The closest
that I ever got to Rubin Carter who died in the early hours of Easter Sunday
was through the automatically generated telephone answering mechanism of his
home in Canada.
The phone
would ring several times before reverting to the rich, baritone voice of an
African-American male. It simply reminded the caller that if they were sure
that they had reached their intended destination, then “you know what to do.”
I had not the
foggiest idea of what password or other ritual Carter had mandated that callers
follow and never did find out.
Back in the
early 2000s when I was completing my research on Dick Tiger, the Nigerian world
middleweight champion who had fought Carter in a memorable contest in May of
1965, I had obtained Carter’s ‘super secret’ contact number from a son of one
of Carter’s other contemporaries, the light heavyweight fighter Frankie
DePaula.
But Carter
was always guarded and extremely selective about the people with whom he
conducted private conversations. Of course, such an attitude may only be
expected from a man who had spent close to twenty years of his life in prison
for a crime which the record shows he should not have been convicted.
It is
certainly de rigueur among those inhabiting a world of fame, or, in Carter’s
case from certain stridently held perspectives, one of infamy.
I already had
an idea, based on what I had read about him and from speaking to people who had
known him, that Carter would not be receptive to conducting an interview.
Still, I held out the hope that he might say something for the record - even if
it was to rail against the sport of boxing for its exploitation of young black
men.
These series
of non-encounters nonetheless enlightened me on certain aspects of Carter’s
persona. He was a difficult man to get to know; often posing riddles and
barriers not only to strangers, but to those with whom he was acquainted and
even to those with whom he had a more intimate association.
Plainly speaking,
he was an enigma.
The aspect of
Rubin Carter which most interested me was that of his career as a boxer. This
remains the case despite the overshadowing circumstance of his been made into a
cause celebre for the perennial problem of racial injustice and the
malfunctioning of the American criminal justice system.
In 1966,
Carter, along with a friend John Artis, was arrested for the brutal slaying of
three people in a New Jersey bar and grill. The police claimed that both men,
at the instigation of Carter had shot the victims as an act of racial revenge.
Carter, on the other hand, contended that he had been arrested by a racially
prejudiced law enforcement regime and was convicted by an equally bigoted jury.
It took
almost two complete decades for his conviction to be quashed. In the interim
period, a campaign was launched in the middle part of the 1970s to free Carter.
The ‘Rubin Carter Defense Campaign Committee’ consisted of many figures from
the worlds of entertainment, sports and the civil rights movement. ‘Hurricane’,
a barnstorming folk-rock song, composed and performed by Bob Dylan became the
anthem for the cause.
When Carter
was released for the second and final time, he pointedly made the decision to
reside in Canada rather than in the United States. This was a serious statement
in its self, but also was one which on reflection may have brought a wry smile
to students of American civil rights history.
While the
perception is that the American South was the regional practioner par
excellence in the meting out of racial oppression, the late Malcolm X in his
‘Ballot or the Bullet’ speech humorously cautioned against holding such a
belief. “Stop talking about the South,” he intoned, “As long as you are south
of the Canadian border, you’re South.”
Carter’s
initial connection with Canada was through a group of commune-living hippies
with whom he communicated during his time in jail, but even after he broke with
them, he made Toronto his permanent place of residence and eventually became a
Canadian citizen.
He became an
advocate for a non-governmental organisation which promoted the rights of those
seeking to overturn wrongful convictions. Carter, after all, had been the
victim of a gross miscarriage of justice.
On that
point, however, there is dissent.
There are
those who believe that Carter, a vocal critic of racism in his hometown of
Paterson, New Jersey had taken the law into his hands in June of 1966 by
shooting three local whites in cold blood as a revenge for an incident earlier
that evening in which a black bartender, the step-father of a friend of
Carter’s was murdered by a white man. They point to the fact that Carter was
convicted in a second trial and that his conviction was only nullified on a
point of technicality.
These doubts
were deployed in a campaign mounted by a Hollywood public relations firm
against the film ‘Hurricane’ in which Carter is powerfully depicted by Denzel
Washington. It likely cost Washington the coveted Oscar for best leading actor
in 2000.
But Carter’s
legions of supporters have not wavered. And as his last autobiography, Eye of the Hurricane: My Path from Darkness
to Freedom showed, he remained
steadfast in his conviction that he was a wronged man, but a man who
nonetheless refused to be shackled by hatred or bitterness.
Bitterness
and hatred were central themes of his earlier life. He had grown up in deprived
circumstances and felt constricted not only by this but also by society’s
attitude towards members of his race. His path was atypical of that of the
juvenile delinquent.
Where
redemption may have come via the potentially positive conditioning values of a
military environment, his career in the army came to an end with a
dishonourable discharge.
Boxing
presented an opportunity to improve his circumstances and he took up the sport
while serving in the military in West Germany. It might sound clichéd to aver
that he fought with a rage –hence the nom de guerre, ‘Hurricane’; but this was
precisely the case. It was however, a controlled and calculated rage.
Carter was
intelligent enough to realise that the application of unrestrained and
untutored aggression by a fighter would be suicidal in the boxing ring. His
ring style necessarily involved a litany of techniques which demonstrated his
adeptness at footwork, posturing feints, measuring his opponent with a ramrod
left jab and a swiftly delivered assortment of powerful hooks and wrecking ball
right crosses.
Fight films
capture him at his ruthless best in pummelling the great welterweight fighter,
Emile Griffith en route to a first round stoppage. In 1962, he memorably
despatched the middleweight Florentino Fernandez with a devastating combination
which sent the Cuban tumbling through the ropes. That bout also ended before the
first round had been completed.
But he could
also be tamed. Harry Scott, a Liverpool-based fighter scored a points decision
over him as did several other fighters. His one challenge for the middleweight
title was frustrated by the masterful boxing technique of Joey Giardello.
And of course
there was Dick Tiger, the subject of my first book.
From Tiger,
Carter would privately admit, he received the biggest beating of his life
“inside or outside of the ring.” Over the course of time, it has become
apparent to me that this bout irreparably wounded a part of Carter’s psyche,
much to the extent that I understand why I stood little chance of been given
the opportunity to interview him.
Carter had
long being fascinated by the stocky African fighter who after relocating to New
York in the late 1950s became a regular performer on the nationally televised
boxing fights broadcast to Americans on Friday evenings.
At a time
when the middleweight division was replete with tough competitors, the
tenacious and skilful Tiger appears to have offered the yet-to-turn
professional Carter a mental challenge of sorts.
To him, Dick
Tiger was seemingly the embodiment of an aura of toughness which the
self-consciously tough-as-nails Carter sought to emulate.
He admitted
to having dreamed about fighting Tiger while incarcerated prior to the start of
his professional career. But while Carter’s conscious and unconscious
excursions into the realm of imagined contests had often predicted a knockout
victory over a future adversary, he could only admit to carving out a points’
decision over Tiger.
Such could be
interpreted as a manifestation of his doubts on being able to cope with Tiger
and if that was the case, they were an accurate portent of his eventual doom.
The way Victor Zimet, an accomplished American trainer told me, it was as if
Tiger had put Carter on his knees and spanked him like a father would an errant
child.
All but one
of Carter’s losses were on points. He was outfoxed by Joey Giardello; not
dominated. True, he was stopped by the capable Jose ‘Monon’ Gonzalez but Carter
had been well ahead on points when the bout was ended due to a deep cut which
had materialised over his right eye.
Dick Tiger
did more. He inflicted a cut deep into Carter’s soul. Tiger hurt him badly in
the early rounds and forced him to retreat. At the end of the bout, a Sports Illustrated photograph shows a
beaming and unblemished Tiger posing with his hand across Carter’s shoulder.
Carter, by way of contrast, looks on sheepishly; his face a spectacle of lumps
and bumps.
A most
revealing incident occurred in 2010 at an event in Guelph, Canada where Carter
was in town to serve as a guest speaker. Afterwards, Carter sat down to sign
autographs and a friend of mine, Gary Vautour, a veteran amateur boxer and
trainer attempted to present him with a copy of my book, Dick Tiger: The Life and Times of a Boxing Immortal.
His reaction
disappointed Vautour.
“Why would I
want to read about someone who beat me up?” Carter told him. Carter’s
friend, Ron Lipton, recently elucidated on this particular point.
“Rubin
absolutely refused to talk about the Tiger fight in later years,” he says. “He
avoided it like the plague. When Brian Kenny asked Rubin on ESPN who was his
toughest fight with in the ring, he said, ‘Holley Mims’. Sorry, the toughest
fight was with Dick Tiger. Rubin did not quit and fought to the end, but Tiger
was too skilled and hurt him early with the heavy hook.”
Contrary to
the impression that Bob Dylan’s lyrics may have conveyed, Carter was far from
being a contender for the middleweight title at the time of his apprehension
for the triple murder. Indeed, he was arguably on the slide. He fought nine
more times after the loss to Tiger of which he lost five.
Yet Carter had
it in him to have been a champion before being beset by his legal maladies. There were
self-destructive tendencies always lurking within him.
His highly
demanding training regime, one which gave him a cast-iron physique, was
punctuated by bouts of drinking and smoking. In fact, he was once knocked out
in a sparring session having entered the ring in an inebriated state.
These lapses
were unforgivable weaknesses in an era which boasts of arguably the most
talented assemblage of middleweight boxers ever.
Much of the
understanding that I have of Carter the fighter and Carter the man comes from
Ron Lipton. Lipton was a sixteen-year old homeless New Yorker who found refuge
in the boxing gymnasiums of the city. He was aware of who Carter was and what
was perceived as his hostility towards white people.
But Carter’s
notorious hardness melted away when the cheeky teenager begged him for a
sparring position with the words, “How’d you like the chance to beat up another
white boy.”
Carter roared
with laughter.
Unknown to
Lipton, Lipton’s father would later encourage Carter to take on a mentoring
role for his head strong son. From Lipton, I heard of Carter’s tenacity in
training, the methodologies behind his boxing-craft, and his skill at his
favourite leisure activity of target shooting.
It was from
Lipton that I also heard of a lavish birthday gift bestowed onto Carter by his
friend Frankie DePaula. DePaula, who would be assassinated by the Mob in 1970,
presented Carter with a two-gun western-style holster set with two .22
revolvers manufactured by a company named High Standard.
Lipton’s
involvement with Carter extended from the boxing world to that pertaining to
the campaign to have him freed. Although a three-time New Jersey Golden Gloves
champion, he decided to pursue a career in law enforcement.
He continued
to visit Carter during his incarceration, and while serving with the Verona,
New Jersey Police Department he would, at an Essex County Revolver League
Dinner, overhear a group of officers boast about how they had framed Carter.
Again, when
working as an investigator at the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office, Lipton
would also overhear the boasts by officers from the Passiac County team that
had handled Carter’s case in which they foreswore to “bury that nigger and keep
him buried at all costs.”
In January of
1974, Lipton disclosed what he knew to the New
York Daily News and made a report which he brought to the attention of the
then serving governor of the state of New Jersey, Brendan Byrne.
He also
enlisted the help of Muhammad Ali. But Ali was not ostensibly disposed to come
to the aid of Rubin Carter. There had been a certain animus between both men
after Carter had made disparaging remarks at the height of his career.
One of
Carter’s victim’s had been Jimmy Ellis, before Ellis metamorphosed into a
heavyweight. Ellis of course had been a boyhood friend of Ali’s in their native
Louisville, Kentucky and was a stable mate given his association with Ali’s
trainer, Angelo Dundee.
Carter had
offended Ali when offhandedly bragging that Ali had sent Ellis to fight him
because Ali was not sure that he could do the job himself.
Ali listened
to Lipton’s pitch and agreed to help Carter. In the aforementioned Daily News article, Ali was quoted as
saying, “I think it’s a good thing when you get whites like Lipton reaching out
to stop injustices against black people.”
Lipton was
there with Ali when in 1976, Ali put up the money guarantee when Carter was
bailed in 1976 pending his re-trial.
But as with
the case with the Canadian hippies and Lesra, the young black protégé whom they
had adopted and who grew up to become a prosecuting lawyer, a fracture occurred
in their relationship.
When Lipton
approached Carter to help write a character reference in a legal case in which
Lipton had defended himself against three men who had waylaid him, Carter had
refused; brusquely informing him that he was "always getting into
scrapes.”
By contrast,
Joe Frazier had acceded to Lipton’s request without demur - just as Ali had
once travelled to aid Lipton in an earlier case when Lipton was acquitted of
having assaulted a group of men who had invaded his home.
Carter’s
reactions to his friends were littered with acts of ingratitude and even
disloyalty; a trait stemming presumably from a pervasive tendency to be
extremely self-centred.
Nonetheless
with Lipton, at least, he made his peace as his former mentee spoke to him
constantly by phone before his life ebbed away from the effects of the prostate
cancer with which he had been stricken.
The legacy of
Rubin Carter will not be subsumed into whatever words that may be affixed to
his gravestone or other monument devised in his honour. His is a complex one;
one that will continue to confound, mystify and perplex.
To some he
will remain the angry social misfit; an impulsive and intemperate man who
effectively duped many and took to the grave a lie about his culpability for a
heinous crime.
To others,
and they appear to be the majority, he will remain a key figure in the
post-civil rights era whose case brought to light the serious deficiencies
which plagued and continue to undermine confidence in the American criminal
justice system.
They will
argue that his advocacy in his post-prison life on behalf of others facing
unjust captivity transcended the specific issue of racial injustice; that
Carter’s worldview became focused not solely on himself or on African-Americans
but on spreading a wider message and taking a pro-active stance on human
rights.
And of Carter
the boxer, we are left with the story of an underprivileged black man who
despite the interregnum caused by his earlier bout of detention, carved out a
decent career as a professional fighter over a five year time span.
It was
something of a remarkable feat to rise from the circumstance of imprisonment
and within a two year period, be featured on live national television stopping
a fighter of the calibre of Emile Griffith.
He
demonstrated toughness and resilience in not taking the easy way out and
quitting against Dick Tiger, and of course, he did fight a creditably
competitive bout with the reigning world champion, Joey Giardello which was
nothing like the racially motivated robbery as portrayed in the film ‘The
Hurricane.’
Carter’s
misfortune in not winning the world championship was actually a misfortune that
he shared with many other talented middleweights of the era in which he
fought. Dylan’s lyric, that he “Could-a
been the champion of the world” is true, although not for the reasons implied
in the song.
But outside
the ring, he did become a champion of sorts; this as an advocate for others
believed to be victims of miscarriages of justice. Carter appears to have found
a niche in helping others and evidently drew a measure of contentment in this
role.
Speaking to
the Poughkeepsie Journal after his
passing, his friend Ron Lipton eulogised him by stating that he “realised the
only joy in life that means anything is to help other people.”
(C) Adeyinka
Makinde (2014)
Adeyinka
Makinde is a writer and law lecturer based in London, England. He is the author
of the books Dick Tiger: The Life and
Times of a Boxing Immortal and Jersey
Boy: The Life and Mob Slaying of Frankie DePaula.
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