Shropshire Star

Weather Underground radical David Gilbert wins parole after 40 years in prison

The 76-year-old has been in jail since a 1981 robbery in which three people died.

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Officials escort a handcuffed David Gilbert, second from left, from Rockland County Court (David Handschuh/AP)

Former Weather Underground radical David Gilbert has been granted parole after 40 years behind bars for his role in a deadly 1981 Brink’s robbery that was a violent echo of left-wing extremism born in the 1960s, the New York state corrections department said.

Gilbert, 76, has been imprisoned since shortly after the infamously botched armoured car robbery in which a guard and two police officers were killed.

He became eligible for parole only after his 75 years-to-life sentence was shortened by Governor Andrew Cuomo in August, hours before he left office.

Gilbert appeared before the state parole board on October 19 and was subsequently granted parole, Thomas Mailey, a spokesperson for the New York state corrections department, said on Tuesday.

He will be able to leave Shawangunk Correctional Facility in the Hudson Valley next month.

Supporters, including his son, San Francisco district attorney Chesa Boudin, lobbied to have Gilbert join other defendants in the case who have been released from prison.

That prospect angered some local officials in the Hudson Valley and family members who said his release would insult the memory of the murdered men.

In a statement, Rockland County Executive Ed Day called the decision a “cruel and unjust slap in the face to the families” of those killed.

“Former Governor Andrew Cuomo and the Parole Board should be ashamed for allowing this domestic terrorist to walk free on our streets,” Mr Day said.

“There’s no reason that David Gilbert should not have to face the full consequences of his heinous crimes, no matter how much time has passed.”

Gilbert and other former members of the Weather Underground, a militant group that grew out of the anti-Vietnam War movement, had joined with members of the Black Liberation Army in the October 20 1981 robbery.

They stole 1.6 million US dollars in cash from an armoured car outside the Nanuet Mall near the Hudson River community of Nyack.

Brink’s guard Peter Paige and two Nyack police officers, Sergeant Edward O’Grady and Officer Waverly Brown, were killed in the holdup and ensuing shootout at a nearby roadblock.

Gilbert will be freed in a month (Andrew Parsons/PA)
Gilbert will be freed in a month (Andrew Parsons/PA)

Though unarmed, Gilbert was charged with robbery and murder, since people were killed during the crime.

Also charged was Chesa Boudin’s mother, Kathy Boudin.

The boy was 14 months old when his parents were imprisoned.

In a sometimes raucous trial, Gilbert and two other defendants cast themselves as freedom fighters and deemed the proceedings illegitimate.

At one court session, Gilbert and defendant Judith Clark raised their fists and shouted “Free the land!”

Kathy Boudin avoided a harsher sentence by pleading guilty and was paroled in 2003.

Clark was granted parole in 2019, three years after Cuomo commuted her sentence.

She had been denied parole after her first hearing two years earlier.

Gilbert was not eligible for parole until 2056 before Cuomo commuted his sentence.

The former governor said Gilbert made significant contributions to HIV/Aids education and prevention programmes, and worked as a tutor, law library clerk, paralegal assistant, teacher’s aide and aide in various prison programmes.

Chesa Boudin was raised by his parents’ Weather Underground compatriots, Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn.

He ran a progressive campaign for San Francisco district attorney in 2019 in which he said visiting his parents in prison showed him the criminal justice system was broken.

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