“White
Democrats will desert their party in droves the minute it becomes a
black party.”
Kevin
Phillips, The Emerging Republican Majority, 1969
Having
climbed through a basement window, the 35 year old black intruder
explored the home for over an hour, pilfering drawers and ransacking
closets. But the thrill of the violation fell short this time, and
after carrying an answering machine and a coffee maker to the
basement the trespasser returned to the kitchen. He stole a knife
from the kitchen drawer and a beer from the refrigerator and went
upstairs. In the bedroom he found a handgun. And twenty minutes
after seven he heard the front door open. William Horton pulled his
ski mask down and slipped behind the bedroom door.
It
was Friday, 3 July, 1987, in the suburb of Oxon Hill, Maryland, 2
miles south of the District of Colombia. The 35,000 residents were
mostly middle class apartments dwellers but lately included a growing
number of Young Upwardly Mobile couples in “starter” homes. A
generation later the process would be described as “Gentrification”.
Clifford
Barnes locked the front door behind him and removed his tie and shirt
while climbing the stairs to the 2nd floor bathroom. The
28 year old white male was undressing to shower, when he heard
movement in the hall. He called out, “Angi?” In response the
door exploded inward, and a 6'3” tall man burst into the bathroom,
screaming. Horton knocked Clifford down and pistol whipped him with
his own gun.
The
social changes in Oxon Hill, mirrored the 20 year old predictions of
Republican strategist Kevin Price Phillips. Early excerpts from his
first book, “The Emerging Republican Majority” were shared within
the 1968 Richard Nixon Presidential campaign. As Phillips later
explained his “Southern Strategy” to the New York Times, “The
more Negroes who register as Democrats... the sooner the “Negrophobe”
whites will...become Republicans. That's where the votes are.” He
offered only one caveat: Republicans would be shortsighted if they
weakened the new Voting Rights Act.
Ignoring that warning Nixon's
Chief of Staff Harry Robinson (H.R.) Halderman (above, left) enunciated the policy
in his own way. “The whole problem is really the blacks. The key is
to devise a system that recognized this while not appearing to".
Binding
Clifford's hands behind his back, Horton dragged the dazed man to the
basement, where he strung him up to a floor brace. Then Horton jammed
the gun into his victim's eyes and dragged a kitchen knife across his
stomach 19 times, drawing blood. He spent 6 hours torturing Clifford
Barnes, until he heard the front door open again.
The
Southern Strategy was targeted at “Dixiecrats” like South
Carolina's James Strom Thermond (above, center). In 1948, when fellow Democrat Harry
Truman ordered the integration of the U.S. military, Thurmond ran
against him for President as a States Rights Democrat, telling one
crowd, “... there's not enough troops in the army to force the
Southern people to break down segregation and admit the Nigra' race
into our theaters...our swimming pools...our homes, and into our
churches.” Thermond won 4 states and 39 electoral votes. In 1954,
as a U.S. Senator, he staged a solitary 24 hour filibuster against
Republican President Eisenhower's 1957 Civil Rights Act.
Angela
Miller, Clifford's fiance, came home at 2:30 on the morning of
Saturday, 4 July. She had been attending a girlfriend's birthday
party and assumed that Clifford would be asleep. But when she walked
into the 2nd floor bedroom she noticed a broken beer
bottle and Clifford's eyeglasses lying on the floor. She retreated
into the hallway, where William Horton shoved the gun into her face.
He dragged her by the throat back into the bedroom, and threw her
onto the bed. After tying her hands behind her back and blindfolding
her, he ripped her shirt off and then using the knife sliced off her
jeans. Then he beat and raped her.
Arizona
Senator Barry Morris Goldwater (above) won the contested Republican
nomination in 1964, in large part because he had argued against
Lyndon Johnson's 1964 Voting Rights Act. Goldwater did not endorse
racism but rationalized supporting it in order to court the racist
Strom Thurmond, who sited Democratic support for the new law to
justify switching to the Republican Party.
That November, while
Johnson won a landslide victory nationwide, Goldwater carried only
his home state and the segregated deep south – Louisiana, Alabama,
Mississippi, Georgia and Strom Thurmond's South Carolina.
After
the rape Angela Miller struggled to hold onto her sanity. She asked
her masked attacker for a beer. Horton walked her downstairs to the
refrigerator. Then she asked him if they could watch some television,
and, again, Horton agreed. As they sat in the living room she made a
grab for the gun. Horton beat her again, and raped her again. In the
basement Clifford could hear his fiance's screams.
When
the 1968 Republican Convention opened in Miami Richard Nixon (above right) was
still 11 votes short of 667 needed to secure the nomination. When
Strom Thermond (above, left) suggested that Nixon name Maryland Governor Spiro
Agnew as his vice President, Nixon agreed. The 22 votes from South
Carolina secured Nixon's victory on the first ballot. From that
point forward, Thurmond was the "indispensable man" in the
Nixon administration and the poison pill of racism was now baked into
Republican ideology.
Having
raped and badly beaten Angela twice in a few hours, a rested William
Horton felt the need to return his attention to his basement
prisoner. But once downstairs he discovered that Barnes had escaped.
Suddenly not in control, Horton panicked. Forgetting his female
victim he shoved the few stolen appliances through the basement
window, and loaded them into Barnes' Camero, He then drove off in the
car.
It
was the stolen car that was spotted by Prince George County Police
Corporal Paul Lopez. He chased the Camero at high speed. When it
crashed, a man emerged holding the hand gun. Corporal Lopez ordered
the suspect to drop the gun and when he didn't the officer fired,
hitting the suspect in the stomach and arm. Shortly thereafter one
year veteran Corporal Yusuf Mhuammad (above) arrested the wounded suspect in
the backyard of nearby home.
He was taken to the hospital for
treatment, where he was photographed and eventually identified as
William J. Horton. But
he would become famous as “Willie Horton”. And just like Strom Thurmond, he was from South Carolina.
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