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  • Gruesome Crime Is Latest Blow To Proud Community

    GRUESOME CRIME IS LATEST BLOW TO PROUD COMMUNITY
    By Doug Moore

    St. Louis Post-Dispatch,MO
    Sept 27 2006

    East St. Louis

    Miles Davis grew up here.

    This is where Tina Turner cut her teeth and met her then-husband,
    Ike.

    Katherine Dunham adopted this town as her own. Advertisement

    The city's pride and joy is Jackie Joyner-Kersee, billed as the
    world's greatest female athlete.

    For all the big names that come with this small town, it's the day-in
    and day-out perception that East St. Louis is best known for: You
    don't want to be here after dark unless you're looking for trouble.

    But it's also a town of fiercely proud people who say they love East
    St. Louis, even when standing among a row of boarded-up houses and
    weed-choked lots. They're residents, usually the older set, who
    remember when the town was a hub of activity. Jobs were plentiful.

    Lawns were manicured. The National Municipal League in partnership
    with Look magazine hailed East St. Louis as an All-America city 45
    years ago.

    Now, it's a city that doesn't make headlines unless the news is bad.

    And usually it's about murder and vote fraud.

    The most recent headlines are almost too gruesome to believe. A woman
    allegedly cut a fetus out of her good friend and left the friend,
    Jimella Tunstall, to bleed to death. Then, police say, the suspect,
    Tiffany Hall, led them to the bodies of her friend's three children,
    found stuffed in a washer and dryer. Police say they had been
    drowned.

    Unfortunately for a town that has hope for a turnaround, it's far
    from the first time the national spotlight has shined to reveal its
    dark side.

    Race riots in 1917 have left deep pocks in the city's landscape and
    given residents a wary eye on outsiders.

    It was the same year that the violent death of a young boy jarred the
    community and the country.

    An Armenian baker complained to police that a house of prostitution
    was being run next door. Soon after, his 3-year-old son, Alphonso
    Magarian, went missing. Nine days later, the boy's headless body was
    found 100 yards away in a dump heap, according to "Race Riot at East
    St. Louis," a book by historian Elliott Rudwick.

    "Who could do such a thing?" was the outcry from the community then -
    and now.

    Police are not discussing a motive. Hall has been charged with
    Tunstall's murder and the death of the unborn child, but not the
    three children. Other sensational crimes have bolstered the
    perception that East St. Louis is a dangerous place. During the
    course of several months in 2001, police found the bodies of eight
    women who had been dumped there. Serial killer Maury Travis, of
    Ferguson, was linked to at least three of them.

    A decade earlier, a serial killer targeting children terrified the
    city. Parents were afraid to let their children walk to school or
    play in the yard. Lorenzo Fayne was convicted of killing six children
    in and around East St. Louis from 1989 to 1993.

    Eleven children died in a house fire in 1981 while their mother was
    out gambling.

    Heinous crimes are not the only blemishes that have put East St.

    Louis on the national map. Buster Wortman, who died in 1968, ran the
    Metro East operations for Chicago-based Al Capone. In the 1980s, with
    the city in financial straits, trash collection was stopped. For
    seven years, trash piles grew on vacant lots. Abandoned houses became
    makeshift landfills. And in 1990, a judge gave City Hall to a man who
    had been severely beaten in the city's jail as a way to help satisfy
    a $3.4 million judgment. Two years later, however, an appeals court
    gave City Hall back to East St. Louis. A vote fraud case took down
    two prominent politicos last year.

    The town's rise as a political powerhouse peaked in the 1950s, when
    the population was more than 82,000. Today, countywide elections can
    still be decided by East St. Louis voters, but the city's steep
    decline in population has lessened its influence. In 2000, the
    population was 31,542, according to the U.S. census. Today, the
    number is thought to be well below that.

    Railroad jobs gave way to the construction of interstates, which were
    built through the city and took down large chunks of neighborhoods.

    Factories closed and moved elsewhere, and those who had the means to
    move - mainly white families - moved with the jobs. It left a broken
    city that has not yet been able to put itself together again.

    "The headlines we see today are not all that different than they were
    in the paper 50, 75 or 100 years ago," said Southern Illinois
    University Edwardsville political science professor Andrew Theising,
    who has written extensively on the city. "East St. Louis is exactly
    what it was designed to be - a city that was designed to facilitate
    profit, both legal and illegal."

    He notes that the national award given to the city in 1960 was for
    its turnaround of corruption, not for its model as an ideal place to
    live.

    "Even though some people have very pleasant memories that sound like
    bedroom suburb memories, East St. Louis was never designed to deliver
    that," Theising said.

    Still, says Mayor Carl E. Officer, the brutal deaths of three
    children and an expectant mother cannot be discounted as simply more
    violence in this impoverished town.

    "You don't ever get used to it," said Officer, who also runs a
    funeral home. "We really have to reflect on our faith. I don't know
    of anything else you can draw upon."
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