Stephen Bingham | |
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Citizenship | United States |
Education | J.D., 1969, University of California at Berkeley; Yale University |
Occupation | Attorney (retired) |
Known for | Fugitive from justice (1971-1984) following an escape attempt at San Quentin State Prison by his client, George Jackson |
At some point during the conversation, Bingham allegedly passed a handgun and several clips of ammunition to Jackson, who slipped the weapon under a wig. When the visit was over, Jackson used the gun to take a guard prisoner, and forced him to unlock the cells of more than two dozen prisoners.
A Missouri woman who smuggled a gun into a county jail by hiding it in her vagina was sentenced to a decade behind bars, a report said. Amy Wilhite, 39, had pleaded guilty to sneaking the 4-inch revolver into Boone County jail on Feb. 14, the Smoking Gun reported. The gun that Amy Wilhite was caught smuggling into a jail.
Bingham worked at Bay Area Legal Aid in California, where he was a staff attorney in its San Francisco regional office specializing in welfare law issues. Bingham became inactive as a member of the California State Bar on January 15, 2015. ^ a b c d e f g hKathleen Maclay (April 7, 1986).
Stephen Mitchell Bingham (born April 23, 1942) is an American legal services and civil rights attorney who was tried and acquitted in 1986 for his alleged role in Black Panther George Jackson 's attempted escape fifteen years earlier from San Quentin State Prison in Marin County, California, in 1971.
Bingham was reported to have retained his "political activism" after the trial. After his release, he worked for an Oakland law firm handling pension litigation, was a member of Jesse Jackson 's Rainbow Coalition, and supported a campaign to free Black Panther Elmer Pratt, who claimed he was also framed by the FBI.
Prior to the trial, he was defended by Leonard Weinglass. Opening arguments in the trial were scheduled to begin on April 7, 1986.
He claimed that he was framed due to his activism in prison reform. He was reported to have "lived quietly in San Jose, California for six months" prior to surrendering. On July 5, 1984, Bingham's attorney, Paul A. Harris, announced that Bingham would surrender "within a week".
In 1969, he received a J.D. degree from Berkeley. He was admitted to the California bar in January 1970. The couple divorced in May, 1969.
Bingham decided to pursue a career in law and attended the Boalt Hall School of Law at the University of California at Berkeley.
He attended Yale University, where he participated on the freshman track and the varsity cross country teams. Bingham became involved in politics during his sophomore year, and was reportedly influenced by Allard Lowenstein.
While in Paris, Bingham met Francoise Blusseau whom he married after his surrender and before his trial. In April 1987, the couple had a daughter, Sylvia, who in 2009 was struck and killed by a truck while riding her bicycle to work in Cleveland.
Amy Wilhite, the Missouri woman who was sentenced to 10 years in prison for sneaking a gun into a jail in her vagina. A Missouri woman who smuggled a gun into a county jail by hiding it in her vagina was sentenced to a decade behind bars, a report said.
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The gun that Amy Wilhite was caught smuggling into a jail. Brian Leer. The firearm was loaded with five rounds when Wilhite brought it into the lockup. Police and jail guards failed to detect the gun, which was eventually found by authorities 17 days after Wilhite was sent to jail on seperate gun and narcotics charges, the report said.
At some point during the conversation, Bingham allegedly passed a handgun and several clips of ammunition to Jackson, who slipped the weapon under a wig. When the visit was over, Jackson used the gun to take a guard prisoner, and forced him to unlock the cells of more than two dozen prisoners.
Nearly four decades earlier, he was charged with slashing a corrections officer's throat during the San Quentin riot he allegedly helped start. Pinell was the last of the six to be imprisoned after alleged involvement in what many consider to be one of the bloodiest prison riots in U.S. history. ------------.
In an earlier version of this story, Willie Tate was identified as the final member of the " San Quentin Six" who remained in the California Prison System. A corrections department spokesman said Friday that the Willie Tate who is incarcerated in a prison in Soledad is not the same person who was acquitted in the 1971 riot at San Quentin. That man was released from prison in 1976.
Despite the torrent of blood inside San Quentin that day, only Spain was convicted of murder after a 16-month trial. Although Spain did not shoot or stab any of the guards, he was convicted of conspiring with Jackson in the escape that caused the guard's deaths.
His younger brother, Jonathan, was one of four people killed during a shootout with police outside the Marin County Courthouse in 1970. Jonathan Jackson had taken a Superior Court judge hostage in an attempt to win his older brother's freedom.
Drumgo was paroled shortly after his acquittal in 1976, but he was shot and killed three years later in Oakland. Talamantez was paroled on a prior robbery conviction less than two months after he was acquitted at trial. Spain, who was the only member of the six convicted of murder at trial, was freed on parole in 1991.