Thirty years ago on this date, August 31, 1984, Tiequon Cox, a Rollin 60's Neighborhood Crips Gangster, murdered 4 people. I will post information about this mass murderer from Wikipedia.
Mug shot of Tiequon Cox.
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Born
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December 1, 1965
U.S. |
Other names
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Lil Fee
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Criminal penalty
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Death sentence
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Criminal
status
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Incarcerated at San Quentin State Prison
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Conviction(s)
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First degree murder
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Tiequon Aundray "Lil Fee" Cox (born December 1, 1965) is a
convicted murderer currently incarcerated in San Quentin State Prison.
Cox
became one of the prime suspects of a mass murder investigation concerning the
deaths of Ebora Alexander, aged 59, Dietra Alexander, aged 25, two boys Damon
Bonner, aged 6, and Damani Garner-Alexander, aged 12. These four individuals
were relatives of former NFL player and defensive back Kermit Alexander. Cox was also a noted
member of the Rollin' 60,
one of the many sets affiliated to the Crips,
and actually still on parole on an unrelated charge.
Murders
and possible motives
The
events that occurred on August 31, 1984, are not clear, but what is known is
that two suspects, described as being male, were seen bursting into the house
of Ebora Alexander (the mother of Kermit Alexander) and opening fire, killing
four people in the process. Two other family members who had previously been
hiding, managed to scare off the gunmen, who were seen fleeing into a brown or
maroon van. Later the two suspects would be caught and identified as Tiequon
Cox, aged 18, and later a man Horace Edwin Burns, aged 20.[1][2] Both
were known affiliates of the Rollin' 60. Burns was not one of the gunman it
would turn out, but a look-out, along with two women Lisa Brown and Ida Moore,
who drove the get-away vehicle. Darren Charles Williams would later be caught and
identified as the other gunman.[3]
In
the past many media outlets have cited that the reason behind the killings was
a drug deal gone bad. This has been proven to be false. During the summer of
1983 a woman had been paralyzed in a shooting incident at a local Watts bar,
and her family was suing the bar's owner in a multimillion dollar suit. The bar
owner wanted to eliminate the lawsuit, so he hired the gang members to
assassinate the girl's entire household. The bar owner wrote the family's
address on a piece of paper, but Cox and his accomplices misread it and invaded
the home of Ebora Alexander.
In
1986, he was found guilty of four counts of 1st degree murder, in accordance
with premeditation laws, in the state of California. The jury further
determined that he should be sentenced to death, placing him on death row.
Young Tiequon Cox
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Related
information
Tiequon
Cox stabbed Stanley
"Tookie" Williams in 1988 while on death row. This is
depicted in the 2004 TV film Redemption:
The Stan Tookie Williams Story.
On
the afternoon of July 18, 2000, three inmates, regarded as some of San Quentin's most dangerous prisoners,
almost escaped. The three, identified as Tiequon Cox, Paul
Tuilaepa, and Noel
Jackson, all rushed towards a hole that had been unraveled from a
four foot section of a chain-link fence, nearly escaping with the intent of
securing themselves hostages. However, the attempt failed and with some
difficulty the officers managed to get all three inmates subdued and back into
a controlled yard. But, the escape attempt left many officers re-addressing the
serious security problems that had been plaguing San Quentin for years.
References
in literature & media
Several
references are made about Cox and the 1984 murders he was suspected of and
subsequently incarcerated for, in Leon Bing's Do or Die, a book
documenting the lives of at-risk youth in late '80's inner city Los Angeles.
This incident is also mentioned in the book "Monster; A Biography of an
L.A. Gang Member" written by Kody "Monster" Scott, a member of
the Eight Trey Gangsta Crips in Los Angeles.
The
details of the murder were also discussed by Alex Alonso in a 2008 episode of
History Channel's Gangland.
what"s taking so long for his day to leave this life.they took my baby tookie willliams away
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