RIP - "Mutulu Shakur" Passes away at 72


The man who Tupac Shakur called his dad while not his biological father that was Billy Gerland. Mutulu Shakue adopted Tupac and gave him his name once he married Tupacs mother Afeni Shakur. Mutulu was a New Afrikan Activist and a member of the Black Liberation Army who was sentenced to sixty years in prison for his involement in a 1981 robbery of a brinks armored truck in which a guard and two police officers were murdered.


Mutulu Shakur (born Jeral Wayne Williams; August 8, 1950 – July 7, 2023) was a New Afrikan activist and a member of the Black Liberation Army who was sentenced to sixty years in prison for his involvement in a 1981 robbery of a Brinks armored truck in which a guard and two police officers were murdered. Shakur was politically active as a teen with the Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM) and later the black separatist movement the Republic of New Afrika. Being the step dad of Tupac Shakur is what he will probably be remembered for the most but Mutulu who was paroled after serving nearly 37 years of imprisonment, and died about eight months later was much more. Shakur was born in Baltimore, Maryland on August 8, 1950 as Jeral Wayne Williams. At age seven, he moved to Jamaica, Queens, New York City with his mother, who was blind,and younger sister.



By his late teens, Shakur was politically active with the Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM) and later joined the Republic of New Afrika In 1970, Shakur began working with the Lincoln Detox program, which offered drug rehabilitation for heroin addiction using acupuncture — instead of the FDA-approved drug methadone. Eventually, he became the program's assistant director and remained associated with the program until 1978. He became certified and licensed to practice acupuncture in the state of California in 1979. He went on to help found and direct the Black Acupuncture Advisory Association of North America (BAAANA) and the Harlem Institute of Acupuncture.



Brink's robbery, arrest, and incarceration Shakur was one of several Black Liberation Army members to carry out the October 1981 robbery of an armored car in Nanuet, New York. Aided by the May 19 Communist Organization and former members of the Weather Underground, the BLA crew stole $1.6 million in cash from a Brink's vehicle at the Nanuet Mall. The robbers killed Brink's guard Peter Paige and seriously wounded another, Joseph Trombino.



Soon after, they killed Nyack, New York police officers Edward O'Grady and Waverly Brown, who had stopped a getaway vehicle. Shakur, the alleged ringleader of the group, evaded capture for more than five years and thus was the last one to go on trial on charges related to the robbery. In 1982, Shakur, Marilyn Buck, and others involved in the BLA and M19CO were indicted on Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) charges, encompassing the Brink's robbery and other similar robberies, as well as engineering the 1979 escape from a New Jersey prison of Assata Shakur. While at large, on July 23, 1982, he became the 380th person added to the FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list.



He was arrested on February 12, 1986 in California by the FBI. An order for Shakur's release on pretrial bail was overturned by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Shakur and Buck were tried in 1987 and convicted on May 11, 1988. He received a 60-year sentence. The convictions and sentence were upheld on appeal.
Although federal parole was abolished in the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, Shakur's convictions were exempt because the Act's provisions did not apply to crimes committed before November 1987. 

Under the rules in effect at the time of his offenses, Shakur was due for a mandatory parole determination after serving thirty of his original sixty-year sentence, which came in 2016. However, the United States Parole Commission denied his release in 2016, 2018, and early 2022. In October 2019, Shakur renewed his quest for a reduction of sentence by applying to the sentencing court for compassionate release under the First Step Act, but relief was once again denied.



On November 10, 2022, the Parole Commission reconsidered his case and granted Shakur release on parole effective December 16, 2022 in light of his declining health. Shakur was freed on that date, and died about eight months later.



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