Windy City Media Group Frontpage News

THE VOICE OF CHICAGO'S GAY, LESBIAN, BI, TRANS AND QUEER COMMUNITY SINCE 1985

home search facebook twitter join
Gay News Sponsor Windy City Times 2023-12-13
DOWNLOAD ISSUE
Donate

Sponsor
Sponsor
Sponsor

  WINDY CITY TIMES

Day Views: Herman Bell
by Susie Day
2006-03-08

This article shared 3393 times since Wed Mar 8, 2006
facebook twitter google +1 reddit email


It could be worse, I say to myself, as I buy my Trailways ticket, he could be on death row. He could be dying in a prison infirmary; he could be getting beaten up by racist gangs. Instead, Herman Bell is doing 25 years to life at a prison outside New York City, where we can take the bus to visit him and make sure he's OK.

It's Herman's birthday today and my girlfriend Laura and I are meeting our friends Tynan and Lise and their daughter Frankie, who have driven here from Montreal, to New York State's Eastern Correctional Facility.

I suppose I should get the demographics out of the way: Tynan is female-to-male transsexual; Lise is his partner; Laura and I are lesbians, and Frankie, approaching the terrible age of two, remains undecided. All of us are White and we're going to visit our friend, who, like a disproportionate number of his fellow-prisoners, is Black.

The five of us enter the huge grey building, which manages to look both looming and funky, a satanic version of Harry Potter's Hogwarts. We go through the inanities of emptying pockets and taking off jackets, shoes, earrings to get through the metal detector. When the guards decide we are non-terrorists, they stamp our hands and unbolt the door to the visiting room.

Inside, there is the usual fluorescent-lit din: dozens of parents and friends and wives and girlfriends, sitting in plastic chairs at formica tables with men in dark-green prison suits, trying to make each moment count, as little kids yell and race each other to the vending machines. We find a table, buy bad coffee—and in comes Herman, a tall, sweet-smiling, quiet man—coach of the prison's football team—who leans down to hug us, one by one. Herman is 58 years old today. He has spent the last 33 years in prison.

'GOOD!' scream headlines in New York City papers. 'Don't Let This Killer Walk'; 'Keep Bell On Ice.' In front of news cameras, Patrick Lynch, president of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, declares, 'These cold-blooded assassins and domestic terrorists should remain in jail for the rest of their lives.'

A model prisoner, Herman has maybe one chance in 20 of getting out when he comes up for parole again next month. The PBA wants to reduce that chance to nothing.

In 1973, when he was in the Black Panther Party, Herman was arrested and charged, with Panthers Anthony [ Jalil ] Bottom and Albert Nuh Washington, in the 1971 shooting deaths of two New York City police officers, Joseph Piagentini and Waverly Jones. According to media accounts, Piagentini and Jones were responding to a domestic abuse complaint when they were killed.

Diane Piagentini, Joseph's widow, appears on TV with Lynch to urge that Herman be denied parole 'from now until the end of time.' They flash an ugly mugshot of Herman in his Panther days, nostrils flared, eyes fierce in a 'Get-Whitey' scowl. A monster.

Here, this monster cuddles the squirming Frankie, then lets her down to play. I watch Laura touch Herman's arm and ask him how's he's doing. Coming here is hard for Laura, who's done over 14 years in prison herself on political charges. 'After your arrest, the cops spend time harassing you and knocking you around,' she told me. 'Then they take your picture, looking all miserable and mean, to scare people.'

Herman and his codefendants argued in court they weren't guilty: that the FBI, under J. Edgar Hoover's COINTELPRO, which called the Panthers America's No. 1 threat, cooked the evidence. The first trial ended in a hung jury; the second resulted in life sentences for the defendants and a book contract for the district attorney.*

'Understand—there was a war going on between police and the community,' says Laura, who spent years in the Weather Underground, supporting the Panthers. I roll my eyes and wonder if there is ever not a 'war' going on when tragic, needless deaths happen. Yet, after Herman's conviction, an ex-Panther witness came forth to say that his testimony against Herman was the result of police torture.

I cannot judge Diane Piagentini. I don't know if I'd be able to stop hating, in her place. And yet, someone has.

Miraculously, someone has. Waverly Jones, Jr., son of the other slain officer, has come to New York twice now, with some of his family, to ask the Parole Board to let Herman Bell out. Jones, a baby when his father was killed, stated, 'Nothing would give us more pleasure or joy than to see that man walk out of prison doors.'

Here in the visiting room, we've started a little birthday party. Herman wants to hear about Laura's and my cat, Rhoda, whose mission is to shed orange fur globally. Ty and Lise talk about working in the 'Victory Garden' that Herman organized from prison, which used to distribute vegetables to inner cities. Herman chuckles at how bad the football team he's coaching is, but he's excited about his new granddaughter. He remembers back when he was in Mississippi, a sharecropper's kid, catching fish on the banks of a river after a rain.

Frankie is now intently exploring her overalls with another two-year-old, and I wonder what's been done to Herman here; how he gets through, as he's called it, 'one more day on the plantation.' But surviving evil doesn't make you a good person: Surviving evil and not passing it on does. I've visited Herman for years and I would trust this good man with my life. Herman has saved lives here…

But they've just announced visiting hours are over, and we gather up Frankie, who is not even a little tired. We turn to go, and Herman admires the beat-up leather jacket I've pulled on. I say, 'Yeah, Laura got it for me, 16 bucks, streets of New York.' Herman smiles, 'Would you help me pick out one like that when I get out?'

What? What did he say? 'When I get out'? Did you forget how they hate you, Herman? Am I supposed to say, be reasonable, go back to your cell now, go back to be strip-searched and monitored and controlled, but don't worry, Herman, we'll see you when we can, you know, there may be times when they won't let us in, but we'll keep trying to reach you through the vengeance and fear, and we'll always hope. Is that what I should tell you, my dear friend, my brother? I look up at him and I say: Yes. Goddamn, yes. With all my heart, I would love to help you pick out that jacket, Herman. It would be … an honor.

Copyright Susie Day, 2006

____

*Robert K. Tanenbaum, Badge of the Assassin, Simon & Schuster, 1979; later, a film.


This article shared 3393 times since Wed Mar 8, 2006
facebook twitter google +1 reddit email

Out and Aging
Presented By

  ARTICLES YOU MIGHT LIKE

Gay News

VIEWPOINT Meditation on the killing of journalists 2024-04-11
- Trigger warning: I am a journalist and I read newspapers. I've been reading newspapers since I first learned to read. Newspapers were a lively part of the daily life in my family. I even wrote letters ...


Gay News

VIEWS Mike Johnson: The smiling face of Christian tyranny 2024-02-14
- Mike Johnson wants to rewrite the constitution to make the United States a Christian nation. James Michael Johnson, Republican from Louisiana's Fourth District, is the 56th speaker of the United States House of Representatives. He was ...


Gay News

VIEWS Parents, not legislators, should be making decisions about medical options for children 2024-02-06
By Jeffery M. Leving - No matter the medical issue, when it comes to kids, Ohio Governor Mike DeWine said something last December that every lawmaker in the country should realize when it comes to medical decisions for children. "Were House ...


Gay News

SHOWBIZ Sundance items, Green Day, 'Wednesday,' Queerties, 'The Wiz' 2024-01-26
- At the Sundance Film Festival, Jodie Foster told Variety that the $1.4-billion success of Barbie helps confirm that Hollywood no longer views women directors as too much of a risk. She said, "With a big success ...


Gay News

VIEWS Is the Pope Catholic? Francis faces opposition in steps toward LGBTQ+ inclusivity 2024-01-02
- The recent change in Vatican policy allowing priests to bless same-gender couples has provoked an unprecedented backlash against Pope Francis and his openness to LGBTQ+ people—a backlash that some fear might devolve into a schism in ...


Gay News

Bring Chicago Home: Guess who's saying no again 2023-12-04
Commentary by Bob Palmer and Mark Swartz - Chicago is ushering in an era of change with a new progressive mayor with a vision to invest in communities long ignored and a significant increase in like-minded city council members. We are excited to see ...


Gay News

Pope Francis's community of transwomen 2023-11-28
- It's a rare opportunity to meet the pope. It's even rarer if you're a transgender Catholic. However, on Nov. 19, in Torvaianica, Italy, a community of transwomen, many of them sex workers, were welcomed and seated ...


Gay News

Banning the Banning of Books: Illinois and California lead the way 2023-10-26
- In June, at the Harold Washington Library in Chicago, Governor JB Pritzker signed legislation banning book bans in Illinois public libraries. This legislation, initiated by Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, passed the Illinois House and ...


Gay News

OPINION Renewing state's Invest in Kids program is investing in anti-LGBTQ+ hate 2023-10-23
- In February 2020, Bishop Thomas Paprocki of the Diocese of Springfield warned transgender students in the Diocese's educational system that they "may be expelled from the school" if they live their lives authentically. Lansing Christian School ...


Gay News

Gilbert Baker Foundation reacts to death of shop owner who flew the rainbow flag 2023-08-29
--From a press release - In response to the murder of Laura Ann Carleton over flying the Rainbow flag in her shop in California, the Gilbert Baker Foundation released the statement below. Facebook refused to post the statement as it did not "...meet their standards." ...


Gay News

VIEWPOINT U.S. higher education under siege; freedom of inquiry and speech at risk 2023-07-03
- The Covid pandemic threw a harsh spotlight on higher education in America, exposing forces eating away at the foundations of college and university learning, calling into question the traditional purposes of such education in our post-modern, ...


Gay News

Guest essay by Florida mom Nicole Pejovich: What's Happening to Florida's Public Schools? 2023-06-19
Related video below - A queer Florida parent answers questions about recent laws, how Floridians are coping, and how you can help Books pulled from school library shelves by the dozens. All evidence of inclusivity stripped from classrooms. The politically ...


Gay News

VIEWPOINT For divorced parents, transgender children's health can present tricky dilemmas 2023-06-12
- Over the last few months, issues impacting individuals who identify as transgender and non-binary are getting a lot of attention in the media and among some politicians. Sadly, because it's become a political issue; a lot ...


Gay News

VIEWPOINT War in the 21st Century: mercenaries, private military companies, private armies 2023-05-20
- In 2022, $407 billion of the Pentagon budget—representing half of that year's funding —were obligated to private contractors, of which a significant number were Private Military Companies (PMCs) involved in ...


Gay News

VIEWPOINT Telling the world about my mental health disorders 2023-05-04
- Over the years, coming out as a lesbian hasn't been that hard for me—because I was always too busy hiding something else. Confessing queerness can be a breeze compared to revealing mental illness. But I decline ...


 


Copyright © 2024 Windy City Media Group. All rights reserved.
Reprint by permission only. PDFs for back issues are downloadable from
our online archives.

Return postage must accompany all manuscripts, drawings, and
photographs submitted if they are to be returned, and no
responsibility may be assumed for unsolicited materials.

All rights to letters, art and photos sent to Nightspots
(Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times (a Chicago
Gay and Lesbian News and Feature Publication) will be treated
as unconditionally assigned for publication purposes and as such,
subject to editing and comment. The opinions expressed by the
columnists, cartoonists, letter writers, and commentators are
their own and do not necessarily reflect the position of Nightspots
(Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times (a Chicago Gay,
Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender News and Feature Publication).

The appearance of a name, image or photo of a person or group in
Nightspots (Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times
(a Chicago Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender News and Feature
Publication) does not indicate the sexual orientation of such
individuals or groups. While we encourage readers to support the
advertisers who make this newspaper possible, Nightspots (Chicago
GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times (a Chicago Gay, Lesbian
News and Feature Publication) cannot accept responsibility for
any advertising claims or promotions.

 
 

TRENDINGBREAKINGPHOTOS







Sponsor
Sponsor


 



Donate


About WCMG      Contact Us      Online Front  Page      Windy City  Times      Nightspots
Identity      BLACKlines      En La Vida      Archives      Advanced Search     
Windy City Queercast      Queercast Archives     
Press  Releases      Join WCMG  Email List      Email Blast      Blogs     
Upcoming Events      Todays Events      Ongoing Events      Bar Guide      Community Groups      In Memoriam     
Privacy Policy     

Windy City Media Group publishes Windy City Times,
The Bi-Weekly Voice of the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Trans Community.
5315 N. Clark St. #192, Chicago, IL 60640-2113 • PH (773) 871-7610 • FAX (773) 871-7609.