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1985 bombing in Philadelphia still unsettled
By Martha T. Moore, USA TODAY
Thu May 12, 6:25 AM ET

The last block of Osage Avenue is a half-abandoned and lonely place. Most
of the houses on the narrow street are boarded up.

Twenty years ago this Friday, city police dropped a bomb on this block and
let it burn. Five children and six adults, members of a small radical
collective called MOVE, died; 61 homes in a middle-class neighborhood were
destroyed. As the nation watched, Philadelphia became the city that bombed
its own people. (Related photo gallery: MOVE bombing)

A generation later, MOVE is still around, its members still agitating for
the release of eight who have been in prison since a 1978 cop-killing.
Most of the other two dozen or so members, all of whom take the surname
Africa, live in a house 3 miles from Osage. The mayor who approved the
bombing, Wilson Goode, 66, is a pastor who runs a youth-mentoring program.
And the residents of Osage Avenue are still trying to get their homes
back.

Philadelphia has spent $42 million in financial settlements, investigation
and rebuilding to try to fix what happened that day. It was a law
enforcement failure so spectacular that it would not be equaled until the
siege near Waco eight years later. A month ago, 24 homeowners won a $12
million suit against the city for the botched rebuilding and repairs of
their homes.

"We're still in it," says Mayor John Street, who was a city councilman in
1985. "It's the never-ending story."

The memory of the bungled decisions and bad judgment that led police to
drop a satchel of explosives from a helicopter onto a residential
neighborhood - and the horror that resulted - still stings.

"Every year when May comes around, I think of it, of course, because I'll
never forget that it's May 13, 1985," says Mary Ellen Krober, a lawyer for
the city who negotiated settlements with 11 MOVE families.


'Grossly negligent' actions

When the Rev. Isaac Miller arrived in Philadelphia shortly after the
bombing, there was little discussion of it, he says. It was too
disturbing: The city's first black mayor had dropped a bomb on a black
neighborhood.

"In many ways, for African-Americans, it's painful to remember," says
Miller, an Episcopal priest who will speak Friday at a commemoration. "But
... it has to be" remembered.

A commission that investigated found that Goode and two other officials,
police commissioner Gregore Sambor and fire commissioner William Richmond,
had been "grossly negligent." The deaths of the MOVE children "appeared to
be unjustified homicide," it said. Police had not taken them out of the
house when they had the chance. They had used excessive force in firing
10,000 rounds of ammunition into the house. The plan to drop explosives
was "reckless" and "unconscionable." And they let the fire burn until it
was too late to control.

Sambor resigned six months later. Richmond retired in 1988. Goode
apologized tearfully on TV and was re-elected in 1988.

"Everybody was shouting at the television set, 'Put out the fire!' " says
Carl Singley, a lawyer who was counsel to the MOVE commission.

That five children died, huddled in the basement of the MOVE house, brings
tears to his eyes. "I imagine those last hours down in the basement," he
says.


Police have changed tactics

The confrontation came after months of complaints from neighbors about
MOVE, which is not an abbreviation for anything. Members broadcast
political harangues on bullhorns day and night, threw garbage and filth
into their yard and kept their children naked as part of a dedication to
"Mom Nature." The violence was touched off when police tried to evict
members and arrest some of them.

"You can say whatever you want about the adult MOVE people in the house
and whether they got what they deserved," says John Anderson, co-author of
Burning Down the House, a book about MOVE. "But there were kids in the
house."

Eight years later, the standoff between federal agents and the Branch
Davidians near Waco, Texas, echoed the MOVE scenario. Since then, says
Henry Ruth, who served on commissions investigating MOVE and Waco, police
have changed their tactics. In 1996, the Montana Freemen standoff ended
peacefully when federal agents simply waited out the Freemen. "They
learned a lot from Waco, and I think they learned from MOVE about the
inevitability of tragedy when you start raiding a cult where you have no
contingency plan," Ruth says. "Law enforcement has seen the need to wait
and wait and wait. I think we've learned a lot of lessons. But it took
MOVE and it took Ruby Ridge and it took Waco to learn that, and that was
over 100 lives."

One of the two who escaped the fire, Ramona Africa, 49, spent seven years
in prison for riot and conspiracy. Today, she earns her living speaking
about MOVE and Mumia Abu-Jamal, a death-row inmate convicted in an
unrelated 1981 killing of a police officer.

"I am angry, and bitter, and justifiably so," she says. "Not a single
official went to prison for murdering my family," referring to the whole
Africa clan. The bombing, she says, was "not bad judgment. That is
murder."

Members now live in a big house in West Philadelphia, eat "a lot" of raw
food, Africa says, and home-school their children. But the tactics have
changed, she says, since the bombing drew the world's attention. "It's not
necessary for us to be on the bullhorn now. People are calling us for
information."

Today, the site of the bombed house, 6221 Osage, is occupied by the police
Civil Affairs Unit. The city rebuilt Osage Avenue, but the construction
was so shoddy that years of repairs failed to fix the homes. Finally, the
city condemned them and offered owners $150,000. Many took the buyout, but
24 families went to federal court. The city is appealing the judgment.

"I'm really disgusted," says resident Nan Chainey. I'm tired, and I want
to end this thing."

Twenty years of struggle left the residents of Osage Avenue distrustful of
the government they asked in 1985 to help them with their neighbors.

"They want us, the people, physically out," says Gerald Renfrow, a roofer
who has lived on the block since 1959. "When we're out, that means there's
no one left on Osage to tell the story of what happened."

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