Arrest Nuwaubians' latest trouble
Group has had confrontational, controversial history in Putnam
Macon Telegraph/May 9, 2002
By Rob Peecher
Eatonton -- Wednesday's arrest of United Nuwaubian Nation of
Moors leader Malachi York is the latest in a long string of
troubles for the fraternal organization and Putnam County.
For more than nine years, York and his followers have been at
the center of one controversy after another, involving massive
amounts of litigation in both state and federal courts. County
officials have accused people associated with the group of
incidents of harassment and intimidation, and Nuwaubians have
repeatedly denounced county officials, alleging they discriminated
against them based on their race and religion.
At various times during the conflict between the Nuwaubians and
county officials, members of the fraternal organization and Putnam
County Sheriff Howard Sills publicly warned of the potential for a
violent confrontation.
The entire controversy has centered on Malachi York, now facing
state and federal charges of child molestation, and his ability to
convince people to follow him.
Before coming to Putnam County in 1993, York was the leader of
an Islamic sect known as the Ansaru Allah Community in New York
City.
In the early 1990s, he was the subject of an FBI investigation
that tied York or members of his organization to arsons, bank
robberies, welfare fraud and extortion.
When York initially came to Putnam County, he claimed to be an
alien from the planet "Rizq," and the Nuwaubians dressed in cowboy
attire.
During his nine years in Georgia, York's organization has been
known by a number of names: the Yamassee Native American Tribe,
the Ancient and Mystic Order of Malchizedek, Holy Tabernacle
Ministries and, most recently, the Nuwaubians have claimed to be
members of the "Al Mahdi Shrine" organization and the "Holy Seed
Baptist Synagogue." York has claimed heritage to Native Americans
and Egyptians.
York and the Nuwaubians have made unsuccessful efforts to
purchase the Shrine temple on Poplar Street and Tabernacle Baptist
Church on Second Street in downtown Macon.
Black superiority a constant theme
While the group's publicly stated beliefs and associations have
changed frequently, the one message in York's teachings that has
remained constant since before coming to Putnam County is a
message of black superiority. York repeatedly refers to whites as
"the devil" and teaches that the color of their skin is caused by
leprosy. In his teachings, York intertwines aspects of Islam and
Christianity.
In 1997, after refusing to allow the county building inspector
onto the property, the group came to the attention of newly
elected Sheriff Howard Sills.
A series of lawsuits were filed, centered on a building that
was issued a building permit as a 100-by-50-foot storage building
that the Nuwaubians turned into a nightclub.
The lawsuits immediately set the Nuwaubians at odds with county
officials. The Nuwaubians began producing hundreds of pamphlets
that they distributed on the streets in Eatonton, targeting
primarily county officials, judges and members of the media.
Also in the pamphlets, the Nuwaubians repeatedly accused Sills
of trying to spark a "Waco"-type confrontation.
The Nuwaubians have received a string of prominent supporters
since spring 1999, when Joe Beasley of Jesse Jackson's
Rainbow/PUSH Coalition came to Putnam County.
Jackson himself visited the Nuwaubian village a year ago. Civil
rights leader Al Sharpton spoke at the village. Macon Mayor Jack
Ellis has visited the village. Former state Sen. Leroy Johnson has
acted as York's attorney.
State Rep. Tyrone Brooks, a Democrat and president of the
Georgia Association of Black Elected Officials, has repeatedly
spoken out in support of York. In 1999 - about the time York was
ordered to appear before Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit Superior Court
Judge Hugh V. Wingfield III on a contempt of court motion - Brooks
sought help for York from the "Georgia Rangers."
The Rangers carried credentials stating they had arrest powers
throughout the state, but the law cited is the law that provides
for citizens arrests.
Shortly after the Rangers became involved in the dispute
between the county and the Nuwaubians, Sills and agents of the
Georgia Bureau of Investigation raided the Rangers headquarters in
Atlanta and made arrests on charges ranging from possession of a
firearm by a convicted felon to impersonating a public officer.
But in the past two years, the tension between county officials
and the Nuwaubians has eased significantly. Dorothy Adams and
Frank Ford, the attorneys who represented the county in almost all
of Nuwaubian-related litigation, were fired by the county a year
ago. Adams and Ford were two of the most frequent targets of the
Nuwaubian fliers. A lawsuit filed by the county in 1999 ended in a
bench trial earlier this year. The new county attorney, Bob Prior,
assisted in creating a deed that got York dismissed as a defendant
in the suit and paid the recording fee for the deed himself at the
Superior Court clerk's office.
In summer 1999, when events seemed to have reached a pivotal
moment, Everett Leon Stout appeared on the scene. Stout, who at
the time was a fugitive from Tennessee and connected to militia
organizations, called on the county coroner to arrest the sheriff
and attempted on behalf of the Nuwaubians to sue various county
officials for $1 million in a "common-law" court.
Stout's lawsuits never materialized, and he disappeared a few
days later.
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