FOR
KIMI SCUDDER-GAMBLE
A JUST CAUSE IS NO SACRIFICE
By
Valerie Shaw, M.PR
She moves as comfortably
among the black gangs and factions of gangs in Central
Los Angeles as John Brown did among black slaves 150
years ago, helping them to escape from tyranny and
bondage, committing his life (and that
of his entire family) to the emancipation of slavery.
True to the cause, Brown, a religious zealot, became
the best known of the "free state" guerrilla
leaders and the subject of legend and lore when, in
October 1859, he staged a symbolic, albeit, unsuccessful
raid on Harpers Ferry, Virginia and was hanged for
treason, murder, and conspiring with slaves to rebel.
These are different
times, of course, but Kimi Scudder-Gamble is as much
an advocate for the unpopular cause of prisoner rights
and prison reform as was John Brown in the cause of
freeing the slaves. And, with long blonde braids and
wide blue eyes, the petite fair-skinned Orange County
native is just as unlikely a hero.
For 12 years Kimi Scudder-Gamble
has been working the streets of Central Los Angeles,
intervening in gang turf wars, teaching, counseling
and tutoring at-risk youth, serving as a gang expert
in L.A. Superior Courts and performing outreach to
dozens of men and women incarcerated within California's
burgeoning prison population.
Last year, in October,
she carried her passion a bit further than Brown,
when Kimi Scudder married Ricky Gamble, a black man
imprisoned in Central California for a crime, she
says, he didn't commit. It is her devotion to Ricky,
who is serving 110 years to life, which gives Kimi
Scudder-Gamble the will to fight in the most unlikely
battle of her previously sheltered life.
"I was raised to be fair," says Kimi, in
a diminutive voice so characteristic of unlikely heroes.
"When I saw the tape of the Rodney King beating
and the subsequent disturbance, somehow I identified,
even though I was living a comfortable life in Orange
County."
Within days of the riot
(or disturbance, depending on your point of view)
Kimi Scudder-Gamble found herself touring the scene
of urban devastation. But she didn't just look at
the ransacked buildings, the blighted and crumpled
cityscape; she looked at the people-their despair,
their anguish, their fear.
"At that very moment," says Kimi, "I
knew that my life was here."
Then, within weeks, Kimi Scudder had joined the staff
at the famed Sheenway School, teaching at-risk youth
12 to 19.
Within a decade she
would found a school, Community Restoration Alternative
High School, and become one of the most credible and
courageous voices within the criminal justice system,
in defense of the wrongfully convicted.
---
I have known Kimi Scudder-Gamble for less than six
months, nonetheless I am sure that she is the Joan
d' Arc, Princess Diana, Mother Theresa or Erin Brocovich
of the Juvenile Justice System circa the 21st Century.
In each case, these
sheroes took up unpopular issues and turned them into
causes celebre. Paradoxically, their passion turned
them into celebrities and the celebrity fueled their
passion. Kimi Scudder-Gamble is this kind of diva
of the underserved and unrepresented, strengthened
by the sacredness of her mission and the belief that
she can make a difference.
It has taken her a decade
to build the credibility among the gangs of Central
L.A. to make a difference, for she is neither a black
man nor an ex-con who definitively knows life from
both sides of the bars.
It has taken her this
decade to build the trust of o.g.'s like charismatic,
notorious author, "Monster" Kody Scott,
who was a volunteer teacher in Kimi's school, but
is now serving two years for violation of probation;
Hakim "Psych" Haynes, from the Swans, a
Bloods gang, now a youth counselor and anti-violence
speaker and Roosevelt Tellis aka Madbone was a youth
counselor at the school, helping Kimi's kids get "passes"
through rival territory in order to get to school,
but today is being held on three strikes charges.
Still, after proving
her allegiance, marrying one of their own and committing
her life to selfless service, she has detractors,
suspicious of her pale skin and "foreign"
origin.
Today, Kimi Scudder-Gamble
seeks justice for her husband, Ricky, and dozens of
other wrongfully incarcerated American prisoners.
Just this year she became a certified paralegal in
her efforts to represent those without a voice in
their own defense.
In this line of work,
no day is routine. She might be negotiating a truce
one hour, the next appearing in court on behalf of
one of her kids. She could be meeting with a parent,
foster parent, probation officer or placing another
meddlesome call to a far-off warden, insisting that
prisoners be given the right to use toilet paper.
She could be meeting with top police officials; top
gang leaders or coaxing wanna be's not to join a gang,
no matter how alluring it appears to them. She regularly
visits prisoners, in county jail or state prison and
frequently appears in court as a character or material
witness.
The only routine she
has, these days, is her half-day trek on Friday to
visit her husband on Saturday and Sunday, for a few
scant hours in the visitor's yard, unless there is
a lockdown, as happened recently for over a month,
robbing her of even those precious moments of conversation
and holding hands.
While many black leaders
are incredulous and won't so much as acknowledge this
unlikely ally in their struggle, Kimi is undaunted
and quietly goes about the business of trying to change
policy, influence public perceptions and watching
her students successfully graduate into a world of
freedom and promise.
"
Why do some
men choose the underdogs when their credentials entitle
them to a seat at the table of upperdogs?" asked
Lerone Bennett Jr. in 1968 in his book, Pioneers In
Protest. "
An unjust world requires, demands
the sacrifice of the Just. The friction [they provide]
is necessary for the health of society, which clings
tenaciously to the old and the safe."
But for Kimi Scudder-Gamble
a just cause is no sacrifice. Like John Brown and
so many others before her, it is sheer determination-with
little financial backing and no fanfare-that drives
her to forgo private comfort for the public good.
Valerie Shaw 2003 All
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