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Larry
Donnell ANDREWS
Andrews grew up in Baltimore, where he became a
stickup artist. Andrews robbed drug dealers, but avoided involving
innocent bystanders. After committing a double murder in 1986 for
a local drug kingpin to support his heroin addiction, Andrews
surrendered to the police. He began counseling inmates to avoid
gang life, and continued his anti-gang outreach after his release
from prison.
Early life
Andrews grew up in a housing project in West
Baltimore. He was physically abused by his mother. At the age of
10, he witnessed a man being beaten to death over 15 cents.
Andrews became a stickup artist who robbed drug dealers, but his
code of ethics included never involving women or children.
Andrews was known to police for armed robbery
and drug dealing in the 1970s and early 1980s in Baltimore. Local
drug kingpin Warren Boardley convinced Andrews, needing to support
his heroin addiction, and Reggie Gross to take on the contract
killing of Zachary Roach and Rodney "Touche" Young. Filled with
guilt, Andrews surrendered himself to Ed Burns, a homicide
detective with the Baltimore Police Department. Working with
Burns, he agreed to wear a covert listening device, which he used
to implicate Boardley and Gross in the killings.
Andrews was sentenced to life in prison for the
two murders in 1987. He was denied parole on his first attempts,
but continued to study, ended his addiction to heroin, and helped
other inmates with an anti-gang workshop. By 1998, Burns, his
co-author David Simon, and the lead prosecutor who obtained
Andrews' conviction together began to lobby for Andrews' release.
He was released in 2005.
The Wire
While Andrews was in prison, David Simon sent
him copies of the newspaper and Andrews gave Simon information
about crimes taking place in Baltimore. Simon named Andrews a
consultant on The Wire, an HBO show about crime in Baltimore.
Simon used Andrews as an inspiration for the character of Omar
Little, a stickup artist who never targeted innocent bystanders.
Personal
Andrews performed youth outreach after his
release from prison. His foundation, "Why Murder?", attempted to
steer children away from a life of crime.
While Andrews was in prison, Burns introduced
him to Fran Boyd, who was the inspiration for the character of the
same name on The Corner: A Year in the Life of an Inner-City
Neighborhood, which Burns and Simon co-wrote. Their first
conversation came in January 1993, when Boyd was still using
drugs. Andrews encouraged Boyd to get clean, and the couple
married on August 11, 2007. Wedding guests included Simon and The
Wire castmembers Dominic West, Sonja Sohn, and Andre Royo.
Andrews suffered from an aortic dissection. He
died as a result on December 13, 2012 in Manhattan at the age of
58.
"From what he told me, he had few epiphanies.
His decision to transform his life came over many years, even
decades."
Joan Jacobson - Baltimorebrew.com
December 17, 2012
If you know anything about Donnie Andrews, who
died last Friday of heart problems in New York, it’s probably
colored by the fictional character Donnie inspired: Omar Little
from “The Wire,” the thief who terrorized drug dealers.
But having spent well over a year with the
real-life Donnie as co-author on his memoir – the narrative of a
brutal life, in the end redeemed – I found myself reflecting on
the endless hours we spent together when I heard the news last
Friday.
Donnie left behind his wife, Fran Boyd, one of
the wisest women I have ever met, and a family that embraced him
when he was released from prison 18 years after he committed
murder on Gold Street in West Baltimore.
Donnie also left behind an unbelievable story
of the detective who arrested him (Ed Burns), the federal
prosecutor who imprisoned him (Charlie Scheeler) and the reporter
who chronicled his life (David Simon). Today, each will gladly
tell you they counted Donnie among their dearest friends.
While Donnie was in prison he counseled Fran
long distance to get off heroin, as her life was being chronicled
by Simon and Burns in their book, “The Corner.”
From there Donnie’s story was entwined with
Fran’s and it was as much a story of redemption as it was a love
story.
I spent long hours with Donnie in 2008 and 2009
co-authoring his memoir, until our HarperCollins/Amistad editor
fired me, unhappy with the chapters I was producing after these
sessions.
But for those many months I was offered a
window into the life of a man who seemed so unrepentant for so
long that it would take decades for a tiny kernel of conscience
rolling around inside him to surface.
The stories he told me did not come easily, as
there had been much pain in his life before he experienced any
joy.
What He Saw, What He Did
I used to drive to Donnie’s Parkville home a
few times a week and sit in his dining room, going over every
aspect of his life that he would share with me.
Some days it was an illuminating morality tale.
Some days it was torture getting just a few words out of him.
Fran had warned me that there were some
incidents in Donnie’s life that were still raw and unresolved.
I could barely get him to tell me, for example,
about his first wife who relocated after his arrest so she could
visit him in his out-of-state federal prison. She was later
murdered.
I could never get him to talk about his jump
from a balcony at the Murphy Homes public housing project in West
Baltimore.
I wanted to write about the real-life leap that
was dramatically fictionalized in HBO’s “The Wire” by the Omar
character. I wondered what else happened that day he jumped that
kept him just shaking his head ‘no’ at me, without a word of
explanation.
But there were many other stories that he
seemed more than willing to tell in the minutest detail, like the
murder he witnessed at the age of nine with his younger brother in
a laundromat when their mother sent them to wash clothes in the
middle of the night.
Or the touching memories of his sister Hazel,
who was more of a mother to him than the woman who gave him birth.
Or the story of the murder he committed, a gory
tale fraught with “what-ifs” that might have kept him from pulling
the trigger that night in 1986.
With Donnie, I never knew what I would get when
I knocked on his door. He might greet me with a welcoming grin, a
look of annoyance, or complete silence. Once he was so irritated
by my interruptions for details of his story that he let me know
without a hint of tact that as a journalist I was certainly no
David Simon.
“David never interrupted me,” he said. “He just
let me talk.”
Rap Sheet Several Feet Long
There were days, usually after a pep talk from
Fran urging him to answer my questions, when he would stay up all
night painstakingly conjuring an episode from his early life.
When I’d check my email in the morning I’d find
one or two typed pages, the result of six or eight hours of soul
searching late into the night.
Maybe it was about the death of his sister from
a botched blood transfusion, or the death of his best friend, who
collapsed in his arms, bleeding from a gunshot. Or the time he and
his brother, Kent, were serving time in side-by-side Hagerstown
prisons. Their mother visited Kent and left him money, but she
didn’t bother to see Donnie.
Donnie’s story was a labyrinth of complications
you might expect from a wretched life turning an about face. His
early life stories of parental neglect, drug dealing and gun
wielding had a cast of characters that were both deadly and
comical. The old print-out of his rap sheet was several feet long.
I kept three timelines of his life: a general
one that ran 22 pages, a second of seven pages just of his parole
attempts from federal prison and the last – just three pages – on
his 11-year courtship with Fran while he was in prison.
From what he told me, he had few epiphanies.
His decision to transform his life came over many years, even
decades.
A Single Garment of Destiny
As a young man spending time in Maryland
prisons, he read the speeches of Martin Luther King Jr. and the
works of other writers. He said the reading was crucial to
maintaining his sanity in prison. But King’s message of peace had
no immediate effect on his continued life of violence.
When he finally turned his life around, he
embraced his new role with gusto.
He worked with young prisoners and, upon his
release, established programs to lure kids out of the kind of life
he once led. And most important, he led a life as a dedicated
husband and father to Fran’s nieces and nephew and her grandson.
After his death Friday, I reread one of
Donnie’s favorite King speeches:
“We are tied together in the single garment of
destiny, caught in an inescapable network of mutuality. And
whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly. For some
strange reason I can never be what I ought to be until you are
what you ought to be. And you can never be what you ought to be
until I am what I ought to be.”
I also came across a speech I heard Donnie
give, years after his release from prison, to a school for
juvenile delinquents.
“I’m 55 years old and spent 28 years in
prison,” he told a packed cafeteria of stone-faced teenagers. “I
took a life. I did a lot of things to a lot of people who looked
like me. I did things against my own people: My sons, my
daughters, my community. The neighborhood is now boarded up,
destroyed because of what I did.”
With his conscience now miraculously in full
bloom, he finally found redemption and embraced the message from
King: Donnie and those troubled kids – and their entire world –
were tied together in a “single garment of destiny.”
By Justin Fenton and Jessica Anderson - The
Baltimore Sun
December 14, 2012
Like the television character he helped
inspire, Donnie Andrews lived by a code.
In his earlier years when he was robbing rival
dealers as a young hustler in West Baltimore — experiences that
would later form the basis for the popular Omar Little character
on the Baltimore crime drama “The Wire” — he vowed to never
involve women or children in his crimes.
But after confessing to a murder and helping
authorities bring down a crime syndicate, he took on a different
mission: working to prevent youth from going down the same path
that he did.
Andrews died Thursday following heart
complications while in New York City, where he was attending an
event as part of his efforts to promote a non-profit outreach
foundation. He was 58.
“Donnie was truly a rare bird, a fierce street
warrior who had been to hell and back,” said Sonja Sohn, an
actress who worked with Andrews in youth outreach, “and lived not
only to tell about it, but to transform that pain and darkness
into the brightest of lights, infused with the love he had for
youth and communities suffering from the injustices of that life,
often times, unfairly doles out to those born with the short end
of the stick.”
Andrews, whose full name was Larry Donnell
Andrews, had been around violence most of his life, physically
abused by his mother and watching at age 10 from behind a washing
machine as a man was bludgeoned to death for 15 cents. He grew up
in the housing projects of West Baltimore, where he was mentored
by hustlers and drug dealers. He became a stick-up artist, robbing
other drug dealers with a .44 Magnum.
“The word ‘future’ wasn’t even in my
vocabulary, because I didn’t know if I’d be alive or dead
tomorrow,” he told The [U.K.] Independent. “They had a bet in my
neighborhood that I wouldn’t reach 21.”
In 1986, roped in by drug kingpin Warren
Boardley and looking to support a heroin addiction, he said he
took on a contract killing, teaming with Reggie Gross for the
fatal, close-range shootings of Rodney “Touche” Young and Zachary
Roach on Gold Street.
The former lead prosecutor, Charles Scheeler,
said Andrews was different from other suspects: not only did he
turn himself in, but he never angled for a lesser sentence. He
simply confessed to the killing, which Scheeler said they had
little evidence to convict him of otherwise.
“I prosecuted hundreds of people but this was
the only person this happened to,” said Scheeler, who developed an
unlikely friendship with Andrews even before his conviction.
“Everyone else in his position has been ‘I will cooperate for less
time.’ Donnie was ‘I will cooperate because I want to repent.’
I’ve never had anyone like that. He convinced me.”
Andrews also agreed to wear a wire with great
personal risk — Edward Burns, a former police detective, said
Andrews once went through three layers of bodyguards to get to a
kingpin — and picked up conversations implicating Boardley and
Gross.
“Donnie wanted change, more than he wanted to
breathe air,” said David Simon, the former Sun crime reporter.
Though Andrews believed he’d receive a 10-year
prison term, he was sentenced to life in federal prison. His first
tries at parole were unsuccessful, but he availed himself of every
opportunity within prison to make things right. He studied, beat
his drug habit, and read the Bible.
Michael Millemann, an attorney who represented
him in his fight for release, recalled meeting Andrews, who was
still behind bars and had no clear path out but was counseling
younger inmates. He talked about how, if he were to ever be
released, he wanted to help children at risk.
“The day he turned himself in, I’d say from
that day on, he became a counselor and a supporter to other
people. The transition was day and night,” Milleman said.
While incarcerated, Burns, a co-author of the
non-fiction book “The Corner,” helped connect Andrews with Fran
Boyd, one of the book’s drug-addicted protagonists. They struck up
a relationship, speaking on the phone daily. Boyd was as tough as
they come, Simon said, and Burns’ hope was that Andrews could get
through to her.
“She’s smart, and I knew she could get herself
straight,” Andrews told the New York Times in 2007, “so I kept
pushing and then I got hooked on her.”
Starting in 1998, Boyd, Simon, Burns and
Scheeler were among those lobbying for his release. It happened in
2005, and he and Boyd married in 2007.
The Times featured their story on the front
page, describing it as “a lengthy courtship that was as much about
turning their lives around as it was about finding each other … a
source of inspiration for the grittier parts of West Baltimore,
where few people who end up on the corner using and selling drugs
manage to break free, and even fewer return to make a difference.”
Simon had sent Andrews copies of the newspaper
while he was incarcerated, and Andrews would call him with
information about crime taking place on city streets. Simon made
him a consultant on his HBO show “The Wire,” where Andrews was
among the inspirations for the Omar, the drug assassin with a
moral code who was based on several real-life stick-up men that
Burns had encountered.
President Obama said in March that Omar was his
favorite character on the show.
Andrews appeared on screen as one of Omar’s
crew, and died in a shootout scene where Omar leaps from a
four-story building and escapes. Andrews said that really happened
to him — but he had jumped from the sixth-story.
On Friday, Michael Kenneth Williams, the actor
who played Omar, wrote on Twitter: “R.I.P. to the original gangsta
and a stand up dude.”
Andrews had spent recent years trying to ramp
up work through his “Why Murder?” foundation, and he has been
featured in documentaries about the drug war and in talks at
Harvard University, where “The Wire” is taught in a class.
“He turned his life around. He patiently waited
for 18 years and came out and became a remarkable asset to this
community,” Scheeler said, mentioning he last saw Andrews a week
ago when they were working together on the project to have
greenhouses for the urban farming initiative in the Oliver
neighborhood.
Said Simon: “On paper, he’s a murderer. We’ve
constructed a criminal justice system that doesn’t allow for the
idea of redemption, and Donnie puts a lie to that.”
He was in New York with Boyd for a screening of
a documentary, Simon said. Andrews died after suffering an aortic
dissection, which begins with a tear in the wall of the major
artery carrying blood out of the heart.
Donnie Andrews: The road to redemption
In care and brutalised, Donnie Andrews never
stood a chance. In with the street gangs, he was convicted of
murder at the age of 32. Then, he read the Bible, met the creator
of 'The Wire', and a famous anti-hero was born. Tim Walker meets
Donnie Andrews
Independent.co.uk
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Donnie Andrews saw his first dead body, lynched
and hanging from a tree in North Carolina, when he was four years
old. At 10, he watched from behind the washing machines in a
Baltimore laundromat as an old man was bludgeoned to death for 15
cents. Physically abused by his mother, enticed by a life of
crime, he earned his first long stretch in jail when he was 19. As
an armed robber, he swapped holding up bars for a more lucrative
and dangerous occupation: robbing drug dealers. In 1986, aged 32,
he committed his first and only murder, a shooting carried out at
the behest of a local drug lord.
I had always wondered, as I watched The Wire,
where an iconoclastic anti-hero like Omar Little – the acclaimed
television drama's ruthless, fearless, mercenary yet moral,
Baltimore stick-up artist – could possibly have come from. Donnie
Andrews is my answer. "When I first met David [Simon, creator of
The Wire]," says Andrews, now 55 and a reformed man, "I told him a
lot about my little escapades. Then I started seeing them on TV."
Thanks not to America's flawed prison system
(where he spent almost 18 years for the murder), but to his
conscience, force of will, and the support of friends like Simon,
Andrews transformed himself. Today, he is head of security at
Bethel AME, one of Baltimore's most prominent African-American
churches; and he counsels young gang members, hoping to staunch
the flow of murders in Maryland's largest and most violent city.
Softly spoken, nattily dressed and enjoying
breakfast at a club in London's West End, Andrews is able to look
at his past life with the clarity of distance. "That person was
buried 15 years ago," he says. "I did it all and I lived through
it, so now I think: why push my luck?"
Born in Carolina, Andrews moved to Maryland
with his mother and five siblings in the midst of the struggle for
civil rights. In Baltimore, he was given away to a carer called
Miss Ruth. It was, he remembers, the best part of his childhood.
But after Miss Ruth's husband suffered a heart attack, she was
forced to return him to his mother.
"When Miss Ruth came back for me later, my mom
said she wanted to keep me. I tried to be bad so she would give me
back to Miss Ruth, but it just increased the abuse. She used to
beat us with extension cords. By the time I was 13, I was on the
streets with the gangs, hustling and staying alive."
West Baltimore's housing projects in the
Sixties and early Seventies were dangerous for a teenager.
Mentored by "hustlers" and drug dealers, as a young gang member,
Andrews recalls how "the word 'future' wasn't even in my
vocabulary, because I didn't know if I'd be alive or dead
tomorrow. They had a bet in my neighbourhood that I wouldn't reach
21. Well, I'm 55 now. And the people who made the bet? They're
dead."
Between his 16th birthday and his murder
conviction 16 years later, Andrews was arrested 19 times. He spent
six years in jail for armed robbery, another two and a half years
for daytime housebreaking. His fights with prison guards meant he
spent most of that time in solitary confinement. On the outside,
like Omar, he preferred to work alone.
"When I was coming up, one of the biggest drug
dealers in the city would always tell me a real man stands alone.
I felt better working by myself. I only had a couple of friends
who I was comfortable hustling with. They'd have to know anything
I was going to do just by a look; when you're robbing people, it's
gotta be perfect."
Also like Omar, Andrews's victims were fellow
drug dealers. "I might get two or three hundred dollars robbing a
bar, but from a drug dealer I could get two or three hundred
thousand. I told Fran [his wife] about a time I went to rob a
stash house and they wouldn't open the door. I yelled: 'If I've
gotta come in there, something bad's gonna happen.' The window
opened and they threw the drugs out. Fran saw the same thing on
The Wire and she called David and said: 'So Omar is Donnie?!'"
He had a moral code, of sorts. "I would never
mess with women... [and] I wouldn't give kids drugs. That's how
the game got messed up: you've got mothers, grandmothers, children
of five or six trying to sell you drugs now." Beneath Andrews's
violent veneer, there was a conscience lurking. But it was only
pricked when he finally killed a man.
After emerging from his latest spell in jail in
1986, Andrews found his neighbourhood under the control of a
25-year-old drug lord named Warren Boardley, whose operation was
worth around $250,000 (Ł150,000) a week. During a shootout over
territory that summer, Boardley had been shot in the foot by
members of a rival crew, the Downer brothers. A friend of Andrews
was shot in the same battle, and he found himself unexpectedly
allied with Boardley, who was willing to pay handsomely for a hit.
On the night of 23 September 1986, Andrews and
Reggie Gross, one of Boardley's henchmen, cruised the blocks
surrounding Gold Street, a neglected terrace that was home to one
of West Baltimore's notorious 24-hour drugs markets. When they
came across one of the Downer gang – an acquaintance of Andrews
known as Fruit Loop – Andrews managed to warn him off, saving his
life without Gross's knowledge.
Their next target was not so fortunate. The
gunmen found Zach Roach, another member of the Downer gang,
sitting with a second young man, Rodney Young, outside a Gold
Street house. Gross, carrying a machine gun, opened fire first –
killing Young instantly.
"Once Reggie's Uzi went off, [Zach] jumped up
and it was a spontaneous reaction on my part. I just fired and, as
he ran up the street, he tripped and fell. I went to give him the
coup de grâce and he looked up at me. I looked him in the eye and,
before he died, he asked me: 'Why?' It was like I was frozen in
time. I thought: why? This guy looks just like me. He could have
been my brother, my son, my father. And why for drugs? Because
somebody shot Warren in the foot? Why? It stuck with me, and I
couldn't get it out of my head. I'm trying to figure out why to
this day."
His payment, $5,000 and two ounces of heroin,
did little to ease his guilt. The Baltimore Police Department
(BPD) suspected him of the murder, but lacked evidence. One
homicide detective who came knocking was Ed Burns. In early 1987,
Andrews ran into Burns at the city court house. "Ed followed me to
the parking lot and said: 'I can give you a second chance at
life.' I was like, who does he think he is, God? But I thought
about it. Even a fool wants a second chance."
Burns's partner made a strange suggestion:
Andrews, he said, should read the Bible – specifically the story
of Paul. The tale of a brutal tax collector's conversion moved
him, as it was meant to. In August 1987, he confessed to the
murder, then wore a concealed recording device to meetings with
Boardley and Gross, where both implicated themselves in the crime.
A prosecutor promised Andrews he'd be free in 10 years. "Donnie
was remarkable," says David Simon. "He gave himself up when they
had very little evidence against him. Ultimately, it was an act of
conscience – and that doesn't happen a lot in police careers."
At the time a police reporter for The Baltimore
Sun, Simon spent 1988 shadowing the city's homicide department.
There he befriended Burns for his book Homicide: A Year on the
Killing Streets, a vivid and meticulous portrait of the period's
crime epidemic from the point of view of those trying to fight it.
In 1989, on Burns's advice, he flew
cross-country to the Federal Correctional Institution in Phoenix,
Arizona, to interview Andrews for an article in the Sun's weekly
magazine. "Donnie told me the story of the Boardley case as he
knew it," Simon explains. "I was impressed that, when I matched it
against the police files, it always checked out. After the article
was published, Donnie just kept calling me. I realised that he was
really being rigorous about making the most of his second chance."
Andrews had kicked his heroin habit in jail,
trained as an electrician, taken up a college course by mail, and
even begun to mentor some of the younger inmates. Burns, who
retired from the BPD and briefly became a schoolteacher, would
send him books. Simon, meanwhile, sent him copies of the Sun:
"He'd see some small story about a shooting, then call me a few
weeks later with very good information."
Andrews's rehabilitation is, Simon insists,
utterly out of the ordinary. "The prison system in America isn't
structured for rehabilitation," he says. "It's structured for
warehousing ... I believe in the individual's capacity to change
their own future. Systemically, though, we sure make it hard. It's
a pretty lonesome journey."
In 1992, Simon and Burns had begun work on a
new book together, chronicling the lives of a disadvantaged family
caught in the crossfire of the drugs war. The Corner: A Year in
the Life of an Inner-City Neighbourhood would be published in 1997
and turned into an HBO mini-series three years later.
One of the book's protagonists was Fran Boyd, a
heroin-addicted woman with two sons from West Baltimore. The
writers, says Simon, had come to love Boyd, and wanted to help her
escape the cycle of addiction. "Ed had the idea of putting Donnie
and Fran together via a phone call. He had no idea he was playing
Cupid."
What followed began as counselling and became a
four-year courtship. With each other's help – through phone
conversations and letters – Andrews began to come to terms with
his crime, while Boyd shook off her addiction. The pair didn't
meet in person until 1997, but by then they were already in love,
and turned their efforts to winning Andrews his freedom. The city
prosecutor who'd promised him an early release reneged on that
pledge, and it took a further eight years, until April 2005,
before he was paroled.
His first job on release was in the writers'
office of The Wire. Eventually, like many Baltimore locals, he
found himself cast in the show – as one of Omar's crew. His
character was killed in a shootout, from which Omar escaped by
leaping from a fifth-floor balcony. "That really happened to me,"
Andrews chuckles, "but I had to jump out of the sixth floor. It
was either lead poisoning or take my chances, so I took my
chances. I did it without thinking. If I'd thought about it, I
might have taken the lead poisoning."
Andrews and Boyd were married in 2007, and the
congregation contained many of The Wire's actors. Simon was best
man.
Andrews is still shocked by the decline of his
old neighbourhood in West Baltimore. "When I came back," he says,
"I actually had tears in my eyes. All the houses that once had
families in them are boarded up. The drug addicts are like
zombies. I try to do everything I can to rebuild; that's why I
took the job at Bethel AME, and that's why I work with the gangs."
How does he persuade young gang members to
respect him, to trust him, even to take his advice and step away
from a life of violence? "It's like when I met David or Ed. 'Real'
recognises 'real'. If you're real and you care about something, it
shows. Your actions speak for themselves. When I first met Ed, I
could tell he was the type of person that cared; he knew how the
street was by working it for 20 years. And he proved it, by
sticking with me the whole time I was in prison."
Some of the old habits of the street come in
useful as part of Andrews's work. Others simply die hard. "I had a
lot of friends who wore their guns in their belts and died because
it's difficult to pull from there," he says. "I still always wear
baggy shirts out of habit, because I used to keep my gun up my
sleeve."