the way business had been done in Oakland for white and, recently, black alike -- at least until Jerry Brown was elected. Hilliard and Elaine Brown are hoping they can rally blacks who feel shafted by the mayor to support Hilliard's political bid. Bobby Seale has joined the campaign, too, as manager -- even though he lives in Philadelphia, and just a few years ago was blasting Hilliard to anyone who'd listen. But times change. Reached by phone and asked about his turnaround, he demurred, "I was pissed at David, but it's over with. That was all back then dealing with that movie deal. It all depends on what's happening. He asked me and I flew out. We ran for political ideas." Still, Seale admits Hilliard is a "stubborn son of a gun. David lost his temper," he said of the vendor altercation, "and he shouldn't have done this. But I don't disrespect David." But Seale has yet to return to Oakland to officially pitch in. He has told other reporters he'll come only when Hilliard is ready to pay him $1,500 a week. Even Panthers must pay Panthers these days.
- - - - - - - - - - - - Sound off Related Salon stories Jerry Brown shakes up Oakland's black political establishment The hard-charging mayor challenges an entrenched bureaucracy -- and a racial spoils system.
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