Stuff You Should Know - Selects: MOVE: Or When the Philly Police Dropped a Bomb on a Residential Neighborhood
Episode Date: March 23, 2024Believe it or not, in 1985 the Philadelphia Police Department dropped a bomb from a helicopter onto a residential building in an African-American neighborhood. The fact that this story isn't more wide...ly known says it all. Listen and learn about MOVE in this classic episode.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, everyone.
It's Josh here, and for this week's Select I've chosen our July 2019 episode
on the Move bombing.
It's a very disturbing little known event in American history when the Philadelphia
Police Department dropped a fire bomb onto a row home where a radical group was holed
up, about half of whom were children.
It ended, as anyone would would expect in terrible tragedy.
Hope you get a lot out of this episode.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeartRadio.
-♪
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh. There's podcast. I'm Josh.
There's Chuck.
There's Josh.
You got to get used to this, Chuck.
We will eventually.
It's the new normal.
Yep.
And this is stuff you should know.
The I Can't Believe This Happened edition.
One of many.
One of many.
Yeah.
This sparked off a lot of ideas, too.
Oh, yeah? Yeah. Like sparked off a lot of ideas too. Oh yeah?
Yeah.
Like how the Phillies work?
No.
What's up with the Philly fanatic?
That's the green one, right?
Yeah.
That's a great character.
Sure.
So, let's dispense with all that, okay?
Yeah, this is going to be a long one, so let's just jump in.
Okay. So back in 1985 in May, Philadelphia Police Department became the first and to this point only police department to drop a bomb on American soil.
No police department has ever bombed anything in the history of America, but they did. And they happened to bomb a house that was occupied at the time with 13 people, seven
of which were children.
And the people in this house were members of an organization called MOVE, M-O-V-E, all
caps, but it's not an acronym.
And they did this because MOVE had made themselves quite a nuisance in the neighborhood, to say
the least.
And there was basically by this time in May 1985, a bitter feud between MOVE and the Philadelphia
Police Department.
And on May 13th, it came to a fiery and tragic end.
It's a nice setup. Thank you. You should have music playing or something. And on May 13th, it came to a fiery and tragic end.
That's a nice setup.
Thank you.
We should have music playing or something.
Hopefully Josh will do that because God knows Jerry's not going to.
She's not anywhere, anywhere, and he knows where she is.
So you want to go back in time and talk a little bit about MOVE and their origins,
and then go forward in time?
I would like to.
Isn't that what you said?
Mm-hmm.
Okay. So MOVE is still around. At times that what you said? Mm-hmm. Okay.
So MOVE is still around.
Yeah.
At times over the years, they've been called a cult.
They've been called a black liberation movement.
Back to Earth.
A terrorist group.
Animal rights group.
There are all these things to a certain degree here and there.
Although the leader, one Mr. Vincent Lepard, who everyone, by the way, if you hear us say the name,
so-and-so Africa, once you become a member of MOVE, you take on the last name of Africa.
Which even though they weren't strictly a group for African Americans, they had white people early on.
And Puerto Rican, too.
They definitely kind of got that rap a little bit more because of the Black Power
movement and the fact that the leader was black, changed his name to Africa, and asked
everyone else to change their last name to Africa.
But ultimately—
Although not legally, I don't think.
No, no.
But ultimately it was—well, they wouldn't have done it legally because that's part
of the system.
That's right.
And the system was one of the things they were really against.
There were basically two prongs to John Africa's philosophy.
One was that basically all life is important and equally important.
Yeah.
So there was a lot of animal rights stuff.
There was a lot of not eating meat ostensibly.
Oh, was there vegetarianism in there?
There was, although they weren't strict vegetarians.
No, they ate meat.
But yes.
But there was animal rights and protection in the sanctity of life.
And then the second was that the system as they called it was inherently flawed because everything that was created by humans was flawed.
And therefore not only should not be used, but the whole system should be taken down and replaced with a much more natural animalistic philosophy and way of life.
Yeah, so that includes electricity, that includes like cooking meat, like these kids ate raw chicken, believe it or not.
Yeah, the kids who were raised in the move movement. And this is, this story would make a lot more sense
if this was on like some deserted island
and someone was moving there to start
this utopian society on an island.
This is a very interesting story in that it happened
in a densely populated area of row houses
in West Philadelphia.
Born and raised.
Not where you would.
I can't not think of that whenever I hear West Philadelphia. I thought of it too.
It's when you go back and look at the footage,
and by the way, there's a great documentary called
Let It Burn, Let the Fire Burn,
that you should pay for online.
I did.
That's good.
On Amazon Prime.
And, well, I'm a Prime member, so. That's good. On Amazon Prime.
Well, I'm a Prime member, so.
So am I.
Still had to pay to rent it though.
Because Amazon is part of the system.
That's right. Where was I going?
You were saying that it would make more sense on
a deserted island than it would in a densely populated neighborhood in Philadelphia.
Yeah, so when you're watching this documentary and there's so much footage,
it's crazy to see this house, this row house, set up with, you know, farm animals at times in the front yard, heavily fenced in.
Fortified like a fortress?
Yeah, sometimes people standing outside with guns, even though, as we'll see later,
these guns were later found out to be not capable of firing bullets,
which means, well, I guess it's still a gun, but it means it's not a weapon.
It's a club.
Yeah, sort of. But at the very least, it's just, it's an odd setting for this story.
It is, and when you watch that documentary, that house sticks out like a sore thumb.
Like this, they had Amish people probably an hour and a half away from this doing the same thing out in the middle of the country.
Not the exact same thing, but you know what I'm saying.
But you can't get a good cheese steak in Amish country.
Much less a good raw one.
You can get good stick candy because they know what they're doing with that stuff.
Nice furniture.
Butter.
Sure.
What was it, Rumspringa, where they get to go crazy or whatever and see if they want
to live the Amish life?
I think, yeah, I think that was it.
That was a good one.
That was a long time ago.
But anyway, it's a very interesting setting for the story.
It got caught up in, or maybe unfairly pegged as black liberation, like I said, but sort
of because of the time in which it happened, which was in the 70s and early 80s when the Black Panther Party
was in power. There was a former Black Panther that later would join the Move movement.
Yes, but from what I saw in the documentary, that person was interviewed and he makes it
sound like rather than bringing the Black Panther ideas to Move, he took on Move's ideals rather than discarded the Black Panther ideas to moves. Well, that's why he left, yeah. He took on moves ideals rather than the,
and discarded the Black Panther's ideas.
Yeah, I think he was disillusioned with the Black Panthers
because of the violence.
And it should be pointed out that Africa's whole thing was,
his whole thing was non-violence,
but it wasn't like that was at the forefront
of like his everyday talkings,
because they very aggressively and very obscenely blasted their message
through these loudspeakers attached to this row house, which was a real problem
in this neighborhood for everyone, this, you know, black neighborhood. They didn't
want them there either.
No, that's a-
Don't drop a bonham on them, which is what one of them being interviewed very
clearly was like, we didn't want this to happen, but you know, they were a threat to our well-being here in the
neighborhood.
Yeah, and they were also deliberately provocative. They purposefully made a nuisance
out of themselves because part of Move's philosophy was waking everybody else up and
doing it in a really aggressive, hostile, threatening way.
Supposedly some neighbors reported that they were directly threatened by this group,
which is a big problem too. I mean, that's definitely a couple steps up from
agitating or aggravating people. Threatening them is different.
Sure, but at the very least, you know, imagine being a neighbor who has lived in this house
for 20 years and all of a sudden there's this organization living there and at 3 in the
morning it's just blasting out, you know, these MFers that are in charge are effing
this and effing that.
And like I felt sorry for these citizens.
Oh, yes.
You know, there's a lot of empathy like to be dispersed among many parts of this story.
Yes, but the story also, basically this story has two types of people in it.
Villains and innocents.
Yeah, sure.
That's virtually who, there's one hero that you can point to, and he doesn't even appear
in this article, he was in the documentary,
which we'll talk about him for a minute later. But it's mostly just people, the adults acting badly.
And the children or the people in the neighborhood
who are innocent bystanders or pawns in this whole thing.
Victims, for sure.
For sure.
Because when you're talking about blaring your philosophy
in a very hostile, foul-mouthed way,
if you see the pictures of the house,
those loudspeakers that they have at stock car races
or whatever, that's what they had posted out on the house.
It wasn't just some guy with a bullhorn
or that walkie talkie thing that Homer Simpson
had at the yard sale episode.
You can hear this along the whole block in every direction.
Yes.
And if you were anywhere near them, if your house was next door or even a couple doors down,
you heard them night and day.
And it was a real problem.
Yeah, so we should back up a little bit and give a little bit of the background here.
Before the 1980s happened and they moved into the second house on Osage Avenue, 6221, they
lived at a different house in the late 70s and there was a different mayor in Philadelphia
at this time, Mayor Rizzo, who was a...
Scumbag.
Tough talking, like...
Scumbag. Yeah. He was a scumbag. I-talking, like... Skumbag.
Yeah.
He was a scumbag, I'm just going to say it.
He was.
I saw archival footage of the man and he was a strong man scumbag.
Yeah, he was one of these guys, you know, and we'll see what happened here.
He was not in charge anymore, but it was remnants from that attitude, basically, that he laid
down in the city, which is like...
He was in charge in 78, though.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
I'm talking about the bombing.
So in 78, there was a standoff with the police.
We had talked about the guns earlier.
It was later found out that these guns weren't capable of firing.
They didn't know that at the time.
But at the very least, the cops overacted or overreacted at the declaration of Mayor Rizzo and there was a shooting.
There was an officer that was shot and killed and it was just a really bad scene.
So even just a little bit before that too, there was a confrontation between MOVE and
the Philadelphia police where one of the MOVE members' babies,
like a two-month-old, died.
Yeah, well, you know.
And the MOVE members said,
the cops did this, like this baby died
from this confrontation with the police.
So, like, that kicks that off.
The police eventually raid the MOVE house in 1978,
and one of the officers gets shot and killed in this raid.
And so you've got some real bad blood brewing between these two groups.
Yeah, and during that raid, Delbert Africa, one of the members was,
and you can see footage of this, it was all captured on camera,
just beaten on the street while laying on the sidewalk
by these cops.
While he was surrendering.
Yeah.
So, to say that there was bad blood is sort of an understatement.
You had on one side what you could at least define as a public nuisance in this neighborhood.
You had on this other side this zealous mayor who just wanted to get rid of
them, period. Not like, let's meet, let's talk, let's see if we can all work together. They were
100,000% at odds with one another.
Right. So the police officer that died, the move side said, we didn't shoot that guy. It was
friendly fire that got him.
Right.
The Philadelphia Police Department
didn't agree with that story.
And so on like a personal level,
like not just an organizational level,
but to a cop, the cops hated move.
And these people just continued on in Philadelphia
and actually stepped up there
making themselves a public nuisance because nine of their members were arrested for the murder of that police officer.
And convicted.
Yes, and sent to jail for decades.
Yeah, 30 to 100 years is what they're each sentenced for.
We'll talk about what happened to them toward the end. But-
So just to kind of like just paint this one last stroke on this picture we're painting
here.
The cops had a vendetta against Move because one of their own was killed during the siege.
And Move had a vendetta against the cops because nine of their people were put in jail, one
of them was beaten, and a baby had died on their side.
Okay?
All right.
Let's take a break, and we'll come back right after this and talk more about what happened
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So whether or not this was a cult is, some people debate that.
John Africa is very much on record saying it's an organization.
Is that relevant?
I don't think so.
I don't either.
I think it's just an attempt to discredit them.
Oh, to call them a cult?
Uh-huh.
Yeah, I don't know.
I think it's all worth talking about though.
Oh yeah, yeah, I'm not criticizing you
or anything like that.
I'm just saying when people toss it around,
like oh, they were a cult.
Yeah, there were some characteristics
that you could say, well, it's kind of cult-like
or whatever.
Let's put it this way. If it was on a deserted island,
then I think people would have straight up called them a cult.
The fact that it was in a neighborhood in West Philadelphia
made it seem a lot less so.
I hear you.
But if he was like, come here and live on this island with me,
then it would have straight up been called a cult.
Let me rephrase what I was saying.
I don't dispute that they may have been a cult.
But again, it's that, well, does that mean that they should have had a bomb dropped on them?
I don't think anyone thinks that.
So, like I said, there were kids there that were forced to eat raw fish, raw chicken.
The adults could cook their meat, which was, there was
definitely some double standards going on there. Their rationale was that our bodies are
used to this, but we want to raise you pure from the start, so you're only going to eat raw foods.
Yeah, they had a lot of exceptions, not just that, like the anti-technology thing where they
had like a wood-burning stove for heat and that was it. Right.
No, they used candles instead of light bulbs, that kind of stuff.
But they also had phones and they drove cars.
Right.
So there was a lot of weird exceptions and loopholes and holes in general in John Africa's guidelines, as he called them. Yeah, as for one of the more, well, the only child that survived this experience,
Birdie Africa, Michael Ward, he said in 1995, I'm still afraid of them, of moves.
Some of the things that went on there, I can't get out of my head.
Bad things, I haven't told anyone except for my father, but I'll tell you this,
I didn't like being there. They said it was a family, but a family is it something where you're forced to stay and you don't want to
All right, and his contention was that the kids were always trying to get out of there and run away
They were just too little to know how too little and you know naked they were naked. They were malnourished
they were
Like the only toys they had they had to hide because they weren't supposed to have them because that's technology and human made.
It was unsanitary.
Yeah, there was, you know, part of what Move was into
is growing their own food.
So they would compost like in the alley behind the house
or on the roof or something like that.
They built an animal shelter in the alley.
So there was a lot of really like not okay conditions to raise kids in, let
alone like adults to live in. But raising children, it was a, there were some really bad
decisions and choices or bad outcomes from some of John Africa's philosophy.
Yeah, it's weird because it's like at the heart of this, it's this back to nature movement, you know, where.
You want them to be on a deserted island so bad.
Not even a deserted island, like go out into,
like there's countryside not too far outside of Philadelphia.
It is a little weird.
It is, it's very strange, because on one hand,
I'm like, yeah, this animal rights group,
and they're back to nature, and they're eschewing
the things of man, but they're doing it in the most like aggressive antagonistic way possible in the middle of a city.
It's like I don't know what to think about any of this except obviously you don't go
in there and firebomb the place.
That's like the one thing I was clear on.
You don't start a war in the middle of a neighborhood.
Right, it's true.
Which is what happened basically.
The neighbors wanted move out.
They filed a bunch of complaints over the years to get them shut down.
And the city didn't really know what to do at this point.
At this point, there was a different mayor, Mayor Good.
So this was the first black mayor of Philadelphia.
Who actually was elected on this reform ticket basically
to get rid of Rizzo, get rid of the corruption,
the racism that Rizzo and his administration had fostered.
Because he was police chief first and then became mayor.
Who good was or Rizzo?
Rizzo.
Sure.
And he basically, after that 1978 raid,
there's footage of him just basically hopped up
and boasting about how militarized the Chicago PD was now.
I think he actually said-
He said, we're ready for war.
Yeah, we could go down to Cuba and take them
if we wanted to right now.
Just really like boasting about this.
Not like, oh man, this is a tragedy or whatever.
Even if, however you want to say it,
like he was boasting, like come on, who's next kind of thing.
And this was the mayor at the time.
So Wilson Goode comes along and is like, not that,
we're going to take a different tact here
and try to promote more unity.
And he was actually pretty successful
in a lot of ways in that respect.
As far as the city officials go, I really kind of like Mayor Good.
Because he took responsibility for it.
Yeah.
Even stuff he didn't do.
Just because he was the mayor, he put himself in as accountable.
All right, so should we fast forward?
Yes.
The stage was set.
We know what happened in the 70s.
We know the relationship between this neighborhood
with this group, this group with this city, and the cops.
And so they decide that they're going
to extract every person from that house.
That was the plan, is we were going to remove the
Move organization from the house on Osage Avenue. In this article it says they didn't have a
plan. That's not true. They had a plan that just was not executed well and went really
pear-shaped really fast. And then they didn't have a plan. But the original plan was to
they had built the Move organization had built this pretty fortified bunker on
top of their building.
As far as homemade bunkers go, not bad.
Which gave them a supreme tactical advantage if you
know anything about war, you know, higher ground is
always going to win out.
Or not always.
Or if you've ever designed a castle or something, you know.
Sure.
Castle designers.
Right, they know.
Bormongers.
So the idea was to create a diversion on the roof,
in which time police officers or SWAT and everybody would go inside
and forcibly remove people by any means necessary, in Mayor Good's words.
But the first part of that was water cannons and tear gas.
You're right.
And they were very surprised when these water cannons
that were just, I think they shot like a thousand gallons
a second or some crazy amount of water.
They just left them on.
Yes, two of them.
Yeah.
And they fully expected to basically take
most of this house down.
Yeah.
Like it was a brick row home, but they expected it to take
the non-brick parts off, including that structure on top,
that lookout.
And they were very, very surprised when two things
didn't happen.
When that structure didn't come down, despite the water
cannons being directed at it for hours, and the people not
coming out, despite tear gas being shot into the house.
Right.
And that is, like you said earlier, when their plan went to the...
Birds?
Yeah.
Toilet?
Sure.
Went down to the toilet and they said, well, what do we do now?
Yeah.
Like, our whole plan doesn't work.
I've got an idea.
Let's start shooting at the house instead.
Yeah, so what they didn't know this whole time
was that they were all hiding in a basement garage.
So all of this water raining down on the roof wasn't,
I probably wouldn't even getting to them.
Probably not.
Or maybe it's not like they were up to their necks
in water in the basement and like drowning
or anything like that.
No, but they later said that the tear gas was everywhere.
Sure.
But apparently it wasn't potent enough.
Yeah.
Maybe they used expired stuff.
We should step it back one step, Chuck.
Before this raid actually started, they went house to house to the neighbors and said,
you guys grab all your clothes.
That's huge.
We need you gone for 24 hours,
because we're about to do what you guys
have wanted us to do for years.
We're gonna do it.
So you need to get out of here.
They towed trucks from Osage Avenue.
They towed every car.
They had the gas shut off, the electricity shut off.
It was a siege.
Yeah, they basically tried to just vacate the block.
Yeah, and they did.
Yeah, and they did. I mean, I think some people stayed when they shouldn't have,
but it's like with any evacuation,
they got as many people out of there as possible.
Right.
They're like, you'll be back in your house tomorrow.
OK.
So the whole block, in like a couple of blocks,
a couple of streets on either side, are cleared.
Yeah.
The water's been used.
It's not working.
The tear gas is not working.
So supposedly the first shots came from the house.
But everybody, all witnesses, cops, firefighters,
news people say that the first shots were automatic fire.
It's been conclusively proven
that no one in the move house had an automatic weapon. So if
the first shots were automatic, then that means the cops fired first. And that's what
people seem to believe is that the cops started this.
Yeah. And a lot of this documentary, it's really compelling because it's footage from
the commission afterward. And you get like the real deal testimony, first person testimony from all the
major players, including the police chief. What was his name?
Gregory Sambor.
Yeah, Sambor, who was, he identified it as automatic, like his sworn testimony said it was
automatic weapons. And they're like, well, how do you know? And he's like, I know what an
automatic weapon sounds like.
Right. And they're like, well, what move didn't have automatic weapons?
He's like, I don't know about that.
Yeah, he's like, I don't know how to explain that then.
But they fired first.
Right.
He just kind of stuck to his guns.
Right.
Every single time.
Yeah.
He was a piece of work himself.
He was definitely in the cut from the same cloth as Mayor Rizzo.
I think so.
Yeah.
So they decide to start shooting at this point because regardless of who shot first, it becomes
like Vietnam on the city block all of a sudden. And it's not like, I mean they cleared it out,
but when you see this news footage, I mean there's people everywhere watching.
There are news cameras and anchors everywhere on the streets like, oh, we should get behind the car now
because it's raining bullets everywhere.
Yeah.
It's just freaky to see this happening on like a city block in the United States.
Yeah, the cops.
In the 80s.
The cops later on estimated that they fired about 10,000 rounds.
They ran out of bullets.
Yeah, they had to bring in more.
Yeah, that was a great part.
Because they ran out of bullets.
Yeah.
This car pulls up and you're like, a car, a police car has just rushed into the scene.
And it's like from a movie, the trunk pops and it's just full of bullets.
Yep. Just for, because they ran out of bullets.
Yeah.
So they kept shooting at this house.
And here's the thing, like, bear in mind, they're shooting 10,000 rounds of ammunition
at a house occupied by 13 people, seven of which are children.
Everyone knows. Oh, yeah. Everyone knows that there were seven children. Occupied by 13 people, seven of which are children.
Everyone knows.
Oh, yeah.
Everyone knows that there were seven children in that house.
Yeah, it's not like the cops were unaware.
No.
Everyone knew that there were children in this house.
Yeah, for sure.
It was part of it.
It was part of the concern of the neighbors that there were children being raised in this
house.
And the cops acted on the information from confidential informants who fully informed them that there were children in this house.
So that's step one. They fired 10,000 rounds at a house where they knew that
there were seven children.
All right. So nothing is changing, though. They're still not bringing people out of
this house.
I'll bet they were like, I can't believe this. And that structure was still
intact on top.
I'm surprised they didn't think they were dead.
Yeah.
I would have thought at some point they would have been like, well, I'm sure we probably killed everyone.
Yeah.
Let's just go in there.
Yeah, I wonder, because if they were all crowded down in the basement garage, they couldn't have been firing back after a certain point in time.
Yeah, I'm not sure. I mean, they said part of the problem was the tear gas.
Right.
So they couldn't send cops in there because it was flooded with tear gas.
And then I think they said the, oh no, this comes later, the steam.
So put a pin in the steam.
So at some point, someone on the bomb squad apparently says to the police chief, or gets to the police chief,
hey, he was really, you know, the chief was really worried about
that bunker and that tactical advantage. So someone
from the bomb squad said, why don't we drop a bomb on
the roof and get rid of that bunker?
And an officer named William Klein suggested it.
And they said it, okay, let's do that.
Good idea, Klein.
What do we need? A helicopter and a bomb.
Yeah.
They're like, well, we've got both.
So even as late as the inquiry that they held, they
characterized it as a Tovex bomb. And Tovex is a water-based
gelatinous explosive that is used, I think, in mining and
demolition and stuff like that.
But it can be purchased.
Yes.
Yeah.
It later came out that in addition to the Tovex, the bomb disposal
guy made a bomb with C4, Plastique Explosives, which is not commercially available, which
means that, we'll see later, the Philadelphia Police Department should not have had this
stuff. Yeah, I mean, we should just go ahead and say how they got it. Why not? Well, I
was trying to save it for with a little flair for the dramatic, but you go ahead.
Well, the FBI gave it to them.
Secretly. Yeah, the FBI had been giving little bits of C4 here and there to police departments,
apparently, like to blow doors off of stuff. To train bomb-sniffing dogs.
Yeah, teach them how to use it.
But then the FBI used that excuse for a little while, then later came out and said,
no, we actually brought them a bunch of C4.
Like 30 blocks of C4 in January,
a few months before this raid, the siege,
but still during the time when the move people
were being negotiated with to leave on their own.
Yeah, because that was happening this whole time.
They would have community leaders on the bullhorn trying to talk them into coming out.
They did not have a professional negotiator on the scene.
No.
Which...
That's a huge red flag.
Yeah, that they never meant for anyone to come out.
Yeah.
But at any rate, they drop a bomb, I think it was a, they said a four-pound bomb
from a satchel with a 45-second fuse. This is all on camera. Like you literally in this documentary
see the helicopter fly over, drop the satchel out of it.
And go eee.
Yeah, fly. I love that you did the running motion, you know, when helicopters run.
Sure. And they flew out of there and kaboom.
In West Philadelphia, a bomb explodes on top of a building and a smallish fire starts.
This is at what time?
That was at like five that they dropped the bomb, 510 I think.
All right.
And the smallish fire took a couple minutes for it to to become apparent that it had caught fire.
But supposedly there was gasoline in the what are we calling that thing?
The bunker.
The bunker?
Yeah.
There's supposedly gasoline in the bunker.
But I really like they the police dropped a bomb on a building
that they knew that people were in,
seven of which were children, okay?
And supposedly the reason that they did this
was to get rid of that bunker.
Like that bunker, the police chief did not like
that bunker standing still and wanted to get rid of it.
The bomb didn't do anything to the bunker.
That was a strong bunker.
It was. The timeline's important. So at 527 is when anything to the bunker. That was a strong bunker. It was.
The timeline's important.
So at 527 is when they dropped the bomb.
At 545, someone asked the fire department
if they should turn on the, you know,
they've been deluging this thing with water all day long
until there's a fire, and then they turn it off.
Which was, you know, it's not ironic
because it was very purposeful, but it definitely
stings more.
Yeah.
So, they said not to turn them on.
By six o'clock, so this is 33 minutes later, Mayor Goode is watching this on TV in his
office.
He phones it in and says, you know, let's put this fire out now.
He ordered the fire to be put out.
Yeah, 33 minutes later.
And this is where it gets a little hinky because this was given to Police Chief Sambor
and under testimony, Sambor says that he relayed that to the Fire Chief.
He said that the Fire Chief was there. He did not say he related to the fire chief.
Well, yeah.
I mean, he got very dodgy with how he worded it.
But the fire chief basically on testimony said, that's what he said?
And he's like, I categorically deny that I ever got an order to start those water cannons.
Or that he was even aware that Goode made that call, that phone call, or called the order. So basically, the fire chief said the buck stopped with Sambor, and Sambor, the police chief, decided to let that fire burn.
That's right. Because he thought, not defending him, but he thought the fire would then take down the bunker and remove that advantage.
Other people contend, and they ask him in the deposition or in the hearing,
no, you've kind of really wanted to use the fire as a weapon.
He got real salty about that.
He did. He said a fire can't be a weapon basically.
And no one said, what about flamethrowers?
He goes, I hadn't thought about flamethrowers, but still.
All right, so this is 630. Flames are, it is clearly out of hand. They waited way too long.
That was the thing that got me was it was obvious from what Sambor was saying. If the documentary is accurate,
from what Sambor was saying that when he was saying that we need to let the bunker burn still,
by this time the entire
top floor was a conflagration.
Yeah, I mean it's on the news.
So that whole thing doesn't hold water at all and it would lend support to the idea
that he was using it as a weapon to burn the people out.
I'm sure he was.
I'm sure he thought tear gas didn't work.
Maybe this fire will work and drive these people out of there.
Okay. All right. Should we take a break or should we wait? No, let's fire will work. Okay. And drive these people out of there. Okay.
All right.
Should we take a break or should we wait?
No, let's take a break.
Okay.
We'll take a break and we'll tell you what happens next. Hey, I'm Bruce Bozzi.
In the last season of Table for Two, we had some good times at the table enjoying lunch
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Table for Two is a bit different from other interview shows.
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We're back for a second season,
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And this time around, we're going even deeper and we'll have something new for you each
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Listen and subscribe to Table for Two on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever
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I'm Davis Miller, host of the new podcast,
The Dow of Muhammad Ali.
I met Ali back in 1988,
and to my great surprise, we became friends.
His influence profoundly changed my perspective
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I'll tell you that story and also stories of others
touched by the champ, including people such as
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We'll even hear from Muhammad's daughter, Rashida.
Well, my dad was, he was Peter Pan.
Like he never really grew up.
He was very mature when it came down to social issues.
He was very in tune.
He felt a responsibility to be able to share his connection to
millions of people who were in need.
In each of these stories, we share lessons, lessons that have meant a great deal to me
and that I hope will be meaningful to you.
Listen to the dialogue Muhammad Ali on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast, or wherever
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For as long as I can remember, I've been fascinated by the depths of human potential and the incredible
things that humans can do.
So I became a cognitive scientist, studying all the ways in which we think, create, make
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I'm Scott Barry Kaufman, host of The Psychology Podcast. I'm a cognitive scientist and I've
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the depths of human potential. Listen to The Psychology Podcast on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Okay, Chuck, so for a little bit, the fire department sprays some of the houses next
to the move house, but doesn't put the fire out or spray the fire
on the move house.
So when the abandoned houses,
they're spraying down to try to contain the fire.
And the house, the one house in this whole square block area
where they know people are, including seven children,
they didn't spray.
Later on, they will defend this by saying,
well, in that 1978 siege,
Move fired on the firefighters
and apparently shot and injured several firefighters.
So we were worried for the firefighters to be picked off
fighting this fire in this siege as well.
Ramona Africa, who would be the one adult
from Move to surviveive this siege,
would say, well, like you said earlier, they weren't scared to hit us with these water cannons
the whole time there wasn't a fire, but then there is a fire and now they're scared we're going to pick them off.
That doesn't make any sense. It's just BS.
Yeah, and also I'm glad you brought that up because it said to put a pin in the steam.
This is when the steam happened because they're blowing water on this fire now
and it's creating all the steam that they said didn't allow anyone to move in as well.
Because they couldn't see anything. There was no visibility.
Okay. So despite spraying down the houses around this fire,
it got out of hand really fast and it spread very fast.
And it moved very quickly, not just from the move house,
but onto the neighboring houses and then beyond.
And even these are fairly narrow streets
that this neighborhood was built on.
And it jumped the street fairly quickly.
Yeah, it wasn't contained or deemed under control until 1141 PM.
So that's like more than six hours after it started.
Yeah, this whole city block is just burning to the ground.
It ended up being like a six alarm fire, which depending on the city is 100, 120 firefighters,
chiefs, ladder trucks.
It's a big old fire.
Yeah.
So you mentioned the 1978 siege where the officer was shot and killed and where the
beating of Delbert, Africa went down.
Important to remember that because two of the officers that were involved in the beat down of Delbert, Africa
were also on the scene today. And they make a big point in this commission, like,
did you think about sending these guys in there? Might not be a good idea and they may have revenge on their minds.
And I can't remember what the answer was. He's kind of like...
He said, no, I didn't think of that.
Or, yes, I did. Whatever it was, he was not like, yeah, that was not a good idea.
He stood by whatever it was.
Right. So this kind of sets up another story in tandem that's going on right now,
which is at a certain point during this massive fire.
About seven.
Yeah, they tried to get out from the basement.
The move people tried to get out. They tried to escape.
That's right. They tried to get out the back door.
There's this, at this point, the cops had moved into the alleyway.
There was no camera access, so you couldn't see what happened.
But from the testimony that, can't even hardly get through the testimony of that kid, they
deposed him.
He wasn't in front of the commission.
Birdie Africa?
Yeah, but Birdie Africa was like, what, he looked like 10 or 11 years old when they deposed
him?
Yeah, but he was actually like 13.
Was he?
But this kid is retelling this story, seems incredibly credible and believable to me. Right.
Like, I fully believe that he was telling the truth.
Over the two cops who are supposed, who may or may not, who may have actually fired on
the people trying to escape the house.
Right.
Of the two, it's way easier to believe that kid's testimony than these guys.
Right.
Who were the ones who beat Delbert Africa in 1978.
Yeah, so that's what happened. They tried to leave.
There was a kid named Rad Africa that was,
I think like 13 or 14, and he was carrying out a baby.
And he was one of the first ones out.
And he goes back into the house.
And there's that part of the documentary
where the priest is talking to the officers.
And he's like, because officers are saying, all we
were saying was come out with your hands up.
Right, we didn't fire on anybody.
We didn't fire, we said come out with your hands up.
And this priest is like, I'm trying to think of what would make a kid holding a baby go
back into a building engulfed in flames.
And the cops are like, I don't know.
Yeah, you can't really put yourself in a move person's feet. Right. You can't really identify with them.
And that minister or whatever said,
actually, I was friends with a lot of these people.
I knew them on a human level.
Right.
The other thing that really kind of damns the two cops who
beat Delbert Africa's testimony is that there was reports
from a lot of witnesses,
including like fire department people,
from, of gunfire in this alley around this time.
So the whole thing kind of adds up.
If you take those tests, the reports of witnesses
that there was gunfire in the back alley,
with Bertie Africa and Ramona Africa's testimony,
that around that same time, people had tried to escape.
And then the testimony of the cops themselves
that the people had run back in the house.
It sounds a lot like a reasonable person would conclude
that the cops who had beaten Delbert Africa in 1978
shot at the people from Move in 1985
who tried to escape the fire and forced them back into the burning house.
Right.
100%.
That's certainly what it sounds like.
The cop said that the kid had, or he said he was a man, he was a kid, had a rifle that
he pointed at them.
And I know what a rifle looks like because the kid who survived,
Bertie said he had a monkey wrench in his hand
that he used to get the window open.
He came out with a monkey wrench in that baby.
And the cop was like,
I can tell there's been a rifle and a monkey wrench.
Yeah, and if you're sitting here like,
hey, lay off the cops, just watch this documentary
and then listen to this part over again.
Because it's a really great documentary.
It does a really good job of like laying everything out.
But part of the, I guess the goodness of this documentary is that it's all archival and
it lets the people speak for themselves.
Oh yeah, it's just you basically kind of watch what happened and listen to what people said
about it.
Right.
You know, including the people in charge.
And it's obviously, I mean, it's edited.
It's not just like here's this inquiry, here's my documentary, but I mean, it lets it pay
out enough that you get a really good clear picture of what happened in the testimony
that followed.
So I mean, that's kind of the end of that story as it happened that, you know, these Ramona
and Bertie were the only two to make it out of that house alive.
And the hero I mentioned earlier, a cop, man, I wish I could remember his name.
I got his name.
He could not stop himself from running to Bertie to help him.
Yeah, Officer James Bergheier.
So Bergheier ran to them, despite some of his colleagues saying,
don't, I think it's a trap, you're going to get killed.
He said, I can't, I can't, I see this kid right there and I'm going to go rescue him.
He thought of his kids, he said.
He did. And he was, they even say like in the inquiry, like if there's any like silver lining or shining moment to this whole horrible thing, it's what you did.
And he got kind of rousted out of the police department within a year or two.
Oh yeah, his own police brethren turned on him.
They wrote racial epithets on his locker because he saved this kid.
Was diagnosed with PTSD and left the forest two years later.
And there's a great article I found that I read the first third of right before we had to record
that of him, an interview with him, I guess like five or six years ago.
Yeah.
That I can't wait to go read and finish up. So let's finish up. Okay. So Bertie and Ramona were the only two Move members
who survived.
The other 11 died, including six children.
Yeah.
In this house that was set on fire,
and the fire was set off by a bomb
that the Philadelphia Police Department dropped
on the house.
So obviously, Philadelphia's gonna cough up
some money for this.
Yeah, there were settlements.
The parents of the dead children settled for $25 million total.
Michael Ward, a young birdie, he became Michael Ward, he changed his name.
He got $1.7 million.
Ramona Africa got half a million dollars.
And the families of John
Africa and his nephew, they couldn't reach a settlement, so they were awarded $1 million
by a jury. And then here's the kicker. Police Chief Sambor and Fire Chief Richmond were
forced to pay $1 a week for 11 years to Ramona Africa.
Matthew Fosk, Jr. To keep it in mind.
Matthew Fosk Yeah, $572.
Matthew Fosk Which is a, but it's a civil, I mean that's a civil punishment basically saying we think you're, like you might not be criminally responsible,
but in this civil suit we are saying, it's basically like how the...
Symbolic payment or whatever?
Yeah, it's like how the court, the civil court ruled against O.J.
Right.
Even though he had been found not guilty of murder.
And the criminal?
The civil court still said, no, you're responsible, we believe so,
we're going to get you in this way.
They did the same thing.
And this was despite the fact that Ramona Africa did seven years.
Like, they didn't say, hey, we're really sorry we burned this house.
Right, she went to prison.
Here's some money.
They said, hey, you're under arrest for inciting riots
and conspiracy of something or other.
And she did seven years.
She didn't get out early because the parole board said,
you have to denounce Move.
And she refused to denounce Move
and she did her full seven years.
Although now she is not affiliated with Move any longer, as far as I know.
Yeah, as far as the original Move Nine, who are the ones in prison for the killing of the police officer,
two of them died in prison.
I think two are still in prison.
The rest, including just in February, February 12th, Eddie Africa was paroled.
Delbert and Chuck Africa are still behind bars.
I think they're the only two still behind bars.
And as far as Michael Ward, aka Young Bertie Africa, he very sadly died in 2013 in a hot
tub cruise ship drowning due to intoxication.
Yeah, the Brevard County, Florida medical examiner ruled that an accidental death from drowning in a hot tub from just being drunk, I guess.
What a weird way to go after all that.
What a weird life.
Yeah, and it's weird because during the deposition he was there with his father and I'm like, where was his dad?
His dad was looking for him.
Well his dad was out of the country in the military while he was living in Philadelphia.
Right, but he had moved to suburban Philadelphia.
His dad did and had been looking for Michael and had no idea he was, you know, 30 minutes
away in Philly.
Yeah, so he lived the rest of his life with his dad and that's who we referenced earlier
when he was like, you know, the stuff that went on there, I'll only tell my father.
Right.
Super, super tragic.
And it's one of these things I think like we should do a little triumvirate of this
in Ruby Ridge and Waco maybe.
Yeah, agreed.
Like three times where there was a potentially
problematic organization and the United States government just decided to firebomb it.
Yeah, these are so sticky because you want to be like, oh, these people are the victims
and the government really was a villain in this one, but you're like, it's never that
complex and these stories really teach you that.
It's always that complex.
Things are much more textured than that.
They're much more nuanced than that black and white.
But even still, you don't drop a bomb and burn 11 people to death.
Yeah. The city, as far as that block went, they paid $11 million,
which was by all accounts a very inside deal with some developer who put up
a bunch of houses that were condemned in 2000 due to shoddy construction.
So somebody got rich, again, trying to build these things, did a terrible job.
24 families stayed.
They offered repairs and buyouts, and apparently most people took the buyouts.
And if you do like the little Google Earth, the 6221 Osage, it's still row houses, and
on either side of that it looks like people might be living there.
But that building has like plywood up in the windows.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Because I heard like starting in about 2015, they brought in a good developer
and started to redevelop it and it's starting to come back.
Well, it's interesting that one address though is boarded up, so I don't know if like no
one wants to live there.
Or it could be an older Google image.
Yeah, those are usually newer, right?
I wonder why. I mean, it could be older than 2015. Although I looked at my house the other day
and it was the old house.
The old house?
Yeah, I was kinda like, oh.
That's cute.
It looked crudder than I thought.
No, you got a good house.
I gotta see your new version.
Yeah, you should.
New fancy version.
I'm just waiting for an invite.
Come on over.
Oh, thanks.
I can't.
Uh.
Uh.
Uh.
If you wanna know more about the move bombing, please, please, we
both beseech you, go watch Let the Fire Burn on Amazon Prime, on the internet, wherever
you can see it, just see it. It's really, really good.
Yeah. And we should point out too that no one involved on the cops and the political
side suffered any punishments?
Oh, yeah.
No.
There was that inquiry and no one was found guilty of any wrongdoing.
Except, although this will put a really good button on, this multiracial panel, inquiry
panel that held these hearings, to a person with one dissenter said that we conclude
had this not been a black working class neighborhood
but instead a white working class neighborhood,
the police never would have dropped that bomb.
Of course they wouldn't have.
Yeah.
Okay, it's time for Listener Man.
Who was the lone dissenter?
I didn't see.
It's gotta be the guy with the glasses.
It's always that guy.
What am I gonna call this?
Perfect Pitch follow-up.
Hey guys, back in 2009 my band was recording an album and there was one song that ends
with us all singing and holding out a single note.
The next song starts with us singing that same note.
Oh, that's cool.
See what they did?
Adding drums, then the songs are edited together
to have them flow into each other with no gap.
Josh T. is very interested because he's a musician.
Jerry would just be like, what?
I'm eating miso, huh?
What did you guys say?
We had finished recording that first one,
and I can tell by the look on Josh's face,
he's like, nah, that old trick.
Packed our instruments away,
then we're about to start the next one.
We realized we needed to hear the first note we were about to start the next one.
We realized we needed to hear the first note so we could sing in the right pitch.
Instead of loading up the previous song, our pianist said,
I have perfect pitch and belted out the note,
which we all, who don't have perfect pitch, trusted him to be right
and started recording from there.
Little did we know, he doesn't have perfect pitch, but is close.
When we edited the songs together and played them through the notes,
we're supposed to match, we're off by about a half step.
Now it sounds like a Jerry edit.
Very dissonant, totally wrong.
Oh, I just realized Jerry's going to hear this when she edits this episode.
That's right, just put a Wilhelm scream in there, Jerry, and we'll be alright.
We were already out of the studio at that point, so we ended up just releasing it
and claiming the dissonance was intentional.
But we never let them off the hook and with the old, oh yeah, you got perfect pitch, do ya?
Thanks so much for all the hard work guys have learned so much.
Been endlessly entertained for years. Signed, spanked, and sent. That is from Kenny.
Thank you Kenny, we appreciate that. That was a pretty great email. It would be literally LOL.
I can only assume it's Kenny Rogers. Kenny, we appreciate that.
and she is perfect exactly the way she is. Well, ifHeartRadio. For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Hi, I'm Martha Stewart and we're back with a new season of my podcast. This season will be even
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Imagine you ask two people the same seven questions.
I'm Minnie Driver, and this was the idea
I set out to explore in my podcast, Minnie Questions.
This year, we bring a whole new group set out to explore in my podcast, Minnie Questions.
This year we bring a whole new group of guests to answer the same seven questions, including
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Seven questions, limitless answers.