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Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Digital Library Collections This is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections. Collection: Reagan, Ronald: Gubernatorial Papers, 1966-74: Press Unit Folder Title: CRLA - Press Clippings, May 1971 (2 of 6) Box: P29 To see more digitized collections visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library To see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection Contact a reference archivist at: [email protected] Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing National Archives Catalogue: https://catalog.archives.gov/ Oakland, Calif. Tribune (Cir. D 225,038, Sat. 209,931, Sun. 251,534) MAY 21 1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est. 1888 Angela Link The commission earlier this week in Salinas found "no merit" in four of 39 charges included in the Unler report of which more evidence was re- quested. To Legal Aid Yesterday's ruling applied to Uhler's allegation involving Miss Davis and George Jack- son, one of the three Soledad inmates. He is the brother of Tossed Out Jonathan Jackson, who died with two convicts and a judge during the Marin County shooting last August. The commission, appointed EL CENTRO (AP)-A fed- ance lawyers were "improper- to investigate CRLA after eral commission has dis- ly" involved with black activ- Reagan vetoed its $1.8-million missed as unfounded Reagan ist Angela Davis and the Sole- budget from federal antipov- administration charges that dad Brothers. erty funds, is scheduled to California Rural Legal Assist- Commission Chairman Rob- consider allegations regarding ert B. Williamson said yester- CRLA and other Soledad day the three-judge panel had Brothers at further hearings asked the state for more evi- June 3 in San Francisco. dence on its charges against Mrs. English testified after the CRLA but received none. CRLA attorneys said earlier He said the commission spe- this week that she had been cifically asked for details on under "a form of house ar- allegations concerning Miss rest" by welfare officials be- Davis and three black Soledad cause she intended to go be- Prison inmates accused of fore the commission. killing a white guard. She was allowed to appear "But no evidence whatsoev- on leave from her work with- er has been produced to sup- out pay. port any claim of misconduct CRLA attorneys had won by CRLA personnel or attor- "admiration and respect" neys regarding these mat- from low-income people, Mrs. ters,". said Williamson, a re- English said. After Reagan's tired chief justice of Maine. veto of the CRLA budget, A report by Lewis K. Uhler, some of the poor "went down state director of the Office of to the church and lit candles Economic Opportunity, in hope the veto would be charged CRLA attorneys "in- overturned." tervened" at the prison in an The courtroom hearing was effort to arrange a meeting attended by more than 100 between Miss Davis and one persons, including several of the inmates. Mexican-Americans listening During yesterday's proceed- to a Spanish translation ings the commission heard through earphones. testimony from an Imperial County welfare worker who stated termination of the CRLA program would cause bitterness among the poor. Donna English said the CRLA was instrumental in the adoption of the Work Incen- tive Program to assist welfare recipients obtain training that would qualify them for jobs. San Jose, Calif. Mercury (Cir. D. 126,382) MAY 21 1971 FEDERAL PANEL'S FINDING Page 1 State CRLA Attack Ruled 'Unfounded' From: The Los Angeles Times Reagan that CRLA attorneys cision after hearing testimo- EL CENTRO - The Feder- were "imporperly involved" ny Wednesday in a closed Jackson is one of the Sole- al Commission on California with Angela Davis and three session at Soledad Prison. dad Brothers, three black in- ; Rural Legal Assistance on prison inmates known as the That proceeding was sus- mates accused of murdering Thursday dismissed as "to- Soledad Brothers. tally unfounded and without pended after it was learned a a white prison guard. He is The commission, now hold- the brother of Jonathan :- merit" allegations by the ad- ing public hearings here, an- prison official had been Jackson, who died with two y ministration of Gov. Ronald nounced it had made the de- stabbed to death in another convicts and a superior court a part of, the facility. Authori- judge in an abortive court- ties told the commission room kidnap and shooting in- cident last August at the there was "absolutely no Marin County Civic Center. connection" between its pro- The state has charged Miss ceedings and the killing. Davis with murder, kidnap- Chairman Robert William- ing and conspiracy, alleging son noted that the commis- she was involved in a plot to sion had asked the Reagan use hostages taken in the in- administration for additional cident as a means to free the evidence on its charges Soledad Brothers. against CRLA regarding Miss Davis and the inmates. The commission ruling also applied to charges by "But." said Williamson, the state that CRLA attor- "no evidence whatsoever neys had been improperly has been produced to sup- involved with another port any claim of miscon- group 0 f inmates, called duct by CRLA personnel or the Soledad Seven. attorneys regarding these matters " Three of this group are now on trial for the death of The commission ruling ap- another prison guard. plied to allegations made in Charges have been dropped the "Uhler Report." pre- against the remaining four. pared by Lewis Uhler, direc- Other allegations made by tor of the California Office of the Reagan administration Economic Opportunity, that concerning CRLA and other CRLA attorneys and another Soledad inmates will be lawyer "intervened" at Sole- heard at further proceedings dad "in an attempt to ar- of the commission in San range a visit for Angela Da- Francisco on June 3. vis to meet with George Jackson." San Jose, Calif. The News (Cir. D. 75,531) MAY 21 1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est. I888 2 Reagan CRLA Charges EL CENTRO(AP) --A federal commission has dismissed as unfounded Rea- Branded 'False' gan Administration charges that California Rural Legal Assistance lawyers were "improperly" involved with black activist Angela Davis and the Soledad Brothers. Commission Chairman panel had asked the state for "But no evidence what- Robert B. Williamson said more evidence on its charges soever has been produced to Thursday the three-judge against the CRLA but re- support any claim of miscon- ceived none. duct by CRLA personnel or attorneys regarding these He said the commission matters," said Williamson, a specifically asked for details retired chief justice of on allegations concerning Maine. Miss Davis and three black A report by Lewis K. Uhl- Soledad Prison inmates ac- er, state director of the Of- cused of killing a white fice of Economic Opportuni- guard. ty, charged CRLA attorneys 7 "intervened" at the prison in CRLA program would cause an effort to arrange a meet- bitterness among the poor. ing between Miss Davis and Donna English said the one of the inmates. CRLA was instrumental in During Thursday's pro- the adoption of the Work In ceedings the commission centive Program to assis heard testimony from an Im- welfare recipients obtair perial County welfare worker training that would qualif: who stated termination of the them for jobs. PROBERS: may 21. CRLA Did Did 1 Not{Aid santa Rosa I : Angela Phl. EL CENTRO (UPI) -A federal commission has dis- missed as "totally unfounded and without merit" allegations by the Reagan Administration that attorneys for the California Rural Legal Assistance were "improperly involved" with Angela Davis and the "Soledad Brothers." The decision was made in a closed session at Soledad prison Wednesday but was not an- nounced until Thursday during a public hearing here. "No evidence whatsoever has been produced to support any claim of misconduct by CRLA personnel or attorneys regard- ing these matters," said commission chairman Robert B. Williamson, retired chief justice of Maine. The commission, composed of three judges, is holding hear- irigs around the state intol the Continued on Page 6, Col. 1) Angera 1 (Continued from Page 1) CRLA at the direction of the Nixon Administration after Gov. Ronald Reagan last December vetoed the federal grant funding the organization. Thursday's announcement re- ferred to charges contained in a report prepared by state Office of Economic Opportunity direc- tor Lewis K. Uhler. He alleged that CRLA attorneys and another lawyer "intervened" at the prison in an effort to arrange a meeting between George Jackson, one of the "Soledad brothers," and Miss Davis. Santa Rosa P.O. The decision also applied to charges that CRLA attorneys were involved improperly with 5-21-71 another group of inmates known as the "Soledad Seven," three of whom are on trial for the death of a guard. The commission will consider other allegations made by the Reagan Administration against CRLA at a. hearing in San Francisco June 3. Los Angeles, Cellif. Times (Cir. 0.955,945 $ 1,269,469) MAY 21 1971 Allen's C.S. Est. 1888 ENCOUNTER IN HALLWAY Judge Gets Into Struggling Match With TV Cameraman Exclusive to The Times from a Staff Writer EL CENTRO-"Who nt the hell ordered to pay a $50 fine or spend 10 are you?" Los Angeles televisione days in jail. meraman Leslie Paul Meeks cried Co-workers obtained a Superior Thursday as he struggled with a Court habeas corpus writ freeing man in a hallway of the court build- Meeks and said the case would be ing here. appealed. "I'm the judge," Meeks' elderly According to witnesses, the hall- opponent shouted back, "and I'm way encounter came while a KNBC going to get you for contempt of crew was filming an interview with court." a witness from a hearing on a CRLA controversy. The pushing match between Floodlights were lighted and film Meeks, ameraman for station was rolling when Keating, 66, ap- KNBC, and Justice Court Judge peared. He pointed to a tripod in the Hugh Keating ended abruptly. middle of the hall and then to the The judge, who had interrupted doorway to his office on the other Meeks by grabbing a tripod and side. knocking over a floodlight as the lat- "I've got to get into that office," he ter was filming an interview, said. "Get the hell out of the way." stormed into his nearby office and Meeks, not realizing the man who called Sheriff Raymond Rowe. spoke also was the judge, said: "You Moments later, the sheriff and six can go around." deputies arrived and took Meeks to "I don't choose to go around," the jail. He was found in contempt and judge said. The struggle followed. C San Francisco, Calif. Examiner (Cir. D 203,026 - Sol. 159,057) MAY 21 1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est. 1888 CRLA Critic Has Office Firebombed Special to The Examiner SALINAS - The law of- fice of a witness who testi- fied earlier this week, criti- cizing the California Rural Legal Assistance in its dealings over Cesar Chav- ez' lettuce boycott. was firebombed before dawn to- day. A bomb tossed through a window caused damage to the office and property of attorney William Moreno estimated at $20.000 by a fire inspector. Moreno ar- rived in time to salvage some of his files. 12-Press Democrat, Santa Rosa, California, Thursday, May 20, 1971 Reagan: Muzzling In CRLA Probe SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. light on the practices and Ronald Reagan has charged the procedures which have been commission appointed by the and are being engaged in by Nixon administration to investi- CRLA personnel,' Reagan said. gate the California Rural Legal The governor told Carlucei Assistance is "muzzling witnes- "the fault for the current ses." confusing state of affairs must "Events of the past several lie at the doorstep of federal days," Reagan said Wednesday OEO which misinformed the in a telegram to Frank commission members as to Carlucci, director of the federal their proper role in these Office of Economic Opportuni- proceedings-to investigate all ty, "are deeply disturbing to of the facts pertaining to me and should be to you." CRLA's activities." He charged that a "firm Reagan has increasingly at- understanding" between him, tacked the commission's proce- the federal OEO and the U.S. dures, and at his Tuesday news Justice Department over the conference said, "very frankly commission's procedures "has I don't have too much been breached repeatedly in confidence in what is going to recent months." be the outcome of the Consisting of three out-of- commission's findings." state judges, the commission is A commission hearing which conducting hearings to deter- had started Wednesday inside mine whether CRLA should Soledad State Prison was continue to exist. The probe cancelled because two convicts was prompted by Reagan's veto stabbed a prison official to last December of CRLA's $1.8 death. million federal grant. Robert B. Williamson, com- The governor charged the mission chairman, said prison agency, now operating on a officials had told him "there is temporary grant, did not really absolutely no connection be- serve the needs of the poor as tween the hearing and this it was set up to do and that it tragic event." violated OEO regulations. Commissioners had intended Reagan told Carlucci he was to investigate assertions that particularly angry because the CRLA attorneys were connect- commission announced Tuesday ed to prison tensions and at that three of the governor's 35 least partially responsible for specific allegations against the racial disturbances there. agency were without merit. Before the meeting started, a "I urge you to clarify spokesman for the California Immediately your instructions Correctional Officers Associa- to the commission in such a tion complained that the state's manner as to require that its attorney general was "handcuf- findings be filed directly with fing" guards and prison offi- you all in the same context," cials who planned to testify. he told Carlucci. Kenneth Brown, the organiza- The governor said "the tion's press officer, said the commission has imposed a attorney general's office had virtual gag rule on non-CRLA prohibited guards and officials witnesses. limiting their testi- from testifying on any incident mony only to narrow items" that may be pending in the contained in the Reagan courts, or on current investiga- administration report that tions that might lead to an prompted his veto. inquiry. "It has become increasingly The CRLA has denied all clear that the procedures assertions concerning its law- adopted by this commission are yers and the prison. having the effect of muzzling Commissioners will meet witnesses whose testimony today and Saturday in El would otherwise shed valuable Centro. San Francisco, Calif. Examiner (Cir. D 203,026 - Sat. 159,057) MAY 20 1971 Allon P.C.B. Est. 1888 KENNETH CONANT, ERICK HILTON AND JERRY LUND Slain Soledad administrator (left) and suspects held in fatal knifing -UPI Photos Tight Security Follows Stabbing at Soledad Special to The Examiner Robbers SOLEDAD - Prisoners at Two suspects - Orange Soledad State Prison re- County robber and jail escap- mained locked in their cells ee Jerry W. Lund, 28, and as the investigation contin- Los Angeles robber Erick V. Hilton, 24 - were being held ued into the fatal stabbing in maximum security. of a prison official. Curtis said inmate assault The prisoners were being and murder charges will be taken to eat in groups of 150 filed against Lund and Hil- in the prison's Central Facili- ton. He did not say whether ty, where Kenneth E. Con- others will be charged al- ant, 49, a program adminis- though he said the slaying trator. was stabbed to death apparently was planned. and two other officials were "It appears to be an execu- wounded. District Attorney William Curtis interrogated staff members and inmates until late last night and resumed the investigation today. tion slaying a very delib- A memorial service was erate thing." scheduled for 2 p.m. Satur- Assistant Prison Superin- day at First Methodist tendent Chuck Stowell said Church in Salinas. no motive has been uncov- ered but it appeared Con- The stabbing brought an ant's slaying - unlike others abrupt suspension of a spe- at the troubled prison-was cial three-judge federal com- not racially motivated. Con- mission investigation inside ant and his attackers were white. the prison into charges by Governor Reagan that the Home-Made Knife California Rural Legal As- A knife made from a piece sistance has engaged in im- of steel was the death weap- proper actions at Soledad. on. The hearing moved on to El Extra guards went on duty Centro in Imperial County to- and 1200 prisoners were day. locked in their cells after the In Sacramento. Loren V. 10th violent death - four of- Smith, general manager of ficials and six convicts - the California State Employ- since Jan. 15, 1970. Family ers Association, said the visits were cancelled today hardened inmates at Soledad and outside activities were should be put in a new maxi- cancelled through May 31. mum security prison. Conant was knifed in the back of the head as he sat at "The (Soledad) facility is the desk where he handled antiquated," Smith asserted.» programming for 600 con- It was quite normal for victs. Lt. E. D. Steele and convicts to be in the head- Supervising Counselor Ed quarters room where Conant, Whalen were injured slightly a 20-year veteran in penal when they went to Conant's work, dealt with such prob- aid. lems as rehabilitation and Services training. But Lund and Hil- ton were not on the prisoner Private funeral services committee meeting with Con- were held for Conant today. ant. The Reagan Adminis- Los Angeles, Calif. tration, in a document pre- Times pared by the state Office City is 955,915 $ 1,269,469 of Economic Opportunity director, Lewis K. Uhler, had asserted that CRLA MAY 20 1971 attorneys represented in- mates at Soledad in viola- tion of federal regulations. P.C.S. 1898 It was those and other charges by Uhler that Reagan used as a basis for his veto of CRLA's $1.8 CRLA Investigators million budget, which is supported by federal anti- poverty funds. Delay Soledad Hearing Later, in answer to an inquiry by Unler, Ray- mond K. Procunier, state of Proceedings Suspended After Slaying director of corrections, as- serted that CRLA attor- Prison Official Will Resume June 3 neys had played a "major BY PHILIP HAGER Times Staff Writer role" in disturbances in state prisons. SOLEDAD, Calif. A (Mr. and Mrs. Michael federal commission inves- English said Florence Last month, Moe Cama- tigating the California Kinlock, the welfare direc- cho, president of the Cali- Rural Legal Assistance tor, has prohibited them fornia Correctional Offi- controversy heard testi- from making or receiving cers Assn., said there was mony Wednesday in a telephone calls or visiting "reason to believe" that a closed hearing at Soledad restrooms without permis- series of assaults that took State Prison. sion and has declined to The proceedings were approve leave SO they can suspended at midmorning testify at the commission place at Soledad "were after it was learned that a hearings on CRLA. motivated by or at least an prison administrator had (Winifred Hutchens, outgrowth of talks with been killed in another part assistant welfare director, certain attorneys, many of of the facility. said "some restrictions them employed by State officials said they have been placed against CRLA." had no reason to believe the Englishes But if Neither Procunier nor there was a connection be- anyone has been su b- Camacho presented details tween the killing and the poenaed to testify at a of their charges and hearings on CRLA. hearing, it has been our CRLA officials vigorously The commission indicat- policy to give permission denied the allegations. ed it would conduct the re- and even provide trans- At Wednesday's hearing, mainder of the proceed- portation." Any elabora- ininates quoted in the Uh- ings scheduled for Soledad tion about the restrictions ler report had completed on June 23 in San Francis- would have to come from their testimony when the 65. Today's hearings will Mrs. Kinlock, she said. killing was reported. Be- be at El Centro. Mrs. Kinlock was not cause guards waiting to (In El Centro, an Imper- available for comment. testify had been closely as- ial County Welfare De- Wants to Testify sociated with the dead of- partment official agreed (CRLA attorneys earlier ficer, the commission de- Wednesday that "some re- this week said Mrs. Eng- cided to suspend the hear- strictions" had been placed on two social work- lish wanted to testify on ings. ers who claim they have behalf of CRLA.) T he commission had virtually been held priso- ners at their desks during agreed to private proceed- working hours. Associated ings at the prison to pro- tect corrections officers Press reported. and inmates who request- ed anonymity. But a trans- cript of the testimony, with those names and pos- sibly other identifying in- formation deleted, will be made public, perhaps by next week. Sacromento, Calif. The Bee (Cir. D. 172/11 Sun. 200,346) MAY 20 1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est. 1888 Soledad Prison Killing Is Ninth Within 18 Months SOLEDAD (UPI) - A Four prison employes and veteran Soledad State Prison five inmates have died in the official was stabbed to death racially tense prison 115 Wednesday - the ninth per- miles south of San Francisco son killed at California's since January 1970, when a troubled penitentiary in the guard killed three black past 18 months. prisoners fighting in the Kenneth E. Conant, 49, a yard. A young white guard program administrator, was was killed a few days later. stabbed in the back of the The slaying of Conant ap- head with a prison-made parently had no connection knife and two other officials with the earlier racial inci- suffered minor wounds dents as the victim and the while subduing his inmate two inmates seized after his attackers. death were white. Jerry W. Lund, 28, and Eric Hilton, 29, both convicted robbers from Southern California, were held for investigation of murder. The slaying occurred as a special federal commission was meeting in another part of the prison investigating charges that California-Ru- ral Legal Assistance, a feder- ally financed legal aid group had fomented violence among inmates. The hear- ings were indefinitely post- poned after Conant's death. Three out-of-state judges are investigating charges by the Reagan administration against CRLA, including the accusation that its attorneys were involved in the "moti- vation" of earlier violence at Soledad. The hearings had no apparent link to Wednes- day's killing Two groups of black con- victs - the "Soledad Broth- ers" and "Soledad Seven" - have been charged with the slayings of two white prison guards in the months follow. ing the deaths of the three Negro prisoners. Conant, of Salinas, was a nonuniformed employe who directed activities, custody requirement and rehabilita- tion programs for inmates. Burbank, Calif. Daily Review (Cir. 6XW 11,013) MAY 20 1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est. 1888 Witnesses blocked SACRAMENTO - Gov. Reagan says the federal commission investigating California Rurah Legal Assistance is "muzzling" potential witnesses who might substantiate Reagan's charges against the controversial agency. In a telegram to Washington, Reagan said the commission is operating under rules which have "tied its hands in such a manner that the truth cannot and will not be known without a major change in approach." His latest criticism was in a telegram Wednesday to Frank Carlucci, director of the federal Office of Economic Oppor- tunity which sent the panel of three out- of-state supreme court justices to probe CRLA's activities. Santa And, Celif. Kis (Evening Edition) you See Eva 91111 143,012) MAY 30 1971 CRLA Probers (Continued From Page A-1) light on the practices and CRLA Probers Muzzling procedures which have been and are being engaged in by CRLA personnel," Reagan said. The governor told Carlucci "the fault for the current Witnesses, Reagan Says confusing state of affairs must lie at the doorstep of federal OEO which misinformed the commission members as to SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Consisting of three out-of- Reagan told Carlucci he was their proper role in these I Ronald Reagan has charged the state judges, the commission is particularly angry because the 1 proceedings-to investigate all commission appointed by the conducting hearings to deter- commission announced Tuesday of the facts pertaining to I mine whether CRLA should CRLA's activities." Nixon administration to investi- continue to exist. The probe that three of the governor's 35 gate the California Rural Legal was prompted by Reagan's veto specific allegations against the Reagan has increasingly at- agency were without merit. tacked the commission's proce- Assistance is "muzzling witnes- last December of CRLA's $1.8 ses." "I urge you to clarify dures, and at his Tuesday news million federal grant. The governor charged the immediately your instructions conference said, "very frankly ** "Events of the past several I don't have too much 7 days," Reagan said Wednesday agency, now operating on a to the commission in such a 1 temporary grant, did not really manner as to require that its confidence in what is going to in a telegram to Frank be the outcome of the : Carlucci, director of the federal serve the needs of the poor as findings be filed directly with ! Office of Economic Opportuni- it was set up to do and that it you all in the same context," commission's findings." he told Carlucci. A commission hearing which : ty, "are deeply disturbing to violated OEO regulations. me and should be to you." The governor said "the was started Wednesday inside He charged that a "firm commission has imposed a Soledad State Prison was understanding" between him, virtual gag rule on non-CRLA conceled because two convicts the federal OEO and the U.S. witnesses, limiting their testi- stabbed a prison official to Justice Department over the mony only to narrow items" death. 1 commission's procedures "has contained in the Reagan Robert B. Williamson, com- been breached repeatedly in administration report that mission chairman, said prison officials had told him "there is , recent months." : 3 prompted his veto. 1 "It has become increasingly absolutely no connection be- clear that the procedures tween the hearing and this or adopted by this commission are tragic event." Commissioners had intended > having the effect of muzzling E witnesses whose testimony to investigate assertions that , would otherwise shed valuable CRLA attorneys were connect- 1 (Turn To Page A2 Col. 3) ed to prison tensions and at least partially responsible for racial disturbances there. 1 Before the meeting started, a spokesman for the California Correctional Officers Associa- tion complained that the state's attorney general was "handcuf- fing" guards and prison offi- cials who planned to testify. Kenneth Brown, the organiza- tion's press officer, said the attorney general's office had prohibited guards and officials from testifying on any incident that may be pending in the courts, or on current investiga- tions that might lead to an inquiry. This CRLA has denied all assertions concerning its law- yers and the prison. Commissioners will meet today and Saturday in El Centro. Glendale, Calif. News Press (Cir. 6XW 23,253) MAY 20 1971 Allen P. C.B. Est. 1888 Witnesses blocked SACRAMENTO - Gov. Reagan says the federal commission investigating C California Rural Legal Assistance is r "muzzling" potential witnesses who j might substantiate Reagan's charges b against the controversial agency. it In a telegram to Washington, Reagan said the commission is operating under ti rules which have "tied its hands in such V a manner that the truth cannot and will g not be known without a major change in u approach." His latest criticism was in a telegram Wednesday to Frank Carlucci, director of the federal Office of Economic Oppor- h: tunity which sent the panel of three out- B of-state supreme court justices to probe gi CRLA's activities. TC V₁ El Centro, Calif. Imperial Valley Press (Cir. D 7,831) MAY 20 1971 Allen P.C.B. Est. 1888 Reagan charges CRLA probe with "muzzling" SACRAMENTO (UPI) Gov. Office of Economic Opportuni- conducting hearings to deter- Ronald Reagan has charged the ty, "are deeply disturbing to mine whether CRLA should commission appointed by the me and should be to you." continue to exist. The probe Nixon administration to investi- He charged that a "firm was prompted by Reagan's veto gate the California Rural Legal understanding" between him, last December of CRLA's $1.8 Assistance is "muzzling witnes- the federal OEO and the U.S. million federal grant. ses. Justice Department over the The governor charged the "Events of the past several commission's procedures "has agency, now operating on a days," Reagan said Wednesday been breached repeatedly in temporary grant, did not really in a telegram to Frank recent months." serve the needs of the poor as Carlucci, director of the federal Consisting of three out-of- it was set up to do and that it state judges, the commission is violated OEO regulations. Santa Barbara, Calif. News Press (Cir. D 37,612 * 37,636) MAY 20 1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est. 1888 Witnesses 'Muzzled' In CRLÀ Probe: Reagan SACRAMENTO (P) - Gov. commission apparently Reagan says the federal com- have allowed them to publicly mission investigating Califor- announce their findings piece- nia Rural Legal Assistance is meal each day, instead of in a "muzzling" po al-wit- report to you." nesses who might substantiate He urged Carlucci "to clari- Reagan's charges against the fy immediately your instruc- controversial agency. tions to the commission in In a telegram to Washing- such a manner that its find- ton, Reagan said the commis- ings be filed directly with you, sion is operating under rules all in the same context, and which have "tied its hands in that the commission members such a manner that the truth avail themselves of all offered cannot and will not be known evidence or testimony, even if without a major change in ap- it proves CRLA is not provid- proach." ing legal services to the poor." WIRE SENT BLAMES 0E0 His latest criticism was in a He added that "I regret to telegram yesterday to Frank say that most of the fault for Carlucci, director of the feder- the current confusing state of al Office of Economic Oppor- affairs must lie at the door- tunity which sent the panel of step of federal OEO." three out-of-state supreme Reagan said the commission court justices to probe CRLA's has refused to allow cross-ex- activities. amination of pro-CRLA wit- Reagan wrote that "the pro- nesses and has failed to give cedures adopted by this com- adequate notice to other per- mission are having the effect sons who wished to testify. of muzzling witnesses whose "Thus far this week," he testimony would otherwise said, "a number of witnesses shed valuable light on the desiring to testify to their practices and proceedings" of knowledge of CRLA's activi- CRLA. ties have simply given up in "The commission has im- frustration after being ex- posed a virtual gag rule on posed to the way in which the non-CRLA witnesses, limiting hearings are being conduct- their testimony only to narrow ed." items in the state OEO report He noted one former CRLA on CRLA," Reagan continued. employe who wanted to testify "Any new information - how- "became SO disgusted after ever pertinent - is being having observed firsthand 'the ruled out of order." commission's biased limita- Reagan referred to the tions on testimony' that she 283-page report submitted to refused to subject herself to back up his veto last De- the 'personal aggravations, cember of a 1.88-million-dollar harrassment and frustrations federal grant to run CRLA of such a sham'." this year. Carlucci authorized Reagan said "she is the a temporary grant while the same woman who was sub- panel investigates whether jected to pressure by the CRLA is not doing its proper CRLA attorney; Robert Gnaiz- job representing the Califor- da, several months ago in nia's rural poor as Reagan four separate telephone calls has charged. in one evening to change The governor also told Car- her story about CRLA's im- lucci "your instructions to the proper activities." Oakland, Calif. Tribune (Cir. D 225,035, Sat. 209,931, Sun. 251,534) MAY 80.1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est. 1888 CRL. Pag Boost From Welfare Aide EL CENTRO (AP) - A so- cial worker who claimed her supervisors tried to keep her from testifying told a public hearing today that the poor need and like the California Rural Legal Assistance pro- gram. The witness, Donna English, said a decision to end the pro- gram "would cause bitterness among the poverty group." With her husband, also an Imperial County welfare em- ploye, Mrs. English has pub- licly accused their superiors of trying to keep them from testifying. The two-day hearing was opened by a federal commis- sion investigating CRLA after Gov. Ronald Reagan charged in Sacramento that potential witnesses who might substan tiate his stand were being "muzzled." Oakland, Calif. Tribune (Cir. D 225,038, Sat. 209,931, Sun. 251,534) MAY 20 1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est. 1888 Expansion of School Lunches on Agenda RICHMOND - A PTA Gnaizda, deputy director of conference dedicated to help California Rural Legal Assist- improve and expand school ance; and Mrs. Barbara Hen- lunch programs will be held ry, president of Welfare Monday at the Memorial Rights Organization of Rich- Youth Center here. mond. Speaker will be. State Sen. Among the seven discussion George Moscone, D-San Fran- groups during the day-long conference will be those on cisco. funding, preparation, distribu- The conference is sponsored tion, nutrition education and by the Richmond Elementary personnel training for school Council with PTA districts lunch programs. from Alameda, Contra Costa The conference stems from and Solano counties. an announcement last Febru- The panel will consist of ary by state superintendent of James Hemphill, chief of public instruction, Wilson Food Service Bureau, State Riles calling for expansion of Dept. of Instruction; Robert. the lunch program. / Son Jose, Calif. The News (Cir. D. 75,531) MAY 30 1971 Allen's P. C.B. Est. ISSS Reagan Says CRLA Probe Witnesses 'Muzzled' By KIETH HEARN SACRAMENTO (AP) --- continued, "Any new Infor- Gov. Reagan says the federal mation however pertinent commission investigating - is being ruled out of or- California Rural Legal As der." sistance is "muzzling" poten- Reagan referred to the tial witnesses who might sub. 283-page report submitted to stantiate Reagan's charges back up his veto last Decem- against the controversial ber of a $1.88 million federal agency. grant to run CRLA this year. In a telegram to Washing- Carlucci authorized a tempo- ton, Reagan said the com- rary grant while the panel in- mission is operating under vestigates whether CRLA is rules which have tied its not doing its proper job rep- har. n such a manner that resenting the California's ru- the truth cannot and will not ral poor as Reagan has be known without a major charged. change in approach." The governor also told Car- His latest criticism was in lucci "your instructions to a telegram Wednesday to the commission apparent- ly have allowed them to pub- Frank Carlucel, director of the federal Office of Econom- ic Opportunity which se: the Licly announce their findings panel of three out-of-state su- piecemeal each day. instead preme court justices to probe of in a report to you.' CRLA's activities. He urged Carlucci "to clar- Reagan wrote that "the ify immediately your instruc- procedures adopted by this tions to the commission in commission are having the such a manner that its find- effect of muzzling witnesses ings be filed directly with whose testimony would oth- you. all in the same context, erwise shed valuable light on he practices and proceed- ngs" of CRLA. and that the commission affairs must lie at the door- "Thus far this week,", he "The commission has im- members avail themselves of step of federal OEO." said, "a number of witnesses osed a virtual gag rule on all offered evidence or testi- Reagan said the commis- desiring to testify to their on-CRLA witnesses. limiting mony, even if it proves sion has refused to allow knowledge of CRLA's activi- heir testimony only to nar- CRLA is not providing legal crossexamination of pro- ties have simply given up. in )W items in the state OEO services to the poor." CRLA witnesses and has frustration after being ex- :port on CRLA," Reagan He added that "I regret to failed to give adequate notice posed to the way in which the say that most of the fault for to other persons who wished hearings are being conduct- the current confusing state of to testify. ed." San Francisco, Calif. Chronicle (Cic. D 478,704 Sot. 443,306) MAY 20 1371 Stowell said Lund and Hil- ton, neither of whom were More Violence scheduled to appear before the committee, wordlessly walked in to the room. Conant was fatally stabbed in the back of the head. Lieu- A Fatal Knifing tenant E. D. Steele and SU- pervising counsellor Ed Whe- lan were also in the room at the time, and both suffered At Soledad minor injuries in grappling with the two alleged assail- Page 1 ants. Investigators from the 2 Cons Accused Monterey county district at- torney's office, already at the troubled institution on an- other matter, arrived mo- ments after the stabbing and From Our Correspondent took a piece of steel honed Soledad into a prison knife or "shank" as evidence. Kenneth E. Conant, 49, The Federal committee in- a program administrator vestigating the CRLA had at Soledad prison, was convened at 7 a.m. in anoth- stabbed to death yester- er part of the prison. but ad- day, and two other offi- journed an hour after the stabbing and postponed its cials were wounded while subduing his alleged in- mate attackers. The killing-fourth mur- der of a Soledad prison employee since Jan. 13, 1970 - occurred while a Federal investigating pan- el was holding meetings in another part of the prison on the alleged role of Cali- fornia Rural Legal Assist- ance in prison violence. IP #irephotos Two inmates, Jerry W. KENNETH E. CONANT Lund, 28, and Eric Hilton, 29, The victim both convicted Southern Cali- fornia robbers, were held for investigation of murder. ATTACK Assistant Superintendant (P Wirephoto 1P Wirephoto Chuck Stowell, who was in charge of some 600 men in ERIC HILTON JERRY W. LUND four wings of the prison, was Los Angeles robber Imprisoned since 1967 seated at his desk about 9:30 a.m. preparing to conduct a routine disciplinary commit- tee hearing involving several Soledad Slaying- inmates. Official Stabbed From Page 1 employees and six inmates killed and many others in- hearings at the prison to an jured. indefinite date. Yesterday's attack, howev- The 1200 inmates in Sole- er, came at a time when So- dad's Central Facility were " ledad's often-criticized Cen- immediately locked in then tral Facility was undergoing tion. cells pending an investiga- a major easing of strict secu- rity. Conant was a 20-year vet- The iron-tight "X" wing eran in correctional work. He adjustment center, scene of is survived by his wife and a several violent attacks. was son at the family's home in drained of inmates in Salinas. March and closed. Its coun- Program administrators in terpart "O" wing, which State prisons and non- made the other half of Sole- uniformed employees who di- dad's notorious "hole," was rect activities, custody re- also slowly being emptied of quirements and rehabilita inmates sent there for disci- tion programs for inmates in plinary reasons. their charge. TRANSFER WHITE Many inmates have been Although previous incl- transferred from the restrict- dents at the prison have had ed inside corridor of Soledad a racial overtone thought to Central to the more spacious stem from the killing of three and relaxed North Facility at black inmates by a white of- the prison. ficer in January. 1970, in this Yesterday's incident, how- case both Conant and his al- ever. was expected to bring a leged assailants were white. flurry of new calls for a Lund was sentenced to tougher institution. prison in 1967 from Orange Almost before complete de- county on a first degree rob- tails of the incident were bery charge with added time known yesterday, Smith dis- for an escape from the Los patched two of his top aides Angeles County Jail. from the employees associa- Hilton entered Soledad in tion to discuss with correc- 1967 on a conviction of first tions officials the possibility degree robbery in Los Ange- les county. Otey Mesa Prison in San Die- In Sacramento, the Califor- go county. nia State Employees Associa- The project was once tion promptly called for "im- planned to replace San Quen- tin Prison, but was scrapped mediate steps to prevent fur- for financial reason. ther tragedies" at Soledad. "For the kind of hardened CALL inmate Soledad in called upon to handle. the facility is Loren V. Smith. the asso- antiquated." Smith charged ciation's general manager. yesterday. called for improvements in Funeral services for Con- security et the prison ant were pending vesterday cially to: 11 21 the Co :C- at Terry's Mortuary in the tional Training Facility. town of Soledad. The Federal hearing at the prison yesterday had been expected to center on charges by the California Correctional Officers Asso- ciation that CRLA attorneys had some role in inspiring in- mates to a series of violent incidents in the last year and a hair that have seen four San Francisco, Calif. Chronicle (Cir. D 478,704 - Sal. 443,305) MAY 20 1971 Allen'se.c.B. Est. 1888 Guard Slain CRLA Hearing at Soledad Canceled By George Murphy Chronicle Correspondent Soledad "We understand how all A Federal commission personnel at the Soledad fa- investigating charges that cility are personally affect- ed; therefore we have con- the California Rural Legal Assistance program fo- curred in the request (of the mented disturbances at the correctional officers) that the Soledad Correctional hearings be contin- ued to a later date." Training Facility here was The commission left last abzruptly halted yesterday after a prison official was night for El Centrp. where it murdered. will hold hearings today and tomorrow. Commission chairman The three-member, Nixon Robert B. Williamson said administration-appointed later prison officials had told commission will split up on him "there was absolutely no June 1 and 2. connection between the hear- One commissioner each ing and this tragic event." will preside over hearings at Williamson said that when Santa Maria, Madera and word of the murder reached Marysville on June 1. On the the hearing room, represent- following day, simultaneous atives of the California hearings will be held in Mo- Correctional Officers Asso- desto, Gilroy and Santa ciation told the commission Rosa. that guards. scheduled to tes- On June 3 and 4 the full tify, were "deeply affected commission will meet in San by the tragic loss of a Francisco. friend," and asked that the The commission is investi- hearing be postponed. gation Reagan administra- "This, of course, was done," Williamson said, add- ing that the Soledad question tion charges against CRLA will be considered at a hear- which led to the governor's ing to be held June 3 in San veto last January of $1.8 mil- Francisco. lion in Federal funds for the Attorney representing legal aid organization. CRLA issued a statement of Reagan, a frequent critic "deepest condolences" to the of the Federal commission widow and family of slain since its probe began, fired prison admiistrator Ken- off a new telegram to Feder- eth Conant. al OEO Director Frank Car- lucci yesterday, saying he was "deeply disturbed" by the commission's conduct. Scin Jose, Calif. The News (Cir. D. 75,531) P.C.B. Est. 1888 Art Buchwald Reagan Proper Client For CRLA No matter how I try, I can't stop the first time we represented someone worrying about Gov. Ronald Reagan's who made money but didn't pay income personal financial situation. As everyone taxes. knows by now, Gov. Reagan had such "Surely there is something wrong bad financial reverses last year that he with the system if the governor of the didn't have to pay state income taxes. largest state in the union has been hurt Instead of Californians sympathizing so badly financially that he can't pay with him over these financial reverses, any taxes." they became upset and felt there was "But what legal defense would you something wrong because they had to have for him?" I asked. pay taxes and Reagan didn't. "First, we would have to find out Very few people in the state said, "If what financial reverses Mr. Reagan had, the governor makes $44,000 a year as whether they came from cattle, oil, real estate or the stock market. Then we salary and has assets of around $1 mil- lion and still can't pay his state income would prove that it wasn't his fault that taxes, then he must be hurting very bad- his investments went sour. It was proba- ly, and needs pity rather than censure." bly due to the general economy." "But the Republicans are in charge of My first thought was that the gover- the economy right now. Wouldn't it look nor should seek legal aid from the local bad if Reagan blamed his own party for Office of Economic Opportunity. Al- the fact he had such a bad income situa- though Reagan is trying to abolish legal tion. aid for the poor in California, I'm sure "I guess you're right. We'll have to the poverty lawyers would take his case think of something else. Perhaps we anyway, just to prove that they will take could persuade the courts to allow the anybody in dire financial straits, regard- governor to make one motion picture a less of race, creed or elective office. year." To make sure, I telephoned a CRLA "Or a new Death Valley Days se- (California Rural Legal Assistance law- ries," I suggested. yer in California and asked him if he "I was thinking of a remake of the would take Reagan as a client. 'Grapes of Wrath.' the lawyer said. "Yes," he said, "he would qualify for "They could shoot most of it around Sac- free legal aid. Our charter specifically ramento, SO the governor wouldn't have says that any governor of a state whose to be on location too long. But the impor- finances are in such poor shape that he tant thing is to get him healthy financial- doesn't have to pay personal state in- ly so he doesn't have to eat from the come taxes is in no position to pay a public trough. lawyer, and is therefore eligible for free "This thing has far more ramifica- legal advice. It would be our pleasure to tions than anyone wants to admit," he help Gov. Reagan in anyway we could." said. "We're trying to pull the poor up "How would you go about it?" by their bootstraps SO they become hon- "From a legal standpoint it would est, hard-working citizens. But if they probably be the most interesting case see somebody like Gov. Reagan, who has we've ever handled. Most of our cases worked all his life and still has nothing have had to do with people who didn't left over for income taxes, they going pay any state income taxes because they to say to themselves "The hell with it. didn't make any money. This would be Let's stay on welfare.' Lob Angeles, Calif Times or 1,269,459 MAY P.O.B. Reagan Income Tax Proves You Just Can't Get Ahead BY ART BUCHWALD WASHINGTON-No matter how 1 try, I can't stop worrying about Gov. "From a legal standpoint it would Ronald Reagan's personal financial probably be the most interesting case we've ever handled. Most of our situation. As everyone knows by cases have had to do with people now, Gov. Reagan had such bad fi- who didn't pay any state income nancial reverses last year that he taxes because they didn't make any didn't have to pay state income money. This would be the first time taxes. we represented someone who made Instead of Californians sympathiz- money but didn't pay income taxes. ing with him over these financial re- "Surely there is something wrong verses, they became upset and felt with the system if the governor of there was something wrong because the largest state in the union has STATE they had to pay taxes and Reagan been hurt so badly financially that didn't he can't pay any taxes." Very few people in the state said, "But what legal defense would "If the governor makes $44,000 a you have for him?" I asked. year as salary and has assets of around S1 million and still can't pay his state income taxes, then he must be hurting very badly, and needs "First, we would have to fina UUS pity rather than censure." what financial reverses Mr. Reagan had, whether they came from cattle, "If you have any business sense, you'll My first thought was that the gov- oil, real estate or the stock market. save all your welfare checks ernor should seek legal aid from the Then we would prove that it wasn't for a rainy day." local Office of Economic Opportuni- his fault that his investments went tv. Although Reagan is trying to abolish legal aid for the poor in Cali- sour. It was probably due to the gen- "They could shoot most of it around eral economy." Sacramento. SO the governor would- fornia, I'm sure the poverty lawyers would take his case anyway, just to "But the Republicans are in n't have to be on location too long. prove that they will take anybody in charge of the economy right now. But the important thing is to get dire financial straits, regardless of Wouldn't it look bad if Reagan him healthy financially so he doesn't race, creed or elective office. blamed his own party for the fact he have to eat from the public trough. had such a bad income situation." "This thing has far more ramifica- "I guess you're right. We'll have to tions than anyone wants to admit," To make sure, I telephoned a think of something else. Perhaps we he said. "We're trying to pull the CRLA lawyer in California and could persuade the courts to allow poor up by their bootstraps so they asked him if he would take Reagan the governor to make one motion become honest, hard-working citi- as a client. picture a year." zens. But if they see somebody like Gov. Reagan, who has worked all his "Yes," he said, "he would qualify "Or a new Death Valley Days se- life and still has nothing left over for for free legal aid. Our charter speci- ries," I suggested. income taxes, they're going to say fically says that any governor of a state whose finances are in such "I was thinking of a remake of the to themselves "The hell with it. Let's poor shape that he doesn't have to Grapes of Wrath," the lawyer said. stay on welfare." pay personal state income taxes is in no position to pay a. lawyer. and is therefore eligible for free legal ad- vice, It would be our pleasure to help Gov. Reagan in any way we could." "How would you go about It?" Son Francisco, Calif. Examiner (Cir, D 203,026 Sell. 159,057) Threats MAY 20 1971 In Probe EM.1883 Of CRLA Panel Drops -From Page 1 Three CRLA officials will get a chance to testify on CRLA activities within Soledad Prison on Charge 1 June 3, when the hearings re- sume in San Francisco By Joel Tlumak That portion of the hear- Examiner News Staff ings will be closed to the pub- EL CENTRO - Three lic and the press, although more of Governor Reagan's testimony of the guards, pris- charges against California on officials and the inmates Rural Legal Assistance were dismissed today by a panel will eventually be made pub- appointed by the Office of lic with names and identifi- Economic Opportunity in cations withheld. Washington. The hearings here. near The OEO commission the Mexican border, will end called the allegations "total- the commission's second ly unfounded and without week of inquiries into Gov. merit." Reagan's charges against CRLA. Reagan vetoed Two of the charges were CRLA's $1.8 million grant on that CRLA was linked to So- the grounds it engaged in il- ledad Prison incidents in legal activities throughout which: Officer William C. the state and didn't properly Shull was slain in July 1970, serve the poor. leading to charges against seven inmates; and in which The Office of Economic Guard John V. Mills was Opportunity in Washington slain in January 1970, leading appointed the special com- to charges of murder against mission to check into the the so-called Soledad Three Governor's charges and rec- ommend whether to uphold 1 - George L. Jackson, John W. Clutchette and Fleeta or override Reagan's veto. Drumgo. Here in the Imperial Val- 1 ley, CRLA faces its biggest 1 A third dismissed charge test. The young, urbane pov- E was that CRLA attorneys at- tempted to arrange a meet- erty lawyers aiding Chicano { ing between Angela Davis farm workers are looked 1 and Jackson at Soledad prior upon as intruders by growers and county and city officials. to the Marin County shootout I One witness against CRLA, Turn to Page 8. Col. 4 attorney F. Douglas McDan- : iel, is reported to be under I police surveillance because I he received threatening 1 phone calls this past 12 week. Sacramento, Calif. The Bee (Cir. D. 172,411 Sun, 200,546) MAY 20 1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est. 1888 Reagan Claims Gagged CRLA Probe Witnesses Gov. Ronald Reagan is againstCRLA. complaining that the federal "A number of private at- inquiry commission on Cali- torneys have stepped for- fornia Rural Legal Assis- ward to present witnesses tance has imposed "a virtual and other evidence," Reagan- gag rule" on witnesses criti- told the Washington official. cal of the antipoverty law "They have requested the agency. opportunity to cross-examine "The procedures adopted CRLA's witnesses, but the by this commission are hav- commission has steadfastly ing the effect of muzzling refused their requests. witnesses whose testimony "Moreover, the commis- would otherwise shed valu- sion has imposed a virtual able light on the practices gag rule on non-CLRA wit- and procedures which have nesses, limiting their testi- been and are being engaged mony only to narrow items in by CRLA personnel," de- in the State OEO report. clared the governor. Any new information-how- Reagan voiced his criti- ever pertinent - is being cism yesterday in a lengthy ruled out of order." and sharply worded tele- Reagan apparently was re- gram to Frank Carlucci, ferring to the April 27 com- director of the US Office of mission ruling that any wit- Economic Opportunity ness not mentioned in the (OEO). Carlucci appointed critical State OEO report the three-judge panel which must file a request to testify is hearing the Reagan ad- by a May 12 deadline if he ministration's complaints wished to appear. HOLLISTER, CALIFORNIA - THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1971 EVENING FREE LANCE 9 TCE TO CREDITORS NOTICE TO CREDITORS Local HRD personnel have always been willing to discuss problems openly with anyone and while not easy to get along with personally, have gone out of their way to solve said problems. Discriminatory? No! As for the free clinic, there already is a free clinic for migrants at the local Health Department every Wednesday, Letter and as every poverty project has always been migrant oriented, I wonder about this free clinic. If you and all you concerned To The Editor citizens look around carefully, you will find that the only ones who benefit from your tax money are outsiders and that discrimination in the field of Mr. Editor: very little of that tax money is Many of us in San Benitc employment, housing, welfare staying in our community. County are in favor of CRLA and in many other areas But CRLA goes on, in the being re-funded. affecting the lives of the poor. name of the Consumers Co-op But when they start to tell and no one dares to speak out No question about it, they have been very effective in you how to vote, and that you because they are all powerfull in should not associate or talk to our courts. stemming the rise of racial your Congressman because he is Well, I've stuck my neck out, Republican, then I say it is time let's see who wants to chop it to impose limitations. off. Take the local Consumers To CRLA I would say, your Co-op as an example. actions and attitude call for It is completely under the limitations to be placed on your dominance of the Gilroy office organizations. of CRLA and its staff. It has been used as a front for John Hernandez the milk program, the hot lunch program, the lawsuit against HRD, and now for a free clinic. This is a duplication of existing services and therefore a waste of money and energy. I have been told by several school administrators that milk has been available for any child upon request. I've also been told that there will be "hot lunch" facilities in the new school and this was long before CRLA induced Consumers personnel to campaign for hot lunches. Reagan Claims Gagged 5-20-11 CRLA Probe Witnesses Gov. Ronald Reagan is againstCRLA. complaining that the federal "A number of private at- inquiry commission on Cali- torneys have stepped for- S fornia Rural Legal Assis- ward to present witnesses tance has imposed "a virtual and other evidence," Reagan gag rule" on witnesses criti- told the Washington official. cal of the antipoverty law "They have requested the 2-Day CRLA agency. opportunity to cross-examine "The procedures adopted CRLA's witnesses, but the HearingOpens by this commission are hav- commission has steadfastly ing the effect of muzzling refused their requests. EL CENTRO (AP) - The witnesses whose testimony "Moreover, the commis- federal commission investi- would otherwise shed valu- sion has imposed a virtual gating state charges against able light on the practices gag rule on non-CLRA wit- the California Rural Legal and procedures which have nesses, limiting their testi- Assistance began a two-day been and are being engaged mony only to narrow items hearing here today. in by CRLA personnel," de- in the State OEO report. The commission will con- clared the governor. Any new information-how- sider charges that El Centro Reagan voiced his criti- ever pertinent - is being office personnel took an ac- cism yesterday in a lengthy ruled out of order." tive part in the strike activi- and sharply worded tele- Reagan apparently was re- ties of Cesar Chavez' United gram to Frank Carlucci, ferring to the April 27 com- Farm Workers Organizing director of the US Office of mission ruling that any wit- Committee and that it trans- Economic Opportunity ness not mentioned in the ported students from nearby (OEO). Carlueci appointed critical State OEO report Brawley to the Imperial the three-judge panel which must file a request to testify County Courthouse to take is hearing the Reagan ad- by a May 12 deadline if he part in a demonstration by ministration's complaints wished to appear. union members. Los Angeles, Calif. Herald Examiner (Cir. D 519,391) MAY 20 1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est.1888 Soledad Official Slain; Charge Two Convicts SOLEDAD, Calif. (UPI)-An administrator was stabbed to death at Soledad State Prison Wednesday while a special commission was in the peniten- tiary investigating charges that a federally funded anti-poverty legal society had fomented violence among inmates. Kenneth E. Conant, 49, prison program administrator, was killed by two prisoners who attacked him with a knife at his desk. The commission hearing was adjourned after the slaying, which was the ninth at Soledad in less than 18 months. The killing apparently had no connection with the scheduled hearings into charges that the UPI Telephotos California Rural Legal Assis- ERIC HILTON JERRY LUND tance (CRLA) was involved in the "motivation" of earlier charged with murder. The violence at the prison. brother of George Jackson, one The attack on Conant did not of the "Soledad Brothers," was appear to have the racial killed, along with two San overtones of previous slayings Quentin convicts and a judge, that started with the killing of last Aug. 7 in a shootout at the three black inmates by a white Marin County Court in San guard in January, 1970. Rafael, Calif. Two prison employes suffered The state, which contends the minor injuries while subduing Marin County episode was Conant's assailants, who were aimed at freeing the "Soledad identified as Jerry W. Lund, 28, Brothers," has charged Angela and Eric Hilton, 24. Davis, former UCLA instructor Shortly after the killings and an avowed Communist, began in 1970 a white guard with taking part in the plot. She was stabbed fatally, and three is awaiting trial in San Rafael. black inmates, now known as The investigative commission the "Soledad Brothers," were at the prison when Conant was killed Wednesday is composed of retired Wisconsin Supreme Court Chief Justice George R. Currie, retired Maine Chief -UPI Telepholo Justice Robert B- Williamson, KENNETH CONANT and Colorado Supreme Court Justice Robert B. Lee. Prison victim Aide Slain At Desk In Soledad SOLEDAD (UPI) - An ad- ministrator was stabbed to death at Soledad State Prison Wednesday while a special commission was inside the walls probing charges that a federally funded anti-poverty legal society had fomented violence among inmates. The commission adjourned its hearings after Kenneth E. Conant, 49, prison program administrator, was fatally stabbed at his desk in the insti- tution about 9: 30 a.m. Two other prison employes in the room subdued the attack- ers, identified as inmates Jerry W. Lund, 28, and Eric Hilton, 24. The victim and his assail- ants were white. Conant's slaying - the ninth at Soledad in the last two years - had no apparent connection with the hearings into charges by some prison guards that the California Rural Legal Assist- ance was involved in the "mo- tivation" of previous violence at the prison. Los Angeles, Calif, Herald Examiner (Cir. D $19,391) MAY 20 1971 Allen's P.C.E. Est. 1888 : CRLA Witnesses : ( 'Muzzled' Reagan 2 : f SACRAMENTO (AP)-Gov. ings piecemeal each day, in- i Reagan has C 0 m plained to stead of in a report to you C Washington that a federal com- "I urge you to clarify immedi- mission probing California Ru- ately your instructions to the ( commission in such a manner E ral Legal Assistance is "muz- zling" witnesses who might as to require that its findings be t back up Reagan's charges filed directly with you, all in the t against CRLA. same context, and that the com- a mission members avail them- a The commission has adopted selves of all offered evidence or procedures which have "tied its testimony, even if it proves I hands in such a manner that the CRLA is not providing legal I truth cannot and will not be services to the poor." y known, without a major change in approach," Reagan said in a The panel of three out-of-state telegram sent yesterday to supreme court justices is prob- f Frank Carlucci, director of the ing the federally-funded legal federal Office of Economic Op- aid agency for the rural poor, portunity. now operating on a temporary in 1 federal grant. The governor wrote that "it I has become increasingly clear Reagan in December vetoed } that the procedures adopted by CRLA's $1.88 million full-year t this commission are having the grant, contending the agency vi- t effect of muzzling witnesses olated numerous federal guide t whose testimony would other- lines and did not concern itself S wise shed valuable light on the with the needs of individual a practices and procedures which poor people. C have been and are being en- gaged in by CRLA personnel." Reagan also wrote Carlucci that "your instructions to the CRLA investigating commission apparently have allowed them to publicly announce their find- Son Diego, Calif. Union (Cir. D 148,337 $ 253,550) MAY 20 1971 Allon's P.C.B. Est. 1888 Felons Kill Prison Counselor At Soledad SOLEDAD (UPI) - An ad- fornia Rural 1 gal Assistance ministrator was stabbed to was involved in the "motvia- death by two felons at Soledad tion" of previous violence at the prison. State Prison yesterday while a The attack yesterday did not special commission was inside have the racial overtones of the walls probing charges that previous killings, which were a federally funded anti-poverty touched off by the slaying of legal society had fomented vio- three Negro inmates by a white lence among inmates. guard in January, 1970. Three The commission adjourned white prison employes had been its hearings after Kenneth E. killed previously. Conant, 49, prison program ad- Soledad officials said Conant ministrator, was killed in an- was attacked at his desk. Two other part of the institution other prison employes, E. E. about 9:30 a.m. All prisoners Steele and Supervisor counselor were locked in their cells. Ed Whalen, suffered minor in- Conant's slaying - the ninth juries while subduing the at- at Soledad in two years - had tackers, identified as Jerry W. no apparent connection with the Lund, 28, and Eric V. Hilton, hearings into charges by some 24. They, like Conant, are prison guards that the Cali- white. Secremento, Calif. The Bee (Cir. D. 172,411 Sun, 200,546) MAY 20 0 1971 Allen's F.C.B. Est. 1888 2-Day CRLA HearingOpens EL CENTRO (AP) - The federal commission investi- gating state charges against the California Rural Legal Assistance began a two-day hearing here today. The commission will con- sider charges that El Centro office personnel took an ac- tive part in the strike activi- ties of Cesar Chavez' United Farm Workers Organizing Committee and that it trans- ported students from nearby Brawley to the Imperial County. Courthouse to take part in a demonstration by union members. Oakland, Calif. Tribune (Cir. D 225,03S, Sat. 209,931, Sun: 251,534) BIRY 80 1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est. 1858 Improved Soledad Security Proposed SOLEDAD The California State Employees Association The slaying took place while, in another part of the has called for "immediate prison, a special federal com- steps to prevent further trage- dies" at the Correctional mission was investigating Reagan Administration Training Facility prison here following the killing of a non - charges that the federally- uniformed prison program ad- ministrator yesterday. Kenneth E. Conant, 49, a 20-year career penologist, died financed California Rural Le- at his desk yesterday after gal Assistance aid group, had being stabbed above the left fomented previous violence ear with a prison - made among inmates. knive. The hearing, which had no Prison authorities identified apparent link with Conant's two suspects held in his death slaying, was indefinitely post- as Jerry Lund, 28, and Eric poned. Hilton, 24, both serving sen- tences of five years to life for robbery. Conant was the fourth pris- on employe slain since Janu- ary, 1970. Although previous attacks at the state's maximum secu- rity prison have had racial overtones, the victim and sus- pects yesterday were all white. Conant was slain while at a desk preparing to conduct a routine displinary committee hearing. Two other prison employes in the room at the time, Lt. E. D. Steele and supervising counselor Ed Whelan, were slightly injured in grappling with the suspect. Immediately following word of the attack, Loren V. Smith, general manager of the Cali- fornia State Employes Asso- ciation, called for improved security at the trouble- plagued prison, and asked that plans to build a new maxi- mum security prison be re- vived. "Security improvements were needed at Soledad before the first murders took place," Smith said San Jose, Calif. Mercury (Cir. D. 126,332) MAY 20 1971 Cons Slay Soledad Official 242 Prison Lockup Page 1 Ordered Tenth Killing In 16 Months By MAC BOWE Mercury Staff Writer ERIC HILTON JERRY W. LUND KENNETH CONANT SOLEDAD - A high Named as suspect Held in stabbing Slain official ranking prison official wa stabbed to death and two oth ers were injured Wednesda when they were attacked b two convicts at Soledad Stat Prison. The attack occurred about 9:30 a.m. just as a specia commission to hear testime ny about activities of the Ca ifornia Rural Legal Assis ance had convened elsewher in the prison. The commission canceled no When recaptured, he also hearings, which will be re- Soledad was convicted of second de- scheduled later. gree burglary, first degree robbery and escape. Dead is Kenneth E. Con- Hilton was committed in ant, 49, a program admin- Official 1967 from Los Angeles County istrator who, with several after his conviction for first others of equal positions, degree robbery. ranks just under the job of associate superintendent. Stowell said Conant was Slain sitting at his desk at the The slaying is the tenth time of the attack but since Jan. 13. 1970, including would nout describe details. three guards and six con- victs. (Continued from Page 1) Conant wa a 20-year veter- Injured slightly while cap- in the hand and once in the an of the California Depart- turing the two convict sus- peets Wednesday were I.t. E. neck according to the Monte- ment of Corrections, starting rey County Coroner's office. his career as a parole offi- D. Settle, a prison guard offi- Neither Stowell nor Monte- cer. cer. and supervising counse- rey County Dist. Atty. Wil. The fatal stabbing is the lor Edward Whalen. liam Curtis would comment second this year. Chick Stowell, assistant on possible motives for the On March 3 guard Robert to the superintendent, attack and killing. McCarthey, 43, was stabbed named convicts Jerry W. by a convict and died the fol- Lund, 28, and Eric Hilton, In Sacramento, Gov. lowing day. Ronald Reagan described The trial of three Soledad 24, as suspects in the slay- the slaying as "brutal and inmates in the fatal stabbling ing. wanton" as he spoke to of one of the three slain Sole- Stowell said Conant, Steele state women's and men's dad guards is now under way and Whalen were in his office clubs. in Salinas. On trial are Jesse preparing for a committee Phillips, James Wagner and meeting between ofificials Stowell said all 1,200 mer Roosevelt Williams, accused and convict representatives of the Central Facility, scent of killing guard William Shull when the two convixts burst of the murder, had beer last July 23. in the door. locked up. Funeral services for Con- "Normal activities have "Conant was stabbed with ant, who lived at 427 La been suspended," he said. a prison-made weapon. a Mesa Dr. in Salinas, are piece of rolled steel," Stowell The North Facility, which houses another 1,000 men, is pending at Muller Mortuary, said. He would not say who also in Salinas. operating without incident stabbed Conant. He is survived by his wid- "Whalen and Steel suffered however, Stowell said. ow, the former Helen Steven- minor injuries subduing the Conant, who has been at son, who once lived in San Soledad for the past 10 years, suspects," Stowell said. Jose, and a son. Conant was stabbed once was sort of a "junior ward- F en," according to Stowell. (Beek of Section, Col- 1) "He was in charge of Unit 1. in Central Facility, which is composed of Wings D, E, F and G, and houses about 600 men." Both Lund and Hilton have been in Soledad Pris- on for less than five months, according to Stow- ell. Both, however, had been serving sentences elsewhere in the state. Lund was committed in 1967 from Orange County on a first degree robbery con- viction. Later he escaped from Los Angeles County Jail where he was being housed for court proceedings in another matter. Los Angeles, Calif. Times 1,269,469) Allen's P.C.S. Est. 1883 X surgetted Citirs At the time of the attack, a hearing by a special federal commission con- Soledad Prison Official ducting an inquiry into the Califor- nia Rural Legal Assistance system was under way at the prison. It was halted and is to be rescheduled later. An investigator from the Monterey Slain; 2 Convicts Held County district attorney's office was at the prison on another matter Wednesday morning and was sum- moned to the scene of the stabbing within minutes. The suspects were immediately taken to 0 Wing, the Administrator Knifed maximum security adjustment cen- ter. as He Sits at Desk; Conant was in charge of a four- wing housing unit in the central fa- Motive Not Learned cility, supervising about 600 of Cuit- dad's approximately 2,900 inmates. He was No. 4 in the administrative Exclusive to The Times from a Staff Writer chain of command. A spokesman for the Department SALINAS-A high official at So- of Corrections in Sacramento said ledad Prison was fatally stabbed Conant was the first high rank- Wednesday when he was attacked ing official in the prison system kill- in his office by two inmates armed ed by inmates in recent years. with a homemade knife, authorities Lived in Housing Unit reported. Conant, a graduate of the Univer- Kenneth E. Conant, 49, a program sity of Denver who did postgraduate administrator and 20-year veteran of work at USC, was preparing to at- the State Department of Correc- tend a disciplinary and classification tions, died in the prison hospital af- committee meeting. However, pri- ter a doctor tried for 28 minutes to son spokesmen said that although revive him. the suspects lived in Conant's hous- The victim, who had been sitting ing unit, they were not scheduled to at his desk in his office when the un- face any disciplinary proceedings. provoked attack occurred, sustained Conant was the fourth member of a stab wound above the left ear. the Soledad staff killed in the last 16 A motive for the stabbing was not months. In addition, four black and immediately learned. two white inmates have died in the Lt. E. D. Steele and Ed Whalen, a same period. supervising counselor, were present Lund was first sent to Soledad in when Conant was stabbed shortly 1967 for first-degree robbery in Or- before a 9:30 a.m. committee meet- ange County. He later escaped from ing with inmates was to begin. the Los Angeles County Jail while They were slightly injured in sub- he was in litigation on another duing the two suspects, Jerry W. Lund, 28, and Eric V. Hilton, 24, charge. After Lund's recapture, he was both imprisoned since 1967 for rob- convicted of second-degree burglary bery in Los Angeles and Orange and first-degree robbery. In 1968, he counties. was convicted of escape. Frequent Racial Clashes Hilton was sentenced from Los Soledad Prison, located 20 miles Angeles County in 1967 for first-de- south of Salinas, has been the scene gree robbery. of frequent racial clashes over the last 18 months, but the victim of Wednesday's stabbing was white, as are the suspects. Los Angeles, Callf. Times (Cir, D 953,915 . $ 1,269,459) MAY 20 1971 Allen's P.C.B. Est. 1888 Reagan Raps Handling of CRLA Probe SACRAMENTO (UPI)- Gov. Reagan fired off a telegram to the Nixon Ad- ministration Wednesday complaining that the com- mission it appointed to in- vestigate California Rural Legal Assistance is "muz- zling witnesses" and not obtaining the facts. In a wire to Frank Car- lucci, director of the Fed- eral Office of Economic Opportunity, Reagan said "events of the past several days are deeply dis- turbing to me and should be to you." The governor charged that a "firm understand- ing" between him, the fed- eral OEO and the U.S. Jus- tice Department over how the commission's hearings would be conducted "has been breached repeatedly in recent months." Reagan told Carlucci he was particularly icked be- cause the commission pub- licly announced on Tues- day that three of the gov- ernor's 35 specific allega- tions against CRLA were without merit. Oakland, Calif. Tribune . (Cir. D 225,038, Scf. 209,931, Sun. 251,534) MAY 19 1971 Allen 3 P. C.B. Est. 1888 A special federal commis- Another sion investigating Governor Reagan's charges against the California Rural Legal Assist- ance had scheduled closed Slaying at hearings in the prison today but postponed them to an un- specified future date. Soledad In Sacramento, the Califor- 1 nia State Employes Associa- Paga tion called for "immediate steps to prevent further trage- SOLEDAD (AP) - Kenneth dies," including revival of E. Conant, 49, program ad- plans to build a new maxi- ministrator at Soledad Prison, mum security prison. Loren V. Smith, CSEA gen- was stabbed to death today eral manager, dispatched two and two other prison em- top aides to discuss with State ployes suffered minor injuries Department of Corrections of- in subduing his two convict at- ficials the possibility of build- ing the Otey Mesa Prison in tackers, officials said. San Diego County. The project He was the fourth prison was once planned to replace employe stabbed to death San Quentin Prison, but was since Jan. 13, 1970. scrapped for financial rea- Chuck Stowell, assistant su- sons. perintendent, said Jerry W. "Security improvements Lund, 28, and Eric V. Hilton, were needed at Soledad before 24, both Los Angeles robbers the first murders took place," imprisoned since 1967, were Smith said. "It should be ob- held and a prison-made knife vious by now that the actions was recovered. were insufficient. Lt. E. D. Steele and super- "For the kind of hardened vising counsellor Ed Whalen inmate Soledad is called upon were slightly hurt in overpow- to handle, the facility is anti- ering the convicts. quated," he added. While racial problems were involved in most previous in- cidents, prison officials said the principals in this case ] were Caucasian. ] The stabbing took place at 1 9:30 a.m. as Conant sat at a : desk in the prison's central fa- 1 cility, preparing to preside at : committee meetings with pris- ( oners. Steele and Whalen were in { the room. 1 An investigator for the Mon- ] terey County district attorney was in the prison on another ; matter and reached the scene within moments. U. Both Sides Angry New CRLA Probe Charges Associated Press Governor Reagan said Tuesday critics of California Rural Legal Assistance Inc. have been "restricted" in hearings of a blue-ribbon panel appointed by the Nixon administration to investigate CRLA. Metro Page The Republican governor renewed his attack on the three-judge panel at his The Sacramento Union weekly news conference, complaining the judges had shown "an unwillingness to allow or hear testimony that might be Wednesday Morning, May 19, 1971 Page A3 detrimental to CRLA's activities." At the same time, the head of the As- sembly Labor Relations Committe said he commission Tuesday, charging the com- what we know now, and if we had the in- will demand a state investigation into "in- mission with bias in favor of the CRLA. formation we have now, we could have timidation" of two welfare workers gone ahead," Reagan said. named as potential witnesses in CRLA AMELIA HARRIS of Salinas, a former hearings. CRLA secretary who was to have testified ON OTHER matters, Reagan said: in support of the governor's veto of CRLA Democrats' $2-billion tax reform "I AM PERSONALLY outraged by the federal funds, sent a telegram, saying, passed by an Assembly committee Mon- clearly arbitrary action of the director of "Having observed the commission's day is still unacceptable to him because it the Imperial County Department of Wel- biased limitations on testimony, I find has half a billion dollars of tax increases fare in respect to Donna and Michael Eng- that the commission is not interested in hidden. He said the plan was also unsound lish," Assemblyman David A. Roberti, D- learning the whole truth but is merely because it has no spending limits on local Los Angeles, told a news conference. going through the motions." government and added he still might in The man and wife say they have been Reagan said he believes President troduce his own tax reform plan this year. ordered to rémain in the county welfare Nixon is committed to finding a new sys- Coastline conservation must start building during working hours. forbidden tem of legal help for the poor to replace on the local level with the state playing to use the telephone and restrooms with- CRLA no matter how the panel rules. some part, but not with a total veto. out permission and barred from meeting Reagan also said Democrats who University of California regents "no together or with welfare recipients whose claim he could have put most of his pre- doubt" will do something about a Berke- cases they ve been handling. sent welfare reform into effect four years ley campus student newspaper editorial In Salinas, a woman who was to have ago when he first took office are "misin- supporting last weekends second anniver- been a key witness in Reagan's fight de- formed." sary demonstration at People's Park in clined to testify before a special federal "Yes, if we had known four years ago Berkeley.

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    "ocrText": "Ronald Reagan Presidential Library\nDigital Library Collections\nThis is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections.\nCollection: Reagan, Ronald: Gubernatorial Papers,\n1966-74: Press Unit\nFolder Title: CRLA - Press Clippings, May 1971\n(2 of 6)\nBox: P29\nTo see more digitized collections visit:\nhttps://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library\nTo see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit:\nhttps://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection\nContact a reference archivist at: [email protected]\nCitation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing\nNational Archives Catalogue: https://catalog.archives.gov/\nOakland, Calif.\nTribune\n(Cir. D 225,038, Sat. 209,931,\nSun. 251,534)\nMAY 21 1971\nAllen's\nP.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nAngela\nLink\nThe commission earlier this\nweek in Salinas found \"no\nmerit\" in four of 39 charges\nincluded in the Unler report of\nwhich more evidence was re-\nquested.\nTo Legal Aid\nYesterday's ruling applied\nto Uhler's allegation involving\nMiss Davis and George Jack-\nson, one of the three Soledad\ninmates. He is the brother of\nTossed\nOut\nJonathan Jackson, who died\nwith two convicts and a judge\nduring the Marin County\nshooting last August.\nThe commission, appointed\nEL CENTRO (AP)-A fed-\nance lawyers were \"improper-\nto investigate CRLA after\neral commission has dis-\nly\" involved with black activ-\nReagan vetoed its $1.8-million\nmissed as unfounded Reagan\nist Angela Davis and the Sole-\nbudget from federal antipov-\nadministration charges that\ndad Brothers.\nerty funds, is scheduled to\nCalifornia Rural Legal Assist-\nCommission Chairman Rob-\nconsider allegations regarding\nert B. Williamson said yester-\nCRLA and other Soledad\nday the three-judge panel had\nBrothers at further hearings\nasked the state for more evi-\nJune 3 in San Francisco.\ndence on its charges against\nMrs. English testified after\nthe CRLA but received none.\nCRLA attorneys said earlier\nHe said the commission spe-\nthis week that she had been\ncifically asked for details on\nunder \"a form of house ar-\nallegations concerning Miss\nrest\" by welfare officials be-\nDavis and three black Soledad\ncause she intended to go be-\nPrison inmates accused of\nfore the commission.\nkilling a white guard.\nShe was allowed to appear\n\"But no evidence whatsoev-\non leave from her work with-\ner has been produced to sup-\nout pay.\nport any claim of misconduct\nCRLA attorneys had won\nby CRLA personnel or attor-\n\"admiration and respect\"\nneys regarding these mat-\nfrom low-income people, Mrs.\nters,\". said Williamson, a re-\nEnglish said. After Reagan's\ntired chief justice of Maine.\nveto of the CRLA budget,\nA report by Lewis K. Uhler,\nsome of the poor \"went down\nstate director of the Office of\nto the church and lit candles\nEconomic Opportunity,\nin hope the veto would be\ncharged CRLA attorneys \"in-\noverturned.\"\ntervened\" at the prison in an\nThe courtroom hearing was\neffort to arrange a meeting\nattended by more than 100\nbetween Miss Davis and one\npersons, including several\nof the inmates.\nMexican-Americans listening\nDuring yesterday's proceed-\nto a Spanish translation\nings the commission heard\nthrough earphones.\ntestimony from an Imperial\nCounty welfare worker who\nstated termination of the\nCRLA program would cause\nbitterness among the poor.\nDonna English said the\nCRLA was instrumental in the\nadoption of the Work Incen-\ntive Program to assist welfare\nrecipients obtain training that\nwould qualify them for jobs.\nSan Jose, Calif.\nMercury\n(Cir. D. 126,382)\nMAY 21 1971\nFEDERAL PANEL'S FINDING\nPage 1\nState CRLA Attack\nRuled 'Unfounded'\nFrom: The Los Angeles Times\nReagan that CRLA attorneys\ncision after hearing testimo-\nEL CENTRO - The Feder-\nwere \"imporperly involved\"\nny Wednesday in a closed\nJackson is one of the Sole-\nal Commission on California\nwith Angela Davis and three\nsession at Soledad Prison.\ndad Brothers, three black in-\n;\nRural Legal Assistance on\nprison inmates known as the\nThat proceeding was sus-\nmates accused of murdering\nThursday dismissed as \"to-\nSoledad Brothers.\ntally unfounded and without\npended after it was learned a\na white prison guard. He is\nThe commission, now hold-\nthe brother of Jonathan\n:-\nmerit\" allegations by the ad-\ning public hearings here, an-\nprison official had been\nJackson, who died with two\ny\nministration of Gov. Ronald\nnounced it had made the de-\nstabbed to death in another\nconvicts and a superior court\na\npart of, the facility. Authori-\njudge in an abortive court-\nties told the commission\nroom kidnap and shooting in-\ncident last August at the\nthere was \"absolutely no\nMarin County Civic Center.\nconnection\" between its pro-\nThe state has charged Miss\nceedings and the killing.\nDavis with murder, kidnap-\nChairman Robert William-\ning and conspiracy, alleging\nson noted that the commis-\nshe was involved in a plot to\nsion had asked the Reagan\nuse hostages taken in the in-\nadministration for additional\ncident as a means to free the\nevidence on its charges\nSoledad Brothers.\nagainst CRLA regarding\nMiss Davis and the inmates.\nThe commission ruling\nalso applied to charges by\n\"But.\" said Williamson,\nthe state that CRLA attor-\n\"no evidence whatsoever\nneys had been improperly\nhas been produced to sup-\ninvolved with another\nport any claim of miscon-\ngroup 0 f inmates, called\nduct by CRLA personnel or\nthe Soledad Seven.\nattorneys regarding these\nmatters \"\nThree of this group are\nnow on trial for the death of\nThe commission ruling ap-\nanother prison guard.\nplied to allegations made in\nCharges have been dropped\nthe \"Uhler Report.\" pre-\nagainst the remaining four.\npared by Lewis Uhler, direc-\nOther allegations made by\ntor of the California Office of\nthe Reagan administration\nEconomic Opportunity, that\nconcerning CRLA and other\nCRLA attorneys and another\nSoledad inmates will be\nlawyer \"intervened\" at Sole-\nheard at further proceedings\ndad \"in an attempt to ar-\nof the commission in San\nrange a visit for Angela Da-\nFrancisco on June 3.\nvis to meet with George\nJackson.\"\nSan Jose, Calif.\nThe News\n(Cir. D. 75,531)\nMAY 21 1971\nAllen's\nP.C.B.\nEst. I888\n2 Reagan CRLA Charges\nEL CENTRO(AP)\n--A federal commission has\ndismissed as unfounded Rea-\nBranded 'False'\ngan Administration charges\nthat California Rural Legal\nAssistance lawyers were\n\"improperly\" involved with\nblack activist Angela Davis\nand the Soledad Brothers.\nCommission Chairman\npanel had asked the state for\n\"But no evidence what-\nRobert B. Williamson said\nmore evidence on its charges\nsoever has been produced to\nThursday the three-judge\nagainst the CRLA but re-\nsupport any claim of miscon-\nceived none.\nduct by CRLA personnel or\nattorneys regarding these\nHe said the commission\nmatters,\" said Williamson, a\nspecifically asked for details\nretired chief justice of\non allegations concerning\nMaine.\nMiss Davis and three black\nA report by Lewis K. Uhl-\nSoledad Prison inmates ac-\ner, state director of the Of-\ncused of killing a white\nfice of Economic Opportuni-\nguard.\nty, charged CRLA attorneys\n7\n\"intervened\" at the prison in\nCRLA program would cause\nan effort to arrange a meet-\nbitterness among the poor.\ning between Miss Davis and\nDonna English said the\none of the inmates.\nCRLA was instrumental in\nDuring Thursday's pro-\nthe adoption of the Work In\nceedings the commission\ncentive Program to assis\nheard testimony from an Im-\nwelfare recipients obtair\nperial County welfare worker\ntraining that would qualif:\nwho stated termination of the\nthem for jobs.\nPROBERS: may 21.\nCRLA Did Did\n1\nNot{Aid\nsanta\nRosa\nI\n:\nAngela\nPhl.\nEL CENTRO (UPI) -A\nfederal commission has dis-\nmissed as \"totally unfounded\nand without merit\" allegations\nby the Reagan Administration\nthat attorneys for the California\nRural Legal Assistance were\n\"improperly involved\" with\nAngela Davis and the \"Soledad\nBrothers.\"\nThe decision was made in a\nclosed session at Soledad prison\nWednesday but was not an-\nnounced until Thursday during\na public hearing here.\n\"No evidence whatsoever has\nbeen produced to support any\nclaim of misconduct by CRLA\npersonnel or attorneys regard-\ning these matters,\" said\ncommission chairman Robert\nB. Williamson, retired chief\njustice of Maine.\nThe commission, composed of\nthree judges, is holding hear-\nirigs around the state intol the\nContinued on Page 6, Col. 1)\nAngera\n1\n(Continued from Page 1)\nCRLA at the direction of the\nNixon Administration after\nGov. Ronald Reagan last\nDecember vetoed the federal\ngrant funding the organization.\nThursday's announcement re-\nferred to charges contained in a\nreport prepared by state Office\nof Economic Opportunity direc-\ntor Lewis K. Uhler. He alleged\nthat CRLA attorneys and\nanother lawyer \"intervened\" at\nthe prison in an effort to\narrange a meeting between\nGeorge Jackson, one of the\n\"Soledad brothers,\" and Miss\nDavis.\nSanta Rosa P.O.\nThe decision also applied to\ncharges that CRLA attorneys\nwere involved improperly with\n5-21-71\nanother group of inmates\nknown as the \"Soledad Seven,\"\nthree of whom are on trial for\nthe death of a guard.\nThe commission will consider\nother allegations made by the\nReagan Administration against\nCRLA at a. hearing in San\nFrancisco June 3.\nLos Angeles, Cellif.\nTimes\n(Cir. 0.955,945 $ 1,269,469)\nMAY 21 1971\nAllen's\nC.S.\nEst. 1888\nENCOUNTER IN HALLWAY\nJudge Gets Into Struggling\nMatch With TV Cameraman\nExclusive to The Times from a Staff Writer\nEL CENTRO-\"Who nt the hell\nordered to pay a $50 fine or spend 10\nare you?\" Los Angeles televisione\ndays in jail.\nmeraman Leslie Paul Meeks cried\nCo-workers obtained a Superior\nThursday as he struggled with a\nCourt habeas corpus writ freeing\nman in a hallway of the court build-\nMeeks and said the case would be\ning here.\nappealed.\n\"I'm the judge,\" Meeks' elderly\nAccording to witnesses, the hall-\nopponent shouted back, \"and I'm\nway encounter came while a KNBC\ngoing to get you for contempt of\ncrew was filming an interview with\ncourt.\"\na witness from a hearing on a CRLA\ncontroversy.\nThe pushing match between\nFloodlights were lighted and film\nMeeks, ameraman for station\nwas rolling when Keating, 66, ap-\nKNBC, and Justice Court Judge\npeared. He pointed to a tripod in the\nHugh Keating ended abruptly.\nmiddle of the hall and then to the\nThe judge, who had interrupted\ndoorway to his office on the other\nMeeks by grabbing a tripod and\nside.\nknocking over a floodlight as the lat-\n\"I've got to get into that office,\" he\nter was filming an interview,\nsaid. \"Get the hell out of the way.\"\nstormed into his nearby office and\nMeeks, not realizing the man who\ncalled Sheriff Raymond Rowe.\nspoke also was the judge, said: \"You\nMoments later, the sheriff and six\ncan go around.\"\ndeputies arrived and took Meeks to\n\"I don't choose to go around,\" the\njail. He was found in contempt and\njudge said. The struggle followed.\nC\nSan Francisco, Calif.\nExaminer\n(Cir. D 203,026 - Sol. 159,057)\nMAY 21 1971\nAllen's P.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nCRLA Critic\nHas Office\nFirebombed\nSpecial to The Examiner\nSALINAS - The law of-\nfice of a witness who testi-\nfied earlier this week, criti-\ncizing the California Rural\nLegal Assistance in its\ndealings over Cesar Chav-\nez' lettuce boycott. was\nfirebombed before dawn to-\nday.\nA bomb tossed through a\nwindow caused damage to\nthe office and property of\nattorney William Moreno\nestimated at $20.000 by a\nfire inspector. Moreno ar-\nrived in time to salvage\nsome of his files.\n12-Press Democrat, Santa Rosa, California, Thursday, May 20, 1971\nReagan: Muzzling\nIn CRLA Probe\nSACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov.\nlight on the practices and\nRonald Reagan has charged the\nprocedures which have been\ncommission appointed by the\nand are being engaged in by\nNixon administration to investi-\nCRLA personnel,' Reagan said.\ngate the California Rural Legal\nThe governor told Carlucei\nAssistance is \"muzzling witnes-\n\"the fault for the current\nses.\"\nconfusing state of affairs must\n\"Events of the past several\nlie at the doorstep of federal\ndays,\" Reagan said Wednesday\nOEO which misinformed the\nin a telegram to Frank\ncommission members as to\nCarlucci, director of the federal\ntheir proper role in these\nOffice of Economic Opportuni-\nproceedings-to investigate all\nty, \"are deeply disturbing to\nof the facts pertaining to\nme and should be to you.\"\nCRLA's activities.\"\nHe charged that a \"firm\nReagan has increasingly at-\nunderstanding\" between him,\ntacked the commission's proce-\nthe federal OEO and the U.S.\ndures, and at his Tuesday news\nJustice Department over the\nconference said, \"very frankly\ncommission's procedures \"has\nI don't have too much\nbeen breached repeatedly in\nconfidence in what is going to\nrecent months.\"\nbe the outcome of the\nConsisting of three out-of-\ncommission's findings.\"\nstate judges, the commission is\nA commission hearing which\nconducting hearings to deter-\nhad started Wednesday inside\nmine whether CRLA should\nSoledad State Prison was\ncontinue to exist. The probe\ncancelled because two convicts\nwas prompted by Reagan's veto\nstabbed a prison official to\nlast December of CRLA's $1.8\ndeath.\nmillion federal grant.\nRobert B. Williamson, com-\nThe governor charged the\nmission chairman, said prison\nagency, now operating on a\nofficials had told him \"there is\ntemporary grant, did not really\nabsolutely no connection be-\nserve the needs of the poor as\ntween the hearing and this\nit was set up to do and that it\ntragic event.\"\nviolated OEO regulations.\nCommissioners had intended\nReagan told Carlucci he was\nto investigate assertions that\nparticularly angry because the\nCRLA attorneys were connect-\ncommission announced Tuesday\ned to prison tensions and at\nthat three of the governor's 35\nleast partially responsible for\nspecific allegations against the\nracial disturbances there.\nagency were without merit.\nBefore the meeting started, a\n\"I urge you to clarify\nspokesman for the California\nImmediately your instructions\nCorrectional Officers Associa-\nto the commission in such a\ntion complained that the state's\nmanner as to require that its\nattorney general was \"handcuf-\nfindings be filed directly with\nfing\" guards and prison offi-\nyou all in the same context,\"\ncials who planned to testify.\nhe told Carlucci.\nKenneth Brown, the organiza-\nThe governor said \"the\ntion's press officer, said the\ncommission has imposed a\nattorney general's office had\nvirtual gag rule on non-CRLA\nprohibited guards and officials\nwitnesses. limiting their testi-\nfrom testifying on any incident\nmony only to narrow items\"\nthat may be pending in the\ncontained in the Reagan courts, or on current investiga-\nadministration report that tions that might lead to an\nprompted his veto.\ninquiry.\n\"It has become increasingly\nThe CRLA has denied all\nclear that the procedures\nassertions concerning its law-\nadopted by this commission are\nyers and the prison.\nhaving the effect of muzzling\nCommissioners will meet\nwitnesses whose testimony\ntoday and Saturday in El\nwould otherwise shed valuable\nCentro.\nSan Francisco, Calif.\nExaminer\n(Cir. D 203,026 - Sat. 159,057)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllon\nP.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nKENNETH CONANT, ERICK HILTON AND JERRY LUND\nSlain Soledad administrator (left) and suspects held in fatal knifing\n-UPI Photos\nTight Security Follows\nStabbing at Soledad\nSpecial to The Examiner\nRobbers\nSOLEDAD - Prisoners at\nTwo suspects - Orange\nSoledad State Prison re-\nCounty robber and jail escap-\nmained locked in their cells\nee Jerry W. Lund, 28, and\nas the investigation contin-\nLos Angeles robber Erick V.\nHilton, 24 - were being held\nued into the fatal stabbing\nin maximum security.\nof a prison official.\nCurtis said inmate assault\nThe prisoners were being\nand murder charges will be\ntaken to eat in groups of 150\nfiled against Lund and Hil-\nin the prison's Central Facili-\nton. He did not say whether\nty, where Kenneth E. Con-\nothers will be charged al-\nant, 49, a program adminis-\nthough he said the slaying\ntrator. was stabbed to death\napparently was planned.\nand two other officials were\n\"It appears to be an execu-\nwounded.\nDistrict Attorney William\nCurtis interrogated staff\nmembers and inmates until\nlate last night and resumed\nthe investigation today.\ntion slaying\na very delib-\nA memorial service was\nerate thing.\"\nscheduled for 2 p.m. Satur-\nAssistant Prison Superin-\nday at First Methodist\ntendent Chuck Stowell said\nChurch in Salinas.\nno motive has been uncov-\nered but it appeared Con-\nThe stabbing brought an\nant's slaying - unlike others\nabrupt suspension of a spe-\nat the troubled prison-was\ncial three-judge federal com-\nnot racially motivated. Con-\nmission investigation inside\nant and his attackers were\nwhite.\nthe prison into charges by\nGovernor Reagan that the\nHome-Made Knife\nCalifornia Rural Legal As-\nA knife made from a piece\nsistance has engaged in im-\nof steel was the death weap-\nproper actions at Soledad.\non.\nThe hearing moved on to El\nExtra guards went on duty\nCentro in Imperial County to-\nand 1200 prisoners were\nday.\nlocked in their cells after the\nIn Sacramento. Loren V.\n10th violent death - four of-\nSmith, general manager of\nficials and six convicts -\nthe California State Employ-\nsince Jan. 15, 1970. Family\ners Association, said the\nvisits were cancelled today\nhardened inmates at Soledad\nand outside activities were\nshould be put in a new maxi-\ncancelled through May 31.\nmum security prison.\nConant was knifed in the\nback of the head as he sat at\n\"The (Soledad) facility is\nthe desk where he handled\nantiquated,\" Smith asserted.»\nprogramming for 600 con-\nIt was quite normal for\nvicts. Lt. E. D. Steele and\nconvicts to be in the head-\nSupervising Counselor Ed\nquarters room where Conant,\nWhalen were injured slightly\na 20-year veteran in penal\nwhen they went to Conant's\nwork, dealt with such prob-\naid.\nlems as rehabilitation and\nServices\ntraining. But Lund and Hil-\nton were not on the prisoner\nPrivate funeral services\ncommittee meeting with Con-\nwere held for Conant today.\nant.\nThe Reagan Adminis-\nLos Angeles, Calif.\ntration, in a document pre-\nTimes\npared by the state Office\nCity is 955,915 $ 1,269,469\nof Economic Opportunity\ndirector, Lewis K. Uhler,\nhad asserted that CRLA\nMAY 20 1971\nattorneys represented in-\nmates at Soledad in viola-\ntion of federal regulations.\nP.C.S.\n1898\nIt was those and other\ncharges by Uhler that\nReagan used as a basis for\nhis veto of CRLA's $1.8\nCRLA\nInvestigators\nmillion budget, which is\nsupported by federal anti-\npoverty funds.\nDelay Soledad Hearing\nLater, in answer to an\ninquiry by Unler, Ray-\nmond K. Procunier, state\nof Proceedings Suspended After Slaying\ndirector of corrections, as-\nserted that CRLA attor-\nPrison Official Will Resume June 3\nneys had played a \"major\nBY PHILIP HAGER\nTimes Staff Writer\nrole\" in disturbances in\nstate prisons.\nSOLEDAD, Calif. A\n(Mr. and Mrs. Michael\nfederal commission inves-\nEnglish said Florence\nLast month, Moe Cama-\ntigating the California\nKinlock, the welfare direc-\ncho, president of the Cali-\nRural Legal Assistance\ntor, has prohibited them\nfornia Correctional Offi-\ncontroversy heard testi-\nfrom making or receiving\ncers Assn., said there was\nmony Wednesday in a\ntelephone calls or visiting\n\"reason to believe\" that a\nclosed hearing at Soledad\nrestrooms without permis-\nseries of assaults that took\nState Prison.\nsion and has declined to\nThe proceedings were\napprove leave SO they can\nsuspended at midmorning\ntestify at the commission\nplace at Soledad \"were\nafter it was learned that a\nhearings on CRLA.\nmotivated by or at least an\nprison administrator had\n(Winifred Hutchens,\noutgrowth of talks with\nbeen killed in another part\nassistant welfare director,\ncertain attorneys, many of\nof the facility.\nsaid \"some restrictions\nthem employed by\nState officials said they\nhave been placed against\nCRLA.\"\nhad no reason to believe\nthe Englishes\nBut if\nNeither Procunier nor\nthere was a connection be-\nanyone has been su b-\nCamacho presented details\ntween the killing and the\npoenaed to testify at a\nof their charges and\nhearings on CRLA.\nhearing, it has been our\nCRLA officials vigorously\nThe commission indicat-\npolicy to give permission\ndenied the allegations.\ned it would conduct the re-\nand even provide trans-\nAt Wednesday's hearing,\nmainder of the proceed-\nportation.\" Any elabora-\nininates quoted in the Uh-\nings scheduled for Soledad\ntion about the restrictions\nler report had completed\non June 23 in San Francis-\nwould have to come from\ntheir testimony when the\n65. Today's hearings will\nMrs. Kinlock, she said.\nkilling was reported. Be-\nbe at El Centro.\nMrs. Kinlock was not\ncause guards waiting to\n(In El Centro, an Imper-\navailable for comment.\ntestify had been closely as-\nial County Welfare De-\nWants to Testify\nsociated with the dead of-\npartment official agreed\n(CRLA attorneys earlier\nficer, the commission de-\nWednesday that \"some re-\nthis week said Mrs. Eng-\ncided to suspend the hear-\nstrictions\" had been\nplaced on two social work-\nlish wanted to testify on\nings.\ners who claim they have\nbehalf of CRLA.)\nT he commission had\nvirtually been held priso-\nners at their desks during\nagreed to private proceed-\nworking hours. Associated\nings at the prison to pro-\ntect corrections officers\nPress reported.\nand inmates who request-\ned anonymity. But a trans-\ncript of the testimony,\nwith those names and pos-\nsibly other identifying in-\nformation deleted, will be\nmade public, perhaps by\nnext week.\nSacromento, Calif.\nThe Bee\n(Cir. D. 172/11 Sun. 200,346)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllen's\nP.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nSoledad Prison Killing Is\nNinth Within 18 Months\nSOLEDAD (UPI) - A\nFour prison employes and\nveteran Soledad State Prison\nfive inmates have died in the\nofficial was stabbed to death\nracially tense prison 115\nWednesday - the ninth per-\nmiles south of San Francisco\nson killed at California's\nsince January 1970, when a\ntroubled penitentiary in the\nguard killed three black\npast 18 months.\nprisoners fighting in the\nKenneth E. Conant, 49, a\nyard. A young white guard\nprogram administrator, was\nwas killed a few days later.\nstabbed in the back of the\nThe slaying of Conant ap-\nhead with a prison-made\nparently had no connection\nknife and two other officials\nwith the earlier racial inci-\nsuffered minor wounds\ndents as the victim and the\nwhile subduing his inmate\ntwo inmates seized after his\nattackers.\ndeath were white. Jerry W.\nLund, 28, and Eric Hilton,\n29, both convicted robbers\nfrom Southern California,\nwere held for investigation\nof murder.\nThe slaying occurred as a\nspecial federal commission\nwas meeting in another part\nof the prison investigating\ncharges that California-Ru-\nral Legal Assistance, a feder-\nally financed legal aid group\nhad fomented violence\namong inmates. The hear-\nings were indefinitely post-\nponed after Conant's death.\nThree out-of-state judges\nare investigating charges by\nthe Reagan administration\nagainst CRLA, including the\naccusation that its attorneys\nwere involved in the \"moti-\nvation\" of earlier violence at\nSoledad. The hearings had\nno apparent link to Wednes-\nday's killing\nTwo groups of black con-\nvicts - the \"Soledad Broth-\ners\" and \"Soledad Seven\" -\nhave been charged with the\nslayings of two white prison\nguards in the months follow.\ning the deaths of the three\nNegro prisoners.\nConant, of Salinas, was a\nnonuniformed employe who\ndirected activities, custody\nrequirement and rehabilita-\ntion programs for inmates.\nBurbank, Calif.\nDaily Review\n(Cir. 6XW 11,013)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllen's P.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nWitnesses blocked\nSACRAMENTO - Gov. Reagan says\nthe federal commission investigating\nCalifornia Rurah Legal Assistance is\n\"muzzling\" potential witnesses who\nmight substantiate Reagan's charges\nagainst the controversial agency.\nIn a telegram to Washington, Reagan\nsaid the commission is operating under\nrules which have \"tied its hands in such\na manner that the truth cannot and will\nnot be known without a major change in\napproach.\"\nHis latest criticism was in a telegram\nWednesday to Frank Carlucci, director\nof the federal Office of Economic Oppor-\ntunity which sent the panel of three out-\nof-state supreme court justices to probe\nCRLA's activities.\nSanta And, Celif.\nKis (Evening Edition)\nyou See Eva 91111\n143,012)\nMAY 30 1971\nCRLA Probers\n(Continued From Page A-1)\nlight on the practices and\nCRLA Probers Muzzling\nprocedures which have been\nand are being engaged in by\nCRLA personnel,\" Reagan said.\nThe governor told Carlucci\n\"the fault for the current\nWitnesses, Reagan Says\nconfusing state of affairs must\nlie at the doorstep of federal\nOEO which misinformed the\ncommission members as to\nSACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov.\nConsisting of three out-of-\nReagan told Carlucci he was\ntheir proper role in these\nI\nRonald Reagan has charged the\nstate judges, the commission is\nparticularly angry because the\n1\nproceedings-to investigate all\ncommission appointed by the\nconducting hearings to deter-\ncommission announced Tuesday\nof the facts pertaining to\nI\nmine whether CRLA should\nCRLA's activities.\"\nNixon administration to investi-\ncontinue to exist. The probe\nthat three of the governor's 35\ngate the California Rural Legal\nwas prompted by Reagan's veto\nspecific allegations against the\nReagan has increasingly at-\nagency were without merit.\ntacked the commission's proce-\nAssistance is \"muzzling witnes-\nlast December of CRLA's $1.8\nses.\"\n\"I urge you to clarify\ndures, and at his Tuesday news\nmillion federal grant.\nThe governor charged the\nimmediately your instructions\nconference said, \"very frankly\n**\n\"Events of the past several\nI don't have too much\n7\ndays,\" Reagan said Wednesday\nagency, now operating on a\nto the commission in such a\n1\ntemporary grant, did not really\nmanner as to require that its\nconfidence in what is going to\nin a telegram to Frank\nbe the outcome of the\n:\nCarlucci, director of the federal\nserve the needs of the poor as\nfindings be filed directly with\n!\nOffice of Economic Opportuni-\nit was set up to do and that it\nyou all in the same context,\"\ncommission's findings.\"\nhe told Carlucci.\nA commission hearing which\n:\nty, \"are deeply disturbing to\nviolated OEO regulations.\nme and should be to you.\"\nThe governor said \"the\nwas started Wednesday inside\nHe charged that a \"firm\ncommission has imposed a\nSoledad State Prison was\nunderstanding\" between him,\nvirtual gag rule on non-CRLA\nconceled because two convicts\nthe federal OEO and the U.S.\nwitnesses, limiting their testi-\nstabbed a prison official to\nJustice Department over the\nmony only to narrow items\"\ndeath.\n1\ncommission's procedures \"has\ncontained in the Reagan\nRobert B. Williamson, com-\nbeen breached repeatedly in\nadministration report that\nmission chairman, said prison\nofficials had told him \"there is\n,\nrecent months.\"\n:\n3\nprompted his veto.\n1\n\"It has become increasingly\nabsolutely no connection be-\nclear that the procedures\ntween the hearing and this\nor\nadopted by this commission are\ntragic event.\"\nCommissioners had intended\n>\nhaving the effect of muzzling\nE\nwitnesses whose testimony\nto investigate assertions that\n,\nwould otherwise shed valuable\nCRLA attorneys were connect-\n1\n(Turn To Page A2 Col. 3)\ned to prison tensions and at\nleast partially responsible for\nracial disturbances there.\n1\nBefore the meeting started, a\nspokesman for the California\nCorrectional Officers Associa-\ntion complained that the state's\nattorney general was \"handcuf-\nfing\" guards and prison offi-\ncials who planned to testify.\nKenneth Brown, the organiza-\ntion's press officer, said the\nattorney general's office had\nprohibited guards and officials\nfrom testifying on any incident\nthat may be pending in the\ncourts, or on current investiga-\ntions that might lead to an\ninquiry.\nThis CRLA has denied all\nassertions concerning its law-\nyers and the prison.\nCommissioners will meet\ntoday and Saturday in El\nCentro.\nGlendale, Calif.\nNews Press\n(Cir. 6XW 23,253)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllen P. C.B.\nEst. 1888\nWitnesses blocked\nSACRAMENTO - Gov. Reagan says\nthe federal commission investigating\nC\nCalifornia Rural Legal Assistance is\nr\n\"muzzling\" potential witnesses who\nj\nmight substantiate Reagan's charges\nb\nagainst the controversial agency.\nit\nIn a telegram to Washington, Reagan\nsaid the commission is operating under\nti\nrules which have \"tied its hands in such\nV\na manner that the truth cannot and will\ng\nnot be known without a major change in\nu\napproach.\"\nHis latest criticism was in a telegram\nWednesday to Frank Carlucci, director\nof the federal Office of Economic Oppor-\nh:\ntunity which sent the panel of three out-\nB\nof-state supreme court justices to probe\ngi\nCRLA's activities.\nTC\nV₁\nEl Centro, Calif.\nImperial Valley Press\n(Cir. D 7,831)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllen\nP.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nReagan charges CRLA\nprobe with \"muzzling\"\nSACRAMENTO (UPI) Gov.\nOffice of Economic Opportuni-\nconducting hearings to deter-\nRonald Reagan has charged the\nty, \"are deeply disturbing to\nmine whether CRLA should\ncommission appointed by the\nme and should be to you.\"\ncontinue to exist. The probe\nNixon administration to investi-\nHe charged that a \"firm\nwas prompted by Reagan's veto\ngate the California Rural Legal\nunderstanding\" between him,\nlast December of CRLA's $1.8\nAssistance is \"muzzling witnes-\nthe federal OEO and the U.S.\nmillion federal grant.\nses.\nJustice Department over the\nThe governor charged the\n\"Events of the past several\ncommission's procedures \"has\nagency, now operating on a\ndays,\" Reagan said Wednesday\nbeen breached repeatedly in\ntemporary grant, did not really\nin a telegram to Frank\nrecent months.\"\nserve the needs of the poor as\nCarlucci, director of the federal\nConsisting of three out-of-\nit was set up to do and that it\nstate judges, the commission is\nviolated OEO regulations.\nSanta Barbara, Calif.\nNews Press\n(Cir. D 37,612 * 37,636)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllen's\nP.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nWitnesses 'Muzzled'\nIn CRLÀ Probe: Reagan\nSACRAMENTO (P) - Gov.\ncommission apparently\nReagan says the federal com-\nhave allowed them to publicly\nmission investigating Califor-\nannounce their findings piece-\nnia Rural Legal Assistance is\nmeal each day, instead of in a\n\"muzzling\" po al-wit-\nreport to you.\"\nnesses who might substantiate\nHe urged Carlucci \"to clari-\nReagan's charges against the\nfy immediately your instruc-\ncontroversial agency.\ntions to the commission in\nIn a telegram to Washing-\nsuch a manner that its find-\nton, Reagan said the commis-\nings be filed directly with you,\nsion is operating under rules\nall in the same context, and\nwhich have \"tied its hands in\nthat the commission members\nsuch a manner that the truth\navail themselves of all offered\ncannot and will not be known\nevidence or testimony, even if\nwithout a major change in ap-\nit proves CRLA is not provid-\nproach.\"\ning legal services to the\npoor.\"\nWIRE SENT\nBLAMES 0E0\nHis latest criticism was in a\nHe added that \"I regret to\ntelegram yesterday to Frank\nsay that most of the fault for\nCarlucci, director of the feder-\nthe current confusing state of\nal Office of Economic Oppor-\naffairs must lie at the door-\ntunity which sent the panel of\nstep of federal OEO.\"\nthree out-of-state supreme\nReagan said the commission\ncourt justices to probe CRLA's\nhas refused to allow cross-ex-\nactivities.\namination of pro-CRLA wit-\nReagan wrote that \"the pro-\nnesses and has failed to give\ncedures adopted by this com-\nadequate notice to other per-\nmission are having the effect\nsons who wished to testify.\nof muzzling witnesses whose\n\"Thus far this week,\" he\ntestimony would otherwise\nsaid, \"a number of witnesses\nshed valuable light on the\ndesiring to testify to their\npractices and proceedings\" of\nknowledge of CRLA's activi-\nCRLA.\nties have simply given up in\n\"The commission has im-\nfrustration after being ex-\nposed a virtual gag rule on\nposed to the way in which the\nnon-CRLA witnesses, limiting\nhearings are being conduct-\ntheir testimony only to narrow\ned.\"\nitems in the state OEO report\nHe noted one former CRLA\non CRLA,\" Reagan continued.\nemploye who wanted to testify\n\"Any new information - how-\n\"became SO disgusted after\never pertinent - is being\nhaving observed firsthand 'the\nruled out of order.\"\ncommission's biased limita-\nReagan referred to the\ntions on testimony' that she\n283-page report submitted to\nrefused to subject herself to\nback up his veto last De-\nthe 'personal aggravations,\ncember of a 1.88-million-dollar\nharrassment and frustrations\nfederal grant to run CRLA\nof such a sham'.\"\nthis year. Carlucci authorized\nReagan said \"she is the\na temporary grant while the\nsame woman who was sub-\npanel investigates whether\njected to pressure by the\nCRLA is not doing its proper\nCRLA attorney; Robert Gnaiz-\njob representing the Califor-\nda, several months ago in\nnia's rural poor as Reagan\nfour separate telephone calls\nhas charged.\nin one evening to change\nThe governor also told Car-\nher story about CRLA's im-\nlucci \"your instructions to the\nproper activities.\"\nOakland, Calif.\nTribune\n(Cir. D 225,035, Sat. 209,931,\nSun. 251,534)\nMAY 80.1971\nAllen's P.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nCRL. Pag\nBoost From\nWelfare Aide\nEL CENTRO (AP) - A so-\ncial worker who claimed her\nsupervisors tried to keep her\nfrom testifying told a public\nhearing today that the poor\nneed and like the California\nRural Legal Assistance pro-\ngram.\nThe witness, Donna English,\nsaid a decision to end the pro-\ngram \"would cause bitterness\namong the poverty group.\"\nWith her husband, also an\nImperial County welfare em-\nploye, Mrs. English has pub-\nlicly accused their superiors\nof trying to keep them from\ntestifying.\nThe two-day hearing was\nopened by a federal commis-\nsion investigating CRLA after\nGov. Ronald Reagan charged\nin Sacramento that potential\nwitnesses who might substan\ntiate his stand were being\n\"muzzled.\"\nOakland, Calif.\nTribune\n(Cir. D 225,038, Sat. 209,931,\nSun. 251,534)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllen's P.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nExpansion of School\nLunches on Agenda\nRICHMOND - A PTA Gnaizda, deputy director of\nconference dedicated to help\nCalifornia Rural Legal Assist-\nimprove and expand school\nance; and Mrs. Barbara Hen-\nlunch programs will be held\nry, president of Welfare\nMonday at the Memorial\nRights Organization of Rich-\nYouth Center here.\nmond.\nSpeaker will be. State Sen.\nAmong the seven discussion\nGeorge Moscone, D-San Fran-\ngroups during the day-long\nconference will be those on\ncisco.\nfunding, preparation, distribu-\nThe conference is sponsored\ntion, nutrition education and\nby the Richmond Elementary\npersonnel training for school\nCouncil with PTA districts\nlunch programs.\nfrom Alameda, Contra Costa\nThe conference stems from\nand Solano counties.\nan announcement last Febru-\nThe panel will consist of\nary by state superintendent of\nJames Hemphill, chief of\npublic instruction, Wilson\nFood Service Bureau, State\nRiles calling for expansion of\nDept. of Instruction; Robert. the lunch program.\n/\nSon Jose, Calif.\nThe News\n(Cir. D. 75,531)\nMAY 30 1971\nAllen's\nP.\nC.B.\nEst. ISSS\nReagan Says CRLA Probe\nWitnesses 'Muzzled'\nBy KIETH HEARN\nSACRAMENTO (AP) ---\ncontinued, \"Any new Infor-\nGov. Reagan says the federal\nmation however pertinent\ncommission\ninvestigating\n- is being ruled out of or-\nCalifornia Rural Legal As\nder.\"\nsistance is \"muzzling\" poten-\nReagan referred to the\ntial witnesses who might sub.\n283-page report submitted to\nstantiate Reagan's charges\nback up his veto last Decem-\nagainst the controversial\nber of a $1.88 million federal\nagency.\ngrant to run CRLA this year.\nIn a telegram to Washing-\nCarlucci authorized a tempo-\nton, Reagan said the com-\nrary grant while the panel in-\nmission is operating under\nvestigates whether CRLA is\nrules which have tied its\nnot doing its proper job rep-\nhar. n such a manner that\nresenting the California's ru-\nthe truth cannot and will not\nral poor as Reagan has\nbe known without a major\ncharged.\nchange in approach.\"\nThe governor also told Car-\nHis latest criticism was in\nlucci \"your instructions to\na telegram Wednesday to\nthe commission apparent-\nly have allowed them to pub-\nFrank Carlucel, director of\nthe federal Office of Econom-\nic Opportunity which se: the\nLicly announce their findings\npanel of three out-of-state su-\npiecemeal each day. instead\npreme court justices to probe\nof in a report to you.'\nCRLA's activities.\nHe urged Carlucci \"to clar-\nReagan wrote that \"the\nify immediately your instruc-\nprocedures adopted by this\ntions to the commission in\ncommission are having the\nsuch a manner that its find-\neffect of muzzling witnesses\nings be filed directly with\nwhose testimony would oth-\nyou. all in the same context,\nerwise shed valuable light on\nhe practices and proceed-\nngs\" of CRLA.\nand that the commission\naffairs must lie at the door-\n\"Thus far this week,\", he\n\"The commission has im-\nmembers avail themselves of\nstep of federal OEO.\"\nsaid, \"a number of witnesses\nosed a virtual gag rule on\nall offered evidence or testi-\nReagan said the commis-\ndesiring to testify to their\non-CRLA witnesses. limiting\nmony, even if it proves\nsion has refused to allow\nknowledge of CRLA's activi-\nheir testimony only to nar-\nCRLA is not providing legal\ncrossexamination of pro-\nties have simply given up. in\n)W items in the state OEO\nservices to the poor.\"\nCRLA witnesses and has\nfrustration after being ex-\n:port on CRLA,\" Reagan\nHe added that \"I regret to\nfailed to give adequate notice\nposed to the way in which the\nsay that most of the fault for\nto other persons who wished\nhearings are being conduct-\nthe current confusing state of\nto\ntestify.\ned.\"\nSan Francisco, Calif.\nChronicle\n(Cic. D 478,704 Sot. 443,306)\nMAY 20 1371\nStowell said Lund and Hil-\nton, neither of whom were\nMore Violence\nscheduled to appear before\nthe committee, wordlessly\nwalked in to the room.\nConant was fatally stabbed\nin the back of the head. Lieu-\nA Fatal Knifing\ntenant E. D. Steele and SU-\npervising counsellor Ed Whe-\nlan were also in the room at\nthe time, and both suffered\nAt Soledad\nminor injuries in grappling\nwith the two alleged assail-\nPage 1\nants.\nInvestigators from the\n2 Cons Accused\nMonterey county district at-\ntorney's office, already at\nthe troubled institution on an-\nother matter, arrived mo-\nments after the stabbing and\nFrom Our Correspondent\ntook a piece of steel honed\nSoledad\ninto a prison knife or\n\"shank\" as evidence.\nKenneth E. Conant, 49,\nThe Federal committee in-\na program administrator\nvestigating the CRLA had\nat Soledad prison, was\nconvened at 7 a.m. in anoth-\nstabbed to death yester-\ner part of the prison. but ad-\nday, and two other offi-\njourned an hour after the\nstabbing and postponed its\ncials were wounded while\nsubduing his alleged in-\nmate attackers.\nThe killing-fourth mur-\nder of a Soledad prison\nemployee since Jan. 13,\n1970 - occurred while a\nFederal investigating pan-\nel was holding meetings in\nanother part of the prison\non the alleged role of Cali-\nfornia Rural Legal Assist-\nance in prison violence.\nIP #irephotos\nTwo inmates, Jerry W.\nKENNETH E. CONANT\nLund, 28, and Eric Hilton, 29,\nThe victim\nboth convicted Southern Cali-\nfornia robbers, were held for\ninvestigation of murder.\nATTACK\nAssistant Superintendant\n(P Wirephoto\n1P Wirephoto\nChuck Stowell, who was in\ncharge of some 600 men in\nERIC HILTON\nJERRY W. LUND\nfour wings of the prison, was\nLos Angeles robber\nImprisoned since 1967\nseated at his desk about 9:30\na.m. preparing to conduct a\nroutine disciplinary commit-\ntee hearing involving several\nSoledad Slaying-\ninmates.\nOfficial Stabbed\nFrom Page 1\nemployees and six inmates\nkilled and many others in-\nhearings at the prison to an\njured.\nindefinite date.\nYesterday's attack, howev-\nThe 1200 inmates in Sole-\ner, came at a time when So-\ndad's Central Facility were\n\"\nledad's often-criticized Cen-\nimmediately locked in then\ntral Facility was undergoing\ntion. cells pending an investiga-\na major easing of strict secu-\nrity.\nConant was a 20-year vet-\nThe iron-tight \"X\" wing\neran in correctional work. He\nadjustment center, scene of\nis survived by his wife and a\nseveral violent attacks. was\nson at the family's home in\ndrained of inmates in\nSalinas.\nMarch and closed. Its coun-\nProgram administrators in\nterpart \"O\" wing, which\nState prisons and non-\nmade the other half of Sole-\nuniformed employees who di-\ndad's notorious \"hole,\" was\nrect activities, custody re-\nalso slowly being emptied of\nquirements and rehabilita\ninmates sent there for disci-\ntion programs for inmates in\nplinary reasons.\ntheir charge.\nTRANSFER\nWHITE\nMany inmates have been\nAlthough previous incl-\ntransferred from the restrict-\ndents at the prison have had\ned inside corridor of Soledad\na racial overtone thought to\nCentral to the more spacious\nstem from the killing of three\nand relaxed North Facility at\nblack inmates by a white of-\nthe prison.\nficer in January. 1970, in this\nYesterday's incident, how-\ncase both Conant and his al-\never. was expected to bring a\nleged assailants were white.\nflurry of new calls for a\nLund was sentenced to\ntougher institution.\nprison in 1967 from Orange\nAlmost before complete de-\ncounty on a first degree rob-\ntails of the incident were\nbery charge with added time\nknown yesterday, Smith dis-\nfor an escape from the Los\npatched two of his top aides\nAngeles County Jail.\nfrom the employees associa-\nHilton entered Soledad in\ntion to discuss with correc-\n1967 on a conviction of first\ntions officials the possibility\ndegree robbery in Los Ange-\nles county.\nOtey Mesa Prison in San Die-\nIn Sacramento, the Califor-\ngo county.\nnia State Employees Associa-\nThe project was once\ntion promptly called for \"im-\nplanned to replace San Quen-\ntin Prison, but was scrapped\nmediate steps to prevent fur-\nfor financial reason.\nther tragedies\" at Soledad.\n\"For the kind of hardened\nCALL\ninmate Soledad in called\nupon to handle. the facility is\nLoren V. Smith. the asso-\nantiquated.\" Smith charged\nciation's general manager.\nyesterday.\ncalled for improvements in\nFuneral services for Con-\nsecurity et the prison\nant were pending vesterday\ncially to: 11 21 the Co :C-\nat Terry's Mortuary in the\ntional Training Facility.\ntown of Soledad.\nThe Federal hearing at the\nprison yesterday had been\nexpected to center on\ncharges by the California\nCorrectional Officers Asso-\nciation that CRLA attorneys\nhad some role in inspiring in-\nmates to a series of violent\nincidents in the last year and\na hair that have seen four\nSan Francisco, Calif.\nChronicle\n(Cir. D 478,704 - Sal. 443,305)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllen'se.c.B.\nEst. 1888\nGuard Slain\nCRLA Hearing at\nSoledad Canceled\nBy George Murphy\nChronicle Correspondent\nSoledad\n\"We understand how all\nA Federal commission\npersonnel at the Soledad fa-\ninvestigating charges that\ncility are personally affect-\ned; therefore we have con-\nthe California Rural Legal\nAssistance program fo-\ncurred in the request (of the\nmented disturbances at the\ncorrectional officers) that\nthe\nSoledad Correctional\nhearings\nbe contin-\nued to a later date.\"\nTraining Facility here was\nThe commission left last\nabzruptly halted yesterday\nafter a prison official was\nnight for El Centrp. where it\nmurdered.\nwill hold hearings today and\ntomorrow.\nCommission chairman\nThe three-member, Nixon\nRobert B. Williamson said\nadministration-appointed\nlater prison officials had told\ncommission will split up on\nhim \"there was absolutely no\nJune 1 and 2.\nconnection between the hear-\nOne commissioner each\ning and this tragic event.\"\nwill preside over hearings at\nWilliamson said that when\nSanta Maria, Madera and\nword of the murder reached\nMarysville on June 1. On the\nthe hearing room, represent-\nfollowing day, simultaneous\natives of the California\nhearings will be held in Mo-\nCorrectional Officers Asso-\ndesto, Gilroy and Santa\nciation told the commission\nRosa.\nthat guards. scheduled to tes-\nOn June 3 and 4 the full\ntify, were \"deeply affected\ncommission will meet in San\nby the tragic loss of a\nFrancisco.\nfriend,\" and asked that the\nThe commission is investi-\nhearing be postponed.\ngation Reagan administra-\n\"This, of course, was\ndone,\" Williamson said, add-\ning that the Soledad question\ntion charges against CRLA\nwill be considered at a hear-\nwhich led to the governor's\ning to be held June 3 in San\nveto last January of $1.8 mil-\nFrancisco.\nlion in Federal funds for the\nAttorney representing\nlegal aid organization.\nCRLA issued a statement of\nReagan, a frequent critic\n\"deepest condolences\" to the\nof the Federal commission\nwidow and family of slain\nsince its probe began, fired\nprison admiistrator Ken-\noff a new telegram to Feder-\neth Conant.\nal OEO Director Frank Car-\nlucci yesterday, saying he\nwas \"deeply disturbed\" by\nthe commission's conduct.\nScin Jose, Calif.\nThe News\n(Cir. D. 75,531)\nP.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nArt Buchwald\nReagan Proper\nClient For CRLA\nNo matter how I try, I can't stop\nthe first time we represented someone\nworrying about Gov. Ronald Reagan's\nwho made money but didn't pay income\npersonal financial situation. As everyone\ntaxes.\nknows by now, Gov. Reagan had such\n\"Surely there is something wrong\nbad financial reverses last year that he\nwith the system if the governor of the\ndidn't have to pay state income taxes.\nlargest state in the union has been hurt\nInstead of Californians sympathizing\nso badly financially that he can't pay\nwith him over these financial reverses,\nany taxes.\"\nthey became upset and felt there was\n\"But what legal defense would you\nsomething wrong because they had to\nhave for him?\" I asked.\npay taxes and Reagan didn't.\n\"First, we would have to find out\nVery few people in the state said, \"If\nwhat financial reverses Mr. Reagan had,\nthe governor makes $44,000 a year as\nwhether they came from cattle, oil, real\nestate or the stock market. Then we\nsalary and has assets of around $1 mil-\nlion and still can't pay his state income\nwould prove that it wasn't his fault that\ntaxes, then he must be hurting very bad-\nhis investments went sour. It was proba-\nly, and needs pity rather than censure.\"\nbly due to the general economy.\"\n\"But the Republicans are in charge of\nMy first thought was that the gover-\nthe economy right now. Wouldn't it look\nnor should seek legal aid from the local\nbad if Reagan blamed his own party for\nOffice of Economic Opportunity. Al-\nthe fact he had such a bad income situa-\nthough Reagan is trying to abolish legal\ntion.\naid for the poor in California, I'm sure\n\"I guess you're right. We'll have to\nthe poverty lawyers would take his case\nthink of something else. Perhaps we\nanyway, just to prove that they will take\ncould persuade the courts to allow the\nanybody in dire financial straits, regard-\ngovernor to make one motion picture a\nless of race, creed or elective office.\nyear.\"\nTo make sure, I telephoned a CRLA\n\"Or a new Death Valley Days se-\n(California Rural Legal Assistance law-\nries,\" I suggested.\nyer in California and asked him if he\n\"I was thinking of a remake of the\nwould take Reagan as a client.\n'Grapes of Wrath.' the lawyer said.\n\"Yes,\" he said, \"he would qualify for\n\"They could shoot most of it around Sac-\nfree legal aid. Our charter specifically\nramento, SO the governor wouldn't have\nsays that any governor of a state whose\nto be on location too long. But the impor-\nfinances are in such poor shape that he\ntant thing is to get him healthy financial-\ndoesn't have to pay personal state in-\nly so he doesn't have to eat from the\ncome taxes is in no position to pay a\npublic trough.\nlawyer, and is therefore eligible for free\n\"This thing has far more ramifica-\nlegal advice. It would be our pleasure to\ntions than anyone wants to admit,\" he\nhelp Gov. Reagan in anyway we could.\"\nsaid. \"We're trying to pull the poor up\n\"How would you go about it?\"\nby their bootstraps SO they become hon-\n\"From a legal standpoint it would\nest, hard-working citizens. But if they\nprobably be the most interesting case\nsee somebody like Gov. Reagan, who has\nwe've ever handled. Most of our cases\nworked all his life and still has nothing\nhave had to do with people who didn't\nleft over for income taxes, they going\npay any state income taxes because they\nto say to themselves \"The hell with it.\ndidn't make any money. This would be\nLet's stay on welfare.'\nLob Angeles, Calif\nTimes\nor 1,269,459\nMAY\nP.O.B.\nReagan Income Tax Proves\nYou Just Can't Get Ahead\nBY ART BUCHWALD\nWASHINGTON-No matter how 1\ntry, I can't stop worrying about Gov.\n\"From a legal standpoint it would\nRonald Reagan's personal financial\nprobably be the most interesting\ncase we've ever handled. Most of our\nsituation. As everyone knows by\ncases have had to do with people\nnow, Gov. Reagan had such bad fi-\nwho didn't pay any state income\nnancial reverses last year that he\ntaxes because they didn't make any\ndidn't have to pay state income\nmoney. This would be the first time\ntaxes.\nwe represented someone who made\nInstead of Californians sympathiz-\nmoney but didn't pay income taxes.\ning with him over these financial re-\n\"Surely there is something wrong\nverses, they became upset and felt\nwith the system if the governor of\nthere was something wrong because\nthe largest state in the union has\nSTATE\nthey had to pay taxes and Reagan\nbeen hurt so badly financially that\ndidn't\nhe can't pay any taxes.\"\nVery few people in the state said,\n\"But what legal defense would\n\"If the governor makes $44,000 a\nyou have for him?\" I asked.\nyear as salary and has assets of\naround S1 million and still can't pay\nhis state income taxes, then he must\nbe hurting very badly, and needs\n\"First, we would have to fina UUS\npity rather than censure.\"\nwhat financial reverses Mr. Reagan\nhad, whether they came from cattle,\n\"If you have any business sense, you'll\nMy first thought was that the gov-\noil, real estate or the stock market.\nsave all your welfare checks\nernor should seek legal aid from the\nThen we would prove that it wasn't\nfor a rainy day.\"\nlocal Office of Economic Opportuni-\nhis fault that his investments went\ntv. Although Reagan is trying to\nabolish legal aid for the poor in Cali-\nsour. It was probably due to the gen-\n\"They could shoot most of it around\neral economy.\"\nSacramento. SO the governor would-\nfornia, I'm sure the poverty lawyers\nwould take his case anyway, just to\n\"But the Republicans are in\nn't have to be on location too long.\nprove that they will take anybody in\ncharge of the economy right now.\nBut the important thing is to get\ndire financial straits, regardless of\nWouldn't it look bad if Reagan\nhim healthy financially so he doesn't\nrace, creed or elective office.\nblamed his own party for the fact he\nhave to eat from the public trough.\nhad such a bad income situation.\"\n\"This thing has far more ramifica-\n\"I guess you're right. We'll have to\ntions than anyone wants to admit,\"\nTo make sure, I telephoned a\nthink of something else. Perhaps we\nhe said. \"We're trying to pull the\nCRLA lawyer in California and\ncould persuade the courts to allow\npoor up by their bootstraps so they\nasked him if he would take Reagan\nthe governor to make one motion\nbecome honest, hard-working citi-\nas a client.\npicture a year.\"\nzens. But if they see somebody like\nGov. Reagan, who has worked all his\n\"Yes,\" he said, \"he would qualify\n\"Or a new Death Valley Days se-\nlife and still has nothing left over for\nfor free legal aid. Our charter speci-\nries,\" I suggested.\nincome taxes, they're going to say\nfically says that any governor of a\nstate whose finances are in such\n\"I was thinking of a remake of the\nto themselves \"The hell with it. Let's\npoor shape that he doesn't have to\nGrapes of Wrath,\" the lawyer said.\nstay on welfare.\"\npay personal state income taxes is in\nno position to pay a. lawyer. and is\ntherefore eligible for free legal ad-\nvice, It would be our pleasure to\nhelp Gov. Reagan in any way we\ncould.\"\n\"How would you go about It?\"\nSon Francisco, Calif.\nExaminer\n(Cir, D 203,026 Sell. 159,057)\nThreats\nMAY 20 1971\nIn Probe\nEM.1883\nOf CRLA\nPanel Drops\n-From Page 1\nThree CRLA\nofficials will get a chance to\ntestify on CRLA activities\nwithin Soledad Prison on\nCharge 1\nJune 3, when the hearings re-\nsume in San Francisco\nBy Joel Tlumak\nThat portion of the hear-\nExaminer News Staff\nings will be closed to the pub-\nEL CENTRO - Three\nlic and the press, although\nmore of Governor Reagan's\ntestimony of the guards, pris-\ncharges against California\non officials and the inmates\nRural Legal Assistance were\ndismissed today by a panel\nwill eventually be made pub-\nappointed by the Office of\nlic with names and identifi-\nEconomic Opportunity in\ncations withheld.\nWashington.\nThe hearings here. near\nThe OEO commission\nthe Mexican border, will end\ncalled the allegations \"total-\nthe commission's second\nly unfounded and without\nweek of inquiries into Gov.\nmerit.\"\nReagan's charges against\nCRLA. Reagan vetoed\nTwo of the charges were\nCRLA's $1.8 million grant on\nthat CRLA was linked to So-\nthe grounds it engaged in il-\nledad Prison incidents in\nlegal activities throughout\nwhich: Officer William C.\nthe state and didn't properly\nShull was slain in July 1970,\nserve the poor.\nleading to charges against\nseven inmates; and in which\nThe Office of Economic\nGuard John V. Mills was\nOpportunity in Washington\nslain in January 1970, leading\nappointed the special com-\nto charges of murder against\nmission to check into the\nthe so-called Soledad Three\nGovernor's charges and rec-\nommend whether to uphold\n1\n- George L. Jackson, John\nW. Clutchette and Fleeta\nor override Reagan's veto.\nDrumgo.\nHere in the Imperial Val-\n1\nley, CRLA faces its biggest\n1\nA third dismissed charge\ntest. The young, urbane pov-\nE\nwas that CRLA attorneys at-\ntempted to arrange a meet-\nerty lawyers aiding Chicano\n{\ning between Angela Davis\nfarm workers are looked\n1\nand Jackson at Soledad prior\nupon as intruders by growers\nand county and city officials.\nto the Marin County shootout\nI\nOne witness against CRLA,\nTurn to Page 8. Col. 4\nattorney F. Douglas McDan-\n:\niel, is reported to be under\nI\npolice surveillance because\nI\nhe received threatening\n1\nphone calls this past 12 week.\nSacramento, Calif.\nThe Bee\n(Cir. D. 172,411 Sun, 200,546)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllen's P.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nReagan Claims Gagged\nCRLA Probe Witnesses\nGov. Ronald Reagan is\nagainstCRLA.\ncomplaining that the federal\n\"A number of private at-\ninquiry commission on Cali-\ntorneys have stepped for-\nfornia Rural Legal Assis-\nward to present witnesses\ntance has imposed \"a virtual\nand other evidence,\" Reagan-\ngag rule\" on witnesses criti-\ntold the Washington official.\ncal of the antipoverty law\n\"They have requested the\nagency.\nopportunity to cross-examine\n\"The procedures adopted\nCRLA's witnesses, but the\nby this commission are hav-\ncommission has steadfastly\ning the effect of muzzling\nrefused their requests.\nwitnesses whose testimony\n\"Moreover, the commis-\nwould otherwise shed valu-\nsion has imposed a virtual\nable light on the practices\ngag rule on non-CLRA wit-\nand procedures which have\nnesses, limiting their testi-\nbeen and are being engaged\nmony only to narrow items\nin by CRLA personnel,\" de-\nin the State OEO report.\nclared the governor.\nAny new information-how-\nReagan voiced his criti-\never pertinent - is being\ncism yesterday in a lengthy\nruled out of order.\"\nand sharply worded tele-\nReagan apparently was re-\ngram to Frank Carlucci,\nferring to the April 27 com-\ndirector of the US Office of\nmission ruling that any wit-\nEconomic\nOpportunity\nness not mentioned in the\n(OEO). Carlucci appointed\ncritical State OEO report\nthe three-judge panel which\nmust file a request to testify\nis hearing the Reagan ad-\nby a May 12 deadline if he\nministration's\ncomplaints\nwished to appear.\nHOLLISTER, CALIFORNIA - THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1971\nEVENING FREE LANCE\n9\nTCE TO CREDITORS\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nLocal HRD personnel have\nalways been willing to discuss\nproblems openly with anyone\nand while not easy to get along\nwith personally, have gone out\nof their way to solve said\nproblems. Discriminatory? No!\nAs for the free clinic, there\nalready is a free clinic for\nmigrants at the local Health\nDepartment every Wednesday,\nLetter\nand as every poverty project has\nalways been migrant oriented, I\nwonder about this free clinic.\nIf you and all you concerned\nTo The Editor\ncitizens look around carefully,\nyou will find that the only ones\nwho benefit from your tax\nmoney are outsiders and that\ndiscrimination in the field of\nMr. Editor:\nvery little of that tax money is\nMany of us in San Benitc\nemployment, housing, welfare\nstaying in our community.\nCounty are in favor of CRLA\nand in many other areas\nBut CRLA goes on, in the\nbeing re-funded.\naffecting the lives of the poor.\nname of the Consumers Co-op\nBut when they start to tell\nand no one dares to speak out\nNo question about it, they\nhave been very effective in\nyou how to vote, and that you\nbecause they are all powerfull in\nshould not associate or talk to\nour courts.\nstemming the rise of racial\nyour Congressman because he is\nWell, I've stuck my neck out,\nRepublican, then I say it is time\nlet's see who wants to chop it\nto impose limitations.\noff.\nTake the local Consumers\nTo CRLA I would say, your\nCo-op as an example.\nactions and attitude call for\nIt is completely under the\nlimitations to be placed on your\ndominance of the Gilroy office\norganizations.\nof CRLA and its staff.\nIt has been used as a front for\nJohn Hernandez\nthe milk program, the hot lunch\nprogram, the lawsuit against\nHRD, and now for a free clinic.\nThis is a duplication of\nexisting services and therefore a\nwaste of money and energy.\nI have been told by several\nschool administrators that milk\nhas been available for any child\nupon request.\nI've also been told that there\nwill be \"hot lunch\" facilities in\nthe new school and this was long\nbefore CRLA induced\nConsumers personnel to\ncampaign for hot lunches.\nReagan Claims Gagged 5-20-11\nCRLA Probe Witnesses\nGov. Ronald Reagan is againstCRLA.\ncomplaining that the federal\n\"A number of private at-\ninquiry commission on Cali-\ntorneys have stepped for-\nS\nfornia Rural Legal Assis-\nward to present witnesses\ntance has imposed \"a virtual\nand other evidence,\" Reagan\ngag rule\" on witnesses criti-\ntold the Washington official.\ncal of the antipoverty law\n\"They have requested the\n2-Day CRLA\nagency.\nopportunity to cross-examine\n\"The procedures adopted\nCRLA's witnesses, but the\nHearingOpens\nby this commission are hav-\ncommission has steadfastly\ning the effect of muzzling\nrefused their requests.\nEL CENTRO (AP) - The\nwitnesses whose testimony\n\"Moreover, the commis-\nfederal commission investi-\nwould otherwise shed valu-\nsion has imposed a virtual\ngating state charges against\nable light on the practices\ngag rule on non-CLRA wit-\nthe California Rural Legal\nand procedures which have\nnesses, limiting their testi-\nAssistance began a two-day\nbeen and are being engaged\nmony only to narrow items\nhearing here today.\nin by CRLA personnel,\" de-\nin the State OEO report.\nThe commission will con-\nclared the governor.\nAny new information-how-\nsider charges that El Centro\nReagan voiced his criti-\never pertinent - is being\noffice personnel took an ac-\ncism yesterday in a lengthy\nruled out of order.\"\ntive part in the strike activi-\nand sharply worded tele-\nReagan apparently was re-\nties of Cesar Chavez' United\ngram to Frank Carlucci,\nferring to the April 27 com-\nFarm Workers Organizing\ndirector of the US Office of\nmission ruling that any wit-\nCommittee and that it trans-\nEconomic\nOpportunity\nness not mentioned in the\nported students from nearby\n(OEO). Carlueci appointed\ncritical State OEO report\nBrawley to the Imperial\nthe three-judge panel which\nmust file a request to testify\nCounty Courthouse to take\nis hearing the Reagan ad-\nby a May 12 deadline if he\npart in a demonstration by\nministration's complaints wished to appear.\nunion members.\nLos Angeles, Calif.\nHerald Examiner\n(Cir. D 519,391)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllen's\nP.C.B.\nEst.1888\nSoledad Official Slain;\nCharge Two Convicts\nSOLEDAD, Calif. (UPI)-An\nadministrator was stabbed to\ndeath at Soledad State Prison\nWednesday while a special\ncommission was in the peniten-\ntiary investigating charges that\na federally funded anti-poverty\nlegal society had fomented\nviolence among inmates.\nKenneth E. Conant, 49, prison\nprogram administrator, was\nkilled by two prisoners who\nattacked him with a knife at his\ndesk.\nThe commission hearing was\nadjourned after the slaying,\nwhich was the ninth at Soledad\nin less than 18 months.\nThe killing apparently had no\nconnection with the scheduled\nhearings into charges that the\nUPI Telephotos\nCalifornia Rural Legal Assis-\nERIC HILTON\nJERRY LUND\ntance (CRLA) was involved in\nthe \"motivation\" of earlier\ncharged with murder. The\nviolence at the prison.\nbrother of George Jackson, one\nThe attack on Conant did not\nof the \"Soledad Brothers,\" was\nappear to have the racial\nkilled, along with two San\novertones of previous slayings\nQuentin convicts and a judge,\nthat started with the killing of\nlast Aug. 7 in a shootout at the\nthree black inmates by a white\nMarin County Court in San\nguard in January, 1970.\nRafael, Calif.\nTwo prison employes suffered\nThe state, which contends the\nminor injuries while subduing\nMarin County episode was\nConant's assailants, who were\naimed at freeing the \"Soledad\nidentified as Jerry W. Lund, 28,\nBrothers,\" has charged Angela\nand Eric Hilton, 24.\nDavis, former UCLA instructor\nShortly after the killings\nand an avowed Communist,\nbegan in 1970 a white guard\nwith taking part in the plot. She\nwas stabbed fatally, and three\nis awaiting trial in San Rafael.\nblack inmates, now known as\nThe investigative commission\nthe \"Soledad Brothers,\" were\nat the prison when Conant was\nkilled Wednesday is composed\nof retired Wisconsin Supreme\nCourt Chief Justice George R.\nCurrie, retired Maine Chief\n-UPI Telepholo\nJustice Robert B- Williamson,\nKENNETH CONANT\nand Colorado Supreme Court\nJustice Robert B. Lee.\nPrison victim\nAide Slain\nAt Desk\nIn Soledad\nSOLEDAD (UPI) - An ad-\nministrator was stabbed to\ndeath at Soledad State Prison\nWednesday while a special\ncommission was inside the\nwalls probing charges that a\nfederally funded anti-poverty\nlegal society had fomented\nviolence among inmates.\nThe commission adjourned\nits hearings after Kenneth E.\nConant, 49, prison program\nadministrator, was fatally\nstabbed at his desk in the insti-\ntution about 9: 30 a.m.\nTwo other prison employes in\nthe room subdued the attack-\ners, identified as inmates Jerry\nW. Lund, 28, and Eric Hilton,\n24. The victim and his assail-\nants were white.\nConant's slaying - the ninth\nat Soledad in the last two years\n- had no apparent connection\nwith the hearings into charges\nby some prison guards that the\nCalifornia Rural Legal Assist-\nance was involved in the \"mo-\ntivation\" of previous violence\nat the prison.\nLos Angeles, Calif,\nHerald Examiner\n(Cir. D $19,391)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllen's P.C.E.\nEst. 1888\n:\nCRLA Witnesses\n:\n(\n'Muzzled'\nReagan\n2\n:\nf\nSACRAMENTO (AP)-Gov.\nings piecemeal each day, in-\ni\nReagan has C 0 m plained to\nstead of in a report to you\nC\nWashington that a federal com-\n\"I urge you to clarify immedi-\nmission probing California Ru-\nately your instructions to the\n(\ncommission in such a manner\nE\nral Legal Assistance is \"muz-\nzling\" witnesses who might\nas to require that its findings be\nt\nback up Reagan's charges\nfiled directly with you, all in the\nt\nagainst CRLA.\nsame context, and that the com-\na\nmission members avail them-\na\nThe commission has adopted\nselves of all offered evidence or\nprocedures which have \"tied its\ntestimony, even if it proves\nI\nhands in such a manner that the\nCRLA is not providing legal\nI\ntruth cannot and will not be\nservices to the poor.\"\ny\nknown, without a major change\nin approach,\" Reagan said in a\nThe panel of three out-of-state\ntelegram sent yesterday to\nsupreme court justices is prob-\nf\nFrank Carlucci, director of the\ning the federally-funded legal\nfederal Office of Economic Op-\naid agency for the rural poor,\nportunity.\nnow operating on a temporary\nin\n1\nfederal grant.\nThe governor wrote that \"it\nI\nhas become increasingly clear\nReagan in December vetoed\n}\nthat the procedures adopted by\nCRLA's $1.88 million full-year\nt\nthis commission are having the\ngrant, contending the agency vi-\nt\neffect of muzzling witnesses\nolated numerous federal guide\nt\nwhose testimony would other-\nlines and did not concern itself\nS\nwise shed valuable light on the\nwith the needs of individual\na\npractices and procedures which\npoor people.\nC\nhave been and are being en-\ngaged in by CRLA personnel.\"\nReagan also wrote Carlucci\nthat \"your instructions to the\nCRLA investigating commission\napparently have allowed them\nto publicly announce their find-\nSon Diego, Calif.\nUnion\n(Cir. D 148,337 $ 253,550)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllon's\nP.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nFelons Kill Prison\nCounselor At Soledad\nSOLEDAD (UPI) - An ad- fornia Rural 1 gal Assistance\nministrator was stabbed to\nwas involved in the \"motvia-\ndeath by two felons at Soledad\ntion\" of previous violence at\nthe prison.\nState Prison yesterday while a\nThe attack yesterday did not\nspecial commission was inside\nhave the racial overtones of\nthe walls probing charges that\nprevious killings, which were\na federally funded anti-poverty\ntouched off by the slaying of\nlegal society had fomented vio-\nthree Negro inmates by a white\nlence among inmates.\nguard in January, 1970. Three\nThe commission adjourned\nwhite prison employes had been\nits hearings after Kenneth E.\nkilled previously.\nConant, 49, prison program ad-\nSoledad officials said Conant\nministrator, was killed in an-\nwas attacked at his desk. Two\nother part of the institution\nother prison employes, E. E.\nabout 9:30 a.m. All prisoners\nSteele and Supervisor counselor\nwere locked in their cells.\nEd Whalen, suffered minor in-\nConant's slaying - the ninth\njuries while subduing the at-\nat Soledad in two years - had\ntackers, identified as Jerry W.\nno apparent connection with the\nLund, 28, and Eric V. Hilton,\nhearings into charges by some\n24. They, like Conant, are\nprison guards that the Cali-\nwhite.\nSecremento, Calif.\nThe Bee\n(Cir. D. 172,411 Sun, 200,546)\nMAY 20 0 1971\nAllen's F.C.B.\nEst. 1888\n2-Day CRLA\nHearingOpens\nEL CENTRO (AP) - The\nfederal commission investi-\ngating state charges against\nthe California Rural Legal\nAssistance began a two-day\nhearing here today.\nThe commission will con-\nsider charges that El Centro\noffice personnel took an ac-\ntive part in the strike activi-\nties of Cesar Chavez' United\nFarm Workers Organizing\nCommittee and that it trans-\nported students from nearby\nBrawley to the Imperial\nCounty. Courthouse to take\npart in a demonstration by\nunion members.\nOakland, Calif.\nTribune\n(Cir. D 225,03S, Sat. 209,931,\nSun: 251,534)\nBIRY 80 1971\nAllen's\nP.C.B.\nEst. 1858\nImproved Soledad\nSecurity Proposed\nSOLEDAD The California\nState Employees Association\nThe slaying took place\nwhile, in another part of the\nhas called for \"immediate\nprison, a special federal com-\nsteps to prevent further trage-\ndies\" at the Correctional\nmission was investigating\nReagan Administration\nTraining Facility prison here\nfollowing the killing of a non -\ncharges that the federally-\nuniformed prison program ad-\nministrator yesterday.\nKenneth E. Conant, 49, a\n20-year career penologist, died\nfinanced California Rural Le-\nat his desk yesterday after\ngal Assistance aid group, had\nbeing stabbed above the left\nfomented previous violence\near with a prison - made\namong inmates.\nknive.\nThe hearing, which had no\nPrison authorities identified\napparent link with Conant's\ntwo suspects held in his death\nslaying, was indefinitely post-\nas Jerry Lund, 28, and Eric\nponed.\nHilton, 24, both serving sen-\ntences of five years to life for\nrobbery.\nConant was the fourth pris-\non employe slain since Janu-\nary, 1970.\nAlthough previous attacks\nat the state's maximum secu-\nrity prison have had racial\novertones, the victim and sus-\npects yesterday were all\nwhite.\nConant was slain while at a\ndesk preparing to conduct a\nroutine displinary committee\nhearing.\nTwo other prison employes\nin the room at the time, Lt. E.\nD. Steele and supervising\ncounselor Ed Whelan, were\nslightly injured in grappling\nwith the suspect.\nImmediately following word\nof the attack, Loren V. Smith,\ngeneral manager of the Cali-\nfornia State Employes Asso-\nciation, called for improved\nsecurity at the trouble-\nplagued prison, and asked that\nplans to build a new maxi-\nmum security prison be re-\nvived.\n\"Security improvements\nwere needed at Soledad before\nthe first murders took place,\"\nSmith said\nSan Jose, Calif.\nMercury\n(Cir. D. 126,332)\nMAY 20 1971\nCons Slay\nSoledad Official\n242\nPrison\nLockup Page 1\nOrdered\nTenth Killing\nIn 16 Months\nBy MAC BOWE\nMercury Staff Writer\nERIC HILTON\nJERRY W. LUND\nKENNETH CONANT\nSOLEDAD - A high\nNamed as suspect\nHeld in stabbing\nSlain official\nranking prison official wa\nstabbed to death and two oth\ners were injured Wednesda\nwhen they were attacked b\ntwo convicts at Soledad Stat\nPrison.\nThe attack occurred about\n9:30 a.m. just as a specia\ncommission to hear testime\nny about activities of the Ca\nifornia Rural Legal Assis\nance had convened elsewher\nin the prison.\nThe commission canceled\nno\nWhen recaptured, he also\nhearings, which will be re-\nSoledad\nwas convicted of second de-\nscheduled later.\ngree burglary, first degree\nrobbery and escape.\nDead is Kenneth E. Con-\nHilton was committed in\nant, 49, a program admin-\nOfficial\n1967 from Los Angeles County\nistrator who, with several\nafter his conviction for first\nothers of equal positions,\ndegree robbery.\nranks just under the job of\nassociate superintendent.\nStowell said Conant was\nSlain\nsitting at his desk at the\nThe slaying is the tenth\ntime of the attack but\nsince Jan. 13. 1970, including\nwould nout describe details.\nthree guards and six con-\nvicts.\n(Continued from Page 1)\nConant wa a 20-year veter-\nInjured slightly while cap-\nin the hand and once in the\nan of the California Depart-\nturing the two convict sus-\npeets Wednesday were I.t. E.\nneck according to the Monte-\nment of Corrections, starting\nrey County Coroner's office.\nhis career as a parole offi-\nD. Settle, a prison guard offi-\nNeither Stowell nor Monte-\ncer.\ncer. and supervising counse-\nrey County Dist. Atty. Wil.\nThe fatal stabbing is the\nlor Edward Whalen.\nliam Curtis would comment\nsecond this year.\nChick Stowell, assistant\non possible motives for the\nOn March 3 guard Robert\nto the superintendent,\nattack and killing.\nMcCarthey, 43, was stabbed\nnamed convicts Jerry W.\nby a convict and died the fol-\nLund, 28, and Eric Hilton,\nIn Sacramento, Gov.\nlowing day.\nRonald Reagan described\nThe trial of three Soledad\n24, as suspects in the slay-\nthe slaying as \"brutal and\ninmates in the fatal stabbling\ning.\nwanton\" as he spoke to\nof one of the three slain Sole-\nStowell said Conant, Steele\nstate women's and men's\ndad guards is now under way\nand Whalen were in his office\nclubs.\nin Salinas. On trial are Jesse\npreparing for a committee\nPhillips, James Wagner and\nmeeting between ofificials\nStowell said all 1,200 mer\nRoosevelt Williams, accused\nand convict representatives\nof the Central Facility, scent\nof killing guard William Shull\nwhen the two convixts burst\nof the murder, had beer\nlast July 23.\nin the door.\nlocked up.\nFuneral services for Con-\n\"Normal activities have\n\"Conant was stabbed with\nant, who lived at 427 La\nbeen suspended,\" he said.\na prison-made weapon. a\nMesa Dr. in Salinas, are\npiece of rolled steel,\" Stowell\nThe North Facility, which\nhouses another 1,000 men, is\npending at Muller Mortuary,\nsaid. He would not say who\nalso in Salinas.\noperating without incident\nstabbed Conant.\nHe is survived by his wid-\n\"Whalen and Steel suffered\nhowever, Stowell said.\now, the former Helen Steven-\nminor injuries subduing the\nConant, who has been at\nson, who once lived in San\nSoledad for the past 10 years,\nsuspects,\" Stowell said.\nJose, and a son.\nConant was stabbed once\nwas sort of a \"junior ward-\nF\nen,\" according to Stowell.\n(Beek of Section, Col- 1)\n\"He was in charge of Unit\n1. in Central Facility, which\nis composed of Wings D, E,\nF and G, and houses about\n600 men.\"\nBoth Lund and Hilton\nhave been in Soledad Pris-\non for less than five\nmonths, according to Stow-\nell. Both, however, had\nbeen serving sentences\nelsewhere in the state.\nLund was committed in\n1967 from Orange County on\na first degree robbery con-\nviction.\nLater he escaped from Los\nAngeles County Jail where\nhe was being housed for\ncourt proceedings in another\nmatter.\nLos Angeles, Calif.\nTimes\n1,269,469)\nAllen's\nP.C.S.\nEst.\n1883\nX surgetted Citirs\nAt the time of the attack, a hearing\nby a special federal commission con-\nSoledad Prison Official\nducting an inquiry into the Califor-\nnia Rural Legal Assistance system\nwas under way at the prison. It was\nhalted and is to be rescheduled later.\nAn investigator from the Monterey\nSlain; 2 Convicts Held\nCounty district attorney's office was\nat the prison on another matter\nWednesday morning and was sum-\nmoned to the scene of the stabbing\nwithin minutes. The suspects were\nimmediately taken to 0 Wing, the\nAdministrator Knifed\nmaximum security adjustment cen-\nter.\nas He Sits at Desk;\nConant was in charge of a four-\nwing housing unit in the central fa-\nMotive Not Learned\ncility, supervising about 600 of Cuit-\ndad's approximately 2,900 inmates.\nHe was No. 4 in the administrative\nExclusive to The Times from a Staff Writer\nchain of command.\nA spokesman for the Department\nSALINAS-A high official at So-\nof Corrections in Sacramento said\nledad Prison was fatally stabbed\nConant was the first high rank-\nWednesday when he was attacked\ning official in the prison system kill-\nin his office by two inmates armed\ned by inmates in recent years.\nwith a homemade knife, authorities\nLived in Housing Unit\nreported.\nConant, a graduate of the Univer-\nKenneth E. Conant, 49, a program\nsity of Denver who did postgraduate\nadministrator and 20-year veteran of\nwork at USC, was preparing to at-\nthe State Department of Correc-\ntend a disciplinary and classification\ntions, died in the prison hospital af-\ncommittee meeting. However, pri-\nter a doctor tried for 28 minutes to\nson spokesmen said that although\nrevive him.\nthe suspects lived in Conant's hous-\nThe victim, who had been sitting\ning unit, they were not scheduled to\nat his desk in his office when the un-\nface any disciplinary proceedings.\nprovoked attack occurred, sustained\nConant was the fourth member of\na stab wound above the left ear.\nthe Soledad staff killed in the last 16\nA motive for the stabbing was not\nmonths. In addition, four black and\nimmediately learned.\ntwo white inmates have died in the\nLt. E. D. Steele and Ed Whalen, a\nsame period.\nsupervising counselor, were present\nLund was first sent to Soledad in\nwhen Conant was stabbed shortly\n1967 for first-degree robbery in Or-\nbefore a 9:30 a.m. committee meet-\nange County. He later escaped from\ning with inmates was to begin.\nthe Los Angeles County Jail while\nThey were slightly injured in sub-\nhe was in litigation on another\nduing the two suspects, Jerry W.\nLund, 28, and Eric V. Hilton, 24,\ncharge. After Lund's recapture, he was\nboth imprisoned since 1967 for rob-\nconvicted of second-degree burglary\nbery in Los Angeles and Orange\nand first-degree robbery. In 1968, he\ncounties.\nwas convicted of escape.\nFrequent Racial Clashes\nHilton was sentenced from Los\nSoledad Prison, located 20 miles\nAngeles County in 1967 for first-de-\nsouth of Salinas, has been the scene\ngree robbery.\nof frequent racial clashes over the\nlast 18 months, but the victim of\nWednesday's stabbing was white, as\nare the suspects.\nLos Angeles, Callf.\nTimes\n(Cir, D 953,915 . $ 1,269,459)\nMAY 20 1971\nAllen's P.C.B.\nEst. 1888\nReagan Raps\nHandling of\nCRLA Probe\nSACRAMENTO (UPI)-\nGov. Reagan fired off a\ntelegram to the Nixon Ad-\nministration Wednesday\ncomplaining that the com-\nmission it appointed to in-\nvestigate California Rural\nLegal Assistance is \"muz-\nzling witnesses\" and not\nobtaining the facts.\nIn a wire to Frank Car-\nlucci, director of the Fed-\neral Office of Economic\nOpportunity, Reagan said\n\"events of the past several\ndays\nare deeply dis-\nturbing to me and should\nbe to you.\"\nThe governor charged\nthat a \"firm understand-\ning\" between him, the fed-\neral OEO and the U.S. Jus-\ntice Department over how\nthe commission's hearings\nwould be conducted \"has\nbeen breached repeatedly\nin recent months.\"\nReagan told Carlucci he\nwas particularly icked be-\ncause the commission pub-\nlicly announced on Tues-\nday that three of the gov-\nernor's 35 specific allega-\ntions against CRLA were\nwithout merit.\nOakland, Calif.\nTribune\n. (Cir. D 225,038, Scf. 209,931,\nSun. 251,534)\nMAY 19 1971\nAllen\n3\nP.\nC.B.\nEst. 1888\nA special federal commis-\nAnother\nsion investigating Governor\nReagan's charges against the\nCalifornia Rural Legal Assist-\nance had scheduled closed\nSlaying at\nhearings in the prison today\nbut postponed them to an un-\nspecified future date.\nSoledad\nIn Sacramento, the Califor-\n1\nnia State Employes Associa-\nPaga\ntion called for \"immediate\nsteps to prevent further trage-\nSOLEDAD (AP) - Kenneth\ndies,\" including revival of\nE. Conant, 49, program ad-\nplans to build a new maxi-\nministrator at Soledad Prison,\nmum security prison.\nLoren V. Smith, CSEA gen-\nwas stabbed to death today\neral manager, dispatched two\nand two other prison em-\ntop aides to discuss with State\nployes suffered minor injuries\nDepartment of Corrections of-\nin subduing his two convict at-\nficials the possibility of build-\ning the Otey Mesa Prison in\ntackers, officials said.\nSan Diego County. The project\nHe was the fourth prison\nwas once planned to replace\nemploye stabbed to death\nSan Quentin Prison, but was\nsince Jan. 13, 1970.\nscrapped for financial rea-\nChuck Stowell, assistant su-\nsons.\nperintendent, said Jerry W.\n\"Security improvements\nLund, 28, and Eric V. Hilton,\nwere needed at Soledad before\n24, both Los Angeles robbers\nthe first murders took place,\"\nimprisoned since 1967, were\nSmith said. \"It should be ob-\nheld and a prison-made knife\nvious by now that the actions\nwas recovered.\nwere insufficient.\nLt. E. D. Steele and super-\n\"For the kind of hardened\nvising counsellor Ed Whalen\ninmate Soledad is called upon\nwere slightly hurt in overpow-\nto handle, the facility is anti-\nering the convicts.\nquated,\" he added.\nWhile racial problems were\ninvolved in most previous in-\ncidents, prison officials said\nthe principals in this case\n]\nwere Caucasian.\n]\nThe stabbing took place at\n1\n9:30 a.m. as Conant sat at a\n:\ndesk in the prison's central fa-\n1\ncility, preparing to preside at\n:\ncommittee meetings with pris-\n(\noners.\nSteele and Whalen were in\n{\nthe room.\n1\nAn investigator for the Mon-\n]\nterey County district attorney\nwas in the prison on another\n;\nmatter and reached the scene\nwithin moments.\nU.\nBoth Sides Angry\nNew CRLA Probe Charges\nAssociated Press\nGovernor Reagan said Tuesday critics\nof California Rural Legal Assistance Inc.\nhave been \"restricted\" in hearings of a\nblue-ribbon panel appointed by the Nixon\nadministration to investigate CRLA.\nMetro Page\nThe Republican governor renewed his\nattack on the three-judge panel at his\nThe Sacramento Union\nweekly news conference, complaining the\njudges had shown \"an unwillingness to\nallow or hear testimony that might be\nWednesday Morning, May 19, 1971\nPage A3\ndetrimental to CRLA's activities.\"\nAt the same time, the head of the As-\nsembly Labor Relations Committe said he\ncommission Tuesday, charging the com-\nwhat we know now, and if we had the in-\nwill demand a state investigation into \"in-\nmission with bias in favor of the CRLA.\nformation we have now, we could have\ntimidation\" of two welfare workers\ngone ahead,\" Reagan said.\nnamed as potential witnesses in CRLA\nAMELIA HARRIS of Salinas, a former\nhearings.\nCRLA secretary who was to have testified\nON OTHER matters, Reagan said:\nin support of the governor's veto of CRLA\nDemocrats' $2-billion tax reform\n\"I AM PERSONALLY outraged by the\nfederal funds, sent a telegram, saying,\npassed by an Assembly committee Mon-\nclearly arbitrary action of the director of\n\"Having observed the commission's\nday is still unacceptable to him because it\nthe Imperial County Department of Wel-\nbiased limitations on testimony, I find\nhas half a billion dollars of tax increases\nfare in respect to Donna and Michael Eng-\nthat the commission is not interested in\nhidden. He said the plan was also unsound\nlish,\" Assemblyman David A. Roberti, D-\nlearning the whole truth but is merely\nbecause it has no spending limits on local\nLos Angeles, told a news conference.\ngoing through the motions.\"\ngovernment and added he still might in\nThe man and wife say they have been\nReagan said he believes President\ntroduce his own tax reform plan this year.\nordered to rémain in the county welfare\nNixon is committed to finding a new sys-\nCoastline conservation must start\nbuilding during working hours. forbidden\ntem of legal help for the poor to replace\non the local level with the state playing\nto use the telephone and restrooms with-\nCRLA no matter how the panel rules.\nsome part, but not with a total veto.\nout permission and barred from meeting\nReagan also said Democrats who\nUniversity of California regents \"no\ntogether or with welfare recipients whose\nclaim he could have put most of his pre-\ndoubt\" will do something about a Berke-\ncases they ve been handling.\nsent welfare reform into effect four years\nley campus student newspaper editorial\nIn Salinas, a woman who was to have\nago when he first took office are \"misin-\nsupporting last weekends second anniver-\nbeen a key witness in Reagan's fight de-\nformed.\"\nsary demonstration at People's Park in\nclined to testify before a special federal\n\"Yes, if we had known four years ago\nBerkeley."
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