December 30, 2003

OAKLAND (CA)
Los Angeles Times

By Lee Romney, Times Staff Writer


OAKLAND — A chain of white stretch limousines ferried many of Yusuf Bey’s wives and 43 children to his memorial service in October. Against a backdrop of his fez-clad image, 16 sons in white suits and red bow ties performed a military-style drill in his honor. Nation of Islam ministers from Chicago and Florida paid their respects.

In more than three decades here, Oakland’s most prominent Black Muslim had built an empire of bakeries, security firms, a school and other businesses. He taught dignity, hard work and discipline to many in this city’s sea of street felons, putting them to work when no one else would.

He championed “family values” on his weekly cable television program, while assailing what he called the white devil’s “tricknology” that kept the black man down.

His finely dressed followers, with shaved heads and ramrod posture, would fill City Council chambers by the dozens when Bey organization members or their allies sought public financing or other city help, which was often approved.

But when the 68-year-old Bey died Sept. 30 of complications from cancer, another story was emerging.

He was facing criminal charges and a civil lawsuit alleging that he had repeatedly raped underage girls at his compound — in some cases fathering their children, then demanding their welfare payments.

According to court records and interviews with his accusers, girls in the foster care of one of Bey’s wives had given birth to child after child fathered by Bey. Authorities did nothing, even after the alleged rape of another teen who had worked at Bey’s burgeoning Your Black Muslim Bakery was reported to police.
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