BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY
Dexter Scott King
Dexter Scott King | |
---|---|
Born | January 30, 1961 Atlanta, Georgia |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Civil rights activist, Advocate |
Known for | Son of Martin Luther King, Jr. Chairman, The Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change |
Spouse(s) | Leah Weber (m. 2013)[1] |
Dexter Scott King (born January 30, 1961) is the second son of civil rights leaders Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King. His siblings are Martin Luther King III, the Reverend Bernice Albertine King, and the late Yolanda Denise King.
Early life
King was born in Atlanta, Georgia, and named after the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama, where his father was pastor before moving to the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia. His eldest sister Yolanda watched after him.[2] He was seven years old when his father was assassinated. King and his siblings were assured an education thanks to the help of Harry Belafonte, who set up a trust fund for them years prior to their father's death.[3] King attended the Democratic National Convention in 1972, which led him to gain an interest in politics.[4]
Schooling
King went to Douglass High School, where he played the trumpet.[5]
King attended Morehouse College, his late father's alma mater. He studied business administration, but did not graduate. He later became an actor and documentary filmmaker.
Activities
King splits his time between Atlanta, Georgia, where he serves as chairman of the King Center, and Malibu, California.[6]
In May 1989, King's mother named the twenty-eight year old as her successor as president of the King Center. Before his mother's choice, King openly expressed interest in changing the King Center into "a West Point of nonviolent training."[7][8] Dexter Scott King served as president of the King Center for Nonviolent Social Change, but resigned only four months after taking the office after a dispute with her. He resumed the position in 1994, but the King Center's influence was sharply reduced by then.[6] As President, he cut the number of staff from 70 to 14 and shut down a child care center among a shift from conventional activities to prioritizing preserving his father's legacy. Reflecting, King admitted that the time was not right since he was "probably moving faster than the board was ready to."[9]
He attended the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington on August 28, 2013, the event at which his father delivered his I Have a Dream speech.
Support of conspiracy theory
Twenty-nine years after Martin Luther King, Jr.'s death, Dexter met with James Earl Ray, the man imprisoned for his father's 1968 murder. When confronting him, King asked Ray, "I just want to ask you, for the record, um, did you kill my father?" Ray replied, "No-no I didn't." King then told Ray that he along with the rest of the King family believed him.[11][12][13] King and Ray had then discussed the latter's health and the actions of J. Edgar Hoover.[14] King also told him that his family believed in his testament of innocence and were seeking to help him. The two spoke privately after 25 minutes with reporters, and King asserted to reporters that he did not know and it was the cause of their request for a new trial.[15] As he asserted that he did not believe Ray had any role in his father's death, he brought up evidence taken from the scene such as the murder weapon and concluded that Ray would not have disposed of it near the scene of the crime, calling his belief as having been in his "gut."[16]
At a 1999 press conference, Dexter was subsequently asked by a reporter, "there are many people out there who feel that as long as these conspirators remain nameless and faceless there is no true closure, and no justice." He replied:
His belief towards a conspiracy extended to President Lyndon B. Johnson.[18] He believed that with the evidence he was shown, there would be difficulty "for something of that magnitude to occur on his watch and he not be privy to it."[19] King pursued Andrew Young to get him involved, and Young changed his position on the assassination of his father after being visited by Dexter in the spring of 1997. His position had always been "that it didn't matter who killed Dr. King but what killed him."[20]
Family
Dexter charged the Atlanta-Journal Constitution with "viciously attacking" his family after the newspaper printed a claim by a German television that his sister Bernice wanted $4,000 or $5,000 for a ten minute interview, which King denied.[21]
King's mother, Coretta Scott King, died on January 30, 2006, at the age of 78 on his birthday.
Dexter's elder sister, Yolanda, collapsed at the home of his best friend, Philip Madison Jones, on May 15, 2007. King called his aunt Christine King Ferris and reported that he had tried to save her, but was not successful and was transporting her to the hospital.[22] She could not be revived and died at the age of 51. Her family believes she had a heart condition. Dexter spoke to her just an hour before her death, and did not think much of it when she told him she was tired due to her "hectic" schedule.[23] In regards to his sister's passing and the role she had played in his life, King stated:
It was reported in the Atlanta-Journal Constitution that in July 2013, Dexter married his fiancée Leah Weber in a private ceremony in California.[1]
Lawsuits
On July 11, 2008, 'Dexter King was sued by his sister Bernice Albertine King and brother Martin Luther King III; in addition, he was sued by Bernice King on behalf of the estate ofCoretta King. The lawsuit alleged that Dexter King improperly took funds from the estate of Coretta King and his father Martin Luther King, Jr.. On August 18, 2008, Dexter King filed a countersuit stating his siblings had "breached their fiduciary and personal duties to the King Center in Atlanta and their father’s estate, misused assets belonging to the center, and kept money that should have been channeled back into the center and the estate."[25]
These lawsuits were filed in Fulton County, GA Superior Court[26] and were settled out of court in October 2009. In 2010, the three supported that year's census, seemingly indicating they had reaffirmed their relationships since the dispute.[27]
Filmography
Acting For Life
King (1978)
Television
- 1-800-Missing, Lost Sister episode (2004)
- The Rosa Parks Story (2002)
Literary works
- Growing Up King: An Intimate Memoir (2003)
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