SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 25, 2005

Gang Leader Gets Clemency Hearing

Gov. Schwarzenegger To Meet With Crips Founder Who Is On Death Row

    • Stanley Tookie Williams, April 25, 2005, in a photo provided by the California Department of Corrections. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said Friday, Nov. 25, 2005 he would consider granting clemency to Williams, a convicted murderer on death row. Photo

      Stanley Tookie Williams, April 25, 2005, in a photo provided by the California Department of Corrections. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said Friday, Nov. 25, 2005 he would consider granting clemency to Williams, a convicted murderer on death row.  (AP)

    • Rapper Snoop Dogg raises his fist in protest outside of the San Quentin State Penitentiary at a rally for death row inmate Stanley Tookie Williams in San Quentin, Calif. on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2005. Photo

      Rapper Snoop Dogg raises his fist in protest outside of the San Quentin State Penitentiary at a rally for death row inmate Stanley Tookie Williams in San Quentin, Calif. on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2005.  (AP)

    • Deshawn Lee Thompson, 7, sitting, of Richmond Calif., joins a rally for death row inmate Stanley Tookie Williams outside of the San Quentin State Penitentiary Saturday, Nov. 19, 2005 in San Quentin, Calif. Photo

      Deshawn Lee Thompson, 7, sitting, of Richmond Calif., joins a rally for death row inmate Stanley Tookie Williams outside of the San Quentin State Penitentiary Saturday, Nov. 19, 2005 in San Quentin, Calif.  (AP)

    • Crips co-founder Stanley Photo

      Crips co-founder Stanley "Tookie" Williams was nominated in 2001 for a Nobel Peace Prize for his series of children's books and efforts to curtail youth gang violence.  (CBS)

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(CBS/AP)  Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said Friday he would consider granting clemency to convicted killer Stanley Tookie Williams, the Crips gang founder who became an anti-gang activist while in prison and was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.

The governor said he would meet Dec. 8 in a private hearing with Williams' lawyers, Los Angeles County prosecutors and others involved.

Schwarzenegger has the authority to commute a death sentence to life without parole, but he is not obligated to hold a hearing. In Schwarzenegger's case, he decides clemency requests on a "case-by-case basis," spokeswoman Margita Thompson said.

Two other clemency petitions have come before Schwarzenegger. Neither was granted.

Williams, 51, faces a lethal injection on Dec. 13 for the 1979 slayings of a Whittier convenience store clerk and three people at a Pico Rivera motel. He has maintained his innocence and has asked the California Supreme Court to reopen his case, alleging shoddy forensics wrongly connected him to three of the murders. The Supreme Court hasn't ruled on the petition.

Los Angeles County prosecutors and victims' relatives have demanded his execution.

Along with asking Schwarzenegger to commute Williams' death sentence, his lawyers submitted what they said were signatures of 32,000 people supporting his petition for clemency.

Supporters, including rapper Snoop Dogg and Ras Baraka, the deputy mayor of Newark, N.J., have urged Schwarzenegger to spare Williams' life so he can continue his work with young people as an anti-gang activist.

At a rally urging clemency for Williams last week, CBS News correspondent John Blackstone reported that the inmate's supporters promised growing demonstrations over the next three weeks, but there are those who remain unconvinced Williams has changed.

"He has multiple incidents where he has been involved in violent acts while here on death row at San Quentin – batteries, assault on staff," said Lt. Vernell Crittendon, a San Quentin Prison spokesman.

Williams founded the Crips with a childhood friend in 1971 in Los Angeles, where the gang battled rivals for territory and control of the drug trade.

In prison, however, Williams gained international acclaim for co-writing children's books about the dangers of gang life. An award-winning television movie starring Jamie Foxx, "Redemption," was based on his life.

Schwarzenegger, in dealing with the two previous clemency requests, denied a hearing last year for Kevin Cooper, whose execution was later stayed by a federal appeals court, and held a public hearing this year for Donald Beardslee but declined to spare him.

©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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