Pubdate: Fri, 08 Sep 2000
Source: Washington City Paper (DC)
Copyright: 2000 Washington Free Weekly Inc.
Contact:  (202) 332-8500
Mail: 2390 Champlain St. NW, Washington, DC 20009
Website: http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/
Author: Jason Cherkis
Note: This is part 5 of a 13 part feature edition of this weekly newspaper.

CRACK RELATED

When He Died, Houston Washington III Earned Just Four Lines In The Daily 
Paper. A Look At The Anatomy Of A Drug Deal Gone Bad.

The Crime Scene

It was supposed to be an easy, quick sale. The woman approached Houston 
Washington III and his friend while they were browsing inside Mart Liquors, 
just off Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue in Southeast. She wanted a $20 rock, 
the woman reportedly told Washington, allegedly a sometime crack dealer. If 
he could just wait, she said, she'd go and get the money.

It was Saturday, March 28, 1998. Washington stepped outside, rounded the 
corner, and headed down the alley behind the store, munching from a bag of 
Doritos.

A few moments later, two 40-caliber bullets tore through Washington's body. 
One bullet entered through his left temple; the other punctured the left 
side of his neck. He died quickly, collapsing to the oil-streaked concrete. 
Apparently, he never saw the shooter's face, and neither did his friend. On 
the ground, his body formed a crooked Y shape. By his side rested the trio 
of Budweiser 7-ounce bottles that he had just purchased. It was just after 
3:30 p.m. on a warm, dry spring day.

Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) Scout Car No. 7041 was the first to 
get to the crime scene. The car approached from the 500 block of Newcomb 
Street SE. "The officer arrived on the scene, finding the victim, Mr. 
Houston Washington, lying in the alley, unconscious with apparent gun shot 
wounds," says the police report. "D.C. Fire Department Medic Unit 
responded. However, death was apparent."

"A large pool of blood is located just north of the decedent's head with 
blood splattering going out several feet north of this pooling," the report 
continues.

Another apparent crack death in a city long inured to such deaths. Every 
detail about the incident, in fact, seemed so very predictable: 
Washington's race (black), his sex (male), his age (31), the location of 
the murder (Southeast), the murder weapon (a gun), his occupation (crack 
dealer), the amount of space devoted to him in the Washington Post (a Metro 
brief), and the reaction from residents (a collective shrug).

Washington's death didn't get a mention in the Post until the following 
Tuesday, when he was lumped in with three other young men slain that 
weekend. He joined Keith Z. Richardson, 28, Deon Gay, 19, and Eddie 
Buckner, 47, in the Post's Crime & Justice column. The three others were 
shot in a 13-minute span the day after Washington died.

The Post wrote this about Washington: "Houston Washington, 30, of the 4200 
block of Fourth Street SE, was found at 3:40 p.m. Saturday in an alley in 
the rear of the 500 block of Newcomb Street SE, officials said. He was 
suffering from multiple gunshot wounds, police said."

It didn't matter that the paper had his age and address wrong, that he had 
just moved back in with his wife in Suitland, or that he had four kids. 
Washington was one of "those guys." Guys who hang out all day in parks and 
on street corners selling rocks. Guys who die in circumstances that are 
murky but that conceal no great mystery. There were no shocked neighbors, 
no tempting life-insurance policies; the murder was not the work of some 
mastermind killer. Washington was just one of those guys who died because 
of crack.

Washington's final resting place turned out to be the District of 
Columbia's long list of murder statistics. In 1998, his was one of 60 
murders that occurred in the MPD's 7th District. In the decade leading up 
to his death, there were more than 1,000 murders in that district. Most of 
those, MPD detectives will tell you, were "crack-related."

Still, even crack murders have specific archaeologies—the bloody scene, the 
brutal killer, the victim, the last words, the heartbreaking ironies, the 
stubborn clues, and the mourning friends and family.

More than two years after Washington's murder, his case remains unsolved. 
In the alley where he was killed, there is no white cross or mural to honor 
him. He was neither saintly nor notorious enough to warrant posthumous 
tributes. The rear red-brick wall of Mart Liquors is marked with all sorts 
of white graffiti tributes to slain brothers and buddies. But nothing about 
Washington.

Residents who live near the liquor store, along Mellon and Newcomb Streets 
SE, say they simply don't remember Washington. Some are too scared to talk 
about the neighborhood's business of shootings and killings. Some have just 
moved here. Others simply confuse him with other murder victims. "He got 
shot at the bus stop two weeks ago," one guy offers. "The fire department 
had to come and wash the blood away."

And these are the neighbors closest to the murder scene.

"There's an enormous amount of murders here, especially here on Mellon 
Street," explains Charles, a longtime resident who declined to give his 
last name. "There's a lot of death here that don't get explained."

The Detective

It's Detective Michael Will's job to explain murders like Washington's. A 
homicide detective since 1991, he currently works on cold cases in the 7th 
District. Will must juggle 15 to 20 cases at one time; pick up each bit of 
evidence; interview informants, neighbors, and inmates; and slowly piece 
together forgotten murders. Since the advent of crack, he says, solving 
cold cases has gotten much, much harder.

Will remembers when homicide investigations changed: when the first 
automatic weapon was fired in the 7th District, which encompasses many of 
the impoverished Southeast D.C. neighborhoods east of the Anacostia River. 
It was 1985, he says, at the corner of Southern Avenue and Chesapeake 
Street SE. A group of guys ambushed a car with a Mac 11 gun, peppering 
metal and skin with bullets. There was one fatality that day. There would 
be many more. Soon after, crack arrived and the murder rate soared.

"Before that, you didn't have the fully automatic bullshit going," Will 
says. "[Since then] you have brazen shit. They don't care if the police are 
out or not."

In 1987, there were 69 murders in the 7th District, according to police 
records. In 1993, there were 137.

In the interim, dealers from Jamaica, New York City, and Miami had come to 
the District seeking a piece of the action. If you could sell a rock of 
cocaine for $3 or $4 in New York, that same piece could be sold in the 
District for $10 or $20. It was a matter of supply and demand. Because D.C. 
wasn't a port of entry for cocaine, someone had to bring it here.

One self-described "small-time" local dealer says he could make as much as 
$3,000 a week selling crack, with a base of 80 loyal customers.

Eventually, dealers started getting into gunfights over the stuff—and 
getting away with it. "We had cases where crack dealers from Miami or New 
York were selling their wares," Will says. "They pulled some triggers, and 
off they went. We had witnesses, but we couldn't find the guys....All you 
knew was a nickname—Remington, Nose, Byron, Soldier."

In 1983, a few years before crack and automatic weapons carved up the 7th 
District, Will met another kid with a nickname: Houston "Huey" Washington III.

Washington had recently moved back to the District after living with his 
mother and stepfather in Riverside County, Calif. He had wanted to come 
back to where most of his extended family lived, says his mother, Carolyn 
Silva. But by then, his father, Houston Washington II, had already started 
a battle with a nasty drug addiction.

Silva arranged for her son to live with Charles Logan, a family friend and 
community activist who had already adopted two boys. Logan was a frequent 
caller to the police. He always had a tip or two and was willing to share 
his knowledge when other neighbors were not. That generosity made him a 
favorite of a lot of officers, including Will.

Whenever Logan called about his suspicions that his own kids were getting 
into mischief, Will would cruise over to his 800 Alabama Ave. SE home and 
counsel Huey. "He was like any other kid," Will remembers of the boy. 
"Skipping school. Just prankster stuff."

When the two got together, they talked about Huey's behavior and anything 
else on the boy's mind. Will, a white cop, says the youngster didn't put on 
any thug act in front of him. "He was cordial. He was respectful," Will 
explains. "I never had any problems with him—he never got out of line. He 
didn't show that adverse reaction to authority. I've met some young ones—10 
or 11 years old—you can't even hold a conversation with them. They tell you 
to blow it out your ass. That wasn't Houston at all."

Sixteen years later, when Washington's murder case went cold, Will took 
over the investigation. "I knew the kid," he says.

The Victim

Washington barely had time to grow up.

In 1985, he had his first child with his teenage sweetheart, Kimberly 
Cooper, who would become his common-law wife. They named the newborn baby 
boy Houston Washington IV.

A year later, Washington's father died in his arms, of a massive heart attack.

Washington dropped out of high school after the 10th grade and never 
managed to hold on to a steady job for very long. There were stints as a 
street vendor, clerk jobs at a pet store and Sears, and a gig delivering 
pizzas. But despite Washington's lack of financial resources, Cooper says, 
he always took care of his son. For the first few years, he even opted to 
stay home and watch over "Little Houston."

"I remember when we went to the day care to register him. They asked you 
all these questions about when did he start walking," Cooper says. "Houston 
knew it all."

By 1991, Washington had split with Cooper and had become addicted to crack. 
"When I saw him for myself, I knew," Cooper says. "His face was sunken. He 
just didn't look like himself. But he was still his charming, loving self. 
Houston's just a charmer."

When the couple had spats, it was usually over other women. "He couldn't be 
contained," Cooper says. "He was always into doing something. He was always 
moving. When I was younger, it didn't bother me, but as I got older, I 
guess I wanted to settle down. He was still going and doing all the things 
he liked to do."

Washington continued his crack habit, occasionally dealing the drug as 
well. Despite numerous attempts to sober up, his addiction brought him more 
than a half-dozen arrests.

On Jan. 8, 1994, he lost his surrogate father, Logan, to a shooting. Logan 
was shot eight times by Timothy "Tiny" Williams, the brother of one of his 
adopted sons.

A year later, Washington had managed to get clean and get back together 
with Cooper. That year, the two had another boy, Malik. There would be 
another breakup, another, final stint in rehab, and another baby boy, 
Kirby. Kirby was 6 weeks old when Washington died. Washington had also 
fathered a girl with another woman.

"We would always get back together, and we was always friends," Cooper 
says. "I was his first love, and he was my first love. He could always 
charm his way out of any situation, no matter how mad you are. He'd let you 
cool off, but he would always charm his way back. It wasn't anything he 
particularly said. You just couldn't stay mad at him."

If his drug habit and dealing were problems, Cooper thought there was 
little she could do about them. "I wasn't happy," Cooper says. "I knew 
Houston knew better. I didn't like [his dealing], either. But he was a 
grown adult. What was I going to do, beat him?"

But enough other people were mad at Washington to want him dead. During the 
course of his investigation, Will has heard a lot of possible motives: that 
Washington owed a lot of money, maybe $10,000, to a dealer dubbed "Jamaican 
Mike." That Washington was "hot," a term used for informants. And there 
were other possibilities floating around, too: He might have been caught 
selling "demos," or fake crack. He might have been fooling around with too 
many women.

"The most glaring thing is, maybe he screwed up with some customer, didn't 
pay somebody," Will adds. "There's a lot of reasons when somebody goes down 
that hard."

But other sources have told Will that Washington was one of the good guys. 
According to one former crack dealer, Washington didn't operate like a thug 
or a guy bent on becoming notorious. The dealer says Washington had a small 
operation and nothing more. "He wasn't flamboyant," the dealer explains. 
"He was just relaxed."

A year into the case, Will says he's interviewed dozens of informants and 
ruled most of the possible motives out. He says he could be close to 
solving the case if a witness or two would come forward.

Until then, the police know the final chain of events, but not the shooter. 
According to people close to the investigation, Washington was playing the 
role of the gentle dealer until the end. Moments before Washington died, as 
he and his friend were walking down the alley behind the liquor store, the 
friend spotted some illegal gambling going on in a resident's backyard. He 
wanted to join in. But Washington wouldn't, chiding his friend that 
gambling was a waste of time and money.

"Don't go in there and gamble" were Washington's last words.

The Shooter

According to informant and witness accounts, the shooter wore a bandanna 
over his face. A female accomplice was said to be a well-known pipehead, 
light-skinned, with auburn hair. According to Cooper, who received a few 
tips, the pair may have driven a late-model car, the shooter's name may 
have been Mike, and they may have fled to a house on Newcomb Street.

The Wife

Cooper remembers her husband's shoes. They were Asics sneakers, white with 
gold and blue stripes. Washington loved those Asics, his favorite brand. 
The last time Cooper saw her husband alive—the morning of the day he 
died—he was washing his sneakers in the bathroom sink, scrubbing the laces.

Just before Cooper left for a shopping trip to Old Navy with her sister, 
Malik, and Kirby, she knocked on the bathroom door and said goodbye to 
Washington.

"'I'll probably just chill in the house,'" Cooper remembers Washington saying.

Driving home from the store, Cooper received several pages. Each had the 
same code punched in: 911, along with her phone number. They stopped at a 
McDonald's and she quickly called the house. It was her son Houston IV. 
"Daddy's been shot," he said.

Cooper first drove to Greater Southeast Community Hospital. The hospital 
told her that they had no records for Houston Washington or any other 
shooting victims. She then directed her sister to take her to their old 
neighborhood, where Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue and Malcolm X Boulevard 
intersect. A manicured park sits between the two streets. Washington always 
went there to hang out or see friends. Maybe that's where he is, she thought.

Cooper was right. As they turned into the old neighborhood, she spotted a 
few old friends. Her sister pulled over. "'He's around in the alley—dead,'" 
Cooper remembers her friends saying. Just like that, they told her the news.

She went to the alley behind Mart Liquors, just off Newcomb, and came upon 
a crowd. There were cops, crime-lab technicians, and many nosy residents. 
Cooper worked her way to the edge of the police tape and tried to get a 
good look. Was this really Houston?

All Cooper could see between the officers was a pair of shoes attached to a 
limp body. That was enough. They were Washington's, the freshly scrubbed 
Asics. "I knew that was him," she says.

The scene quickly turned chaotic. A woman in the crowd claimed she was 
Washington's girlfriend and that he lived with her. Another told police 
that she was his sister. Both claims were not true. Washington's sister 
lived far from her brother's friends. And as far as the woman who said she 
lived with Washington, he could very well have had another relationship. 
But he had recently gotten back together with Cooper—and she knew he wasn't 
living anywhere else. She had told herself the reunion was going to be for 
good this time.

Cooper grew hysterical. She says she couldn't get any of the officers to 
listen to her, to understand that she was his wife and that she had just 
lost the love of her life. She says, instead, that one officer cuffed her 
hands behind her back and stuffed her in the back of a squad car. "'You 
going to jail,'" she remembers the cop saying. She sat in the car for about 
five minutes before the police decided to accept her story.

"I felt helpless—really, really helpless," Cooper says. "They weren't 
listening to me. I just saw him two hours ago at home. You couldn't even 
possibly understand my state of mind to see him on the ground with all that 
blood."

Two years later, Cooper wishes she could get that picture of Washington out 
of her mind. She says she hasn't been back to that stretch of Martin Luther 
King Jr. Avenue since the shooting. She can't face those old friends, 
friends she thinks know who killed her husband, but aren't talking.

"All those people claim, 'Oh, Houston was my man.' All those girls down 
there—he was either their boyfriend or their brother. But none of y'all 
seen nothing, none of y'all know nothing," Cooper says. "None of y'all can 
tell the police one little word. But you-all 'loved' him. I don't 
understand it. I don't understand it. He took away my children's father—he 
took away someone I grew up with.

"My little son, Malik, says, 'I wish my Daddy would come out the sky. Tell 
Jesus to let him out the sky and come down to look at TV.' That's all he 
knows—he's in heaven."

The Son

"Big Houston just got shot. I think he gone." This is how Houston 
Washington IV—Little Houston—heard about his father's death. Washington's 
liquor-store companion called the house soon after the shooting and broke 
the news to the 12-year-old.

Little Houston had lost his best friend, his father, who, despite the 
revolving-door relationship with Cooper, always seemed to be there for him. 
Little Houston says that whenever he wanted to talk, had a problem with 
school, had difficulties with his mother, Big Houston was ready to listen. 
The two could talk about anything—how not to get into trouble, how to use 
common sense in tough situations, how to be the man of the house when Big 
Houston wasn't around.

When they weren't talking, the two were usually enthralled in a game of 
Sony PlayStation football. That's what they did the night before Big 
Houston died. That night, Washington came home at 3 a.m. and woke his son 
up. "'Come on, play PlayStation with me,'" Little Houston remembers his 
father saying. He jumped out of bed, and the two sat in front of the TV, 
joysticks in hand, for several hours of contentious arcade football.

Little Houston remembers the score of their last game: He beat his father 
35-14. "He quit," he says. "He was like, 'You got it.'"

The next day, Big Houston told him he was going out to the "Avenue," and 
that he'd be right back.

Little Houston, now almost 15 years old, still remembers that day. He's the 
only one of Washington's sons who remembers their father. But now, anger 
and confusion and soured pride occasionally displace the fond memories. 
This past spring, the youth spent time in a Maryland youth "boot camp" 
after assaulting a neighborhood boy. His mother says his grades in school 
have plummeted, too.

Little Houston tries not to think about his father's death. But he has an 
idea of how the shooting went down. Right now, it's as good as any other. 
It came to him in a dream:

"I seen him get shot. He was arguing with some dude," Little Houston 
recalls. "I couldn't see him. His face was shining. Last thing you know, it 
was like Pow! Pow! He just dropped."

"I couldn't hear what they were saying," Little Houston continues. "They 
were just arguing back and forth. And I woke up. I never dreamed it again."
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake