- Salvador Agron
Salvador Agron a.k.a. "The Capeman" (
April 24 ,1943 -April 22 ,1986 ) was a Puerto Rican gang member who murdered two teenagers in a Hell's Kitchen park in a notorious 1959 gang fight. Agron was the subject of the musical "The Capeman " byPaul Simon .Early years
Agron was born in the city of Mayagüez on the western coast of
Puerto Rico . When he was young, his parents divorced and his mother had the custody of Agron and his sister, Aurea. She earned a living by working at a local convent; however, according to Agron, he and his sister were mistreated by the nuns. Agron's mother met and married a Pentecostal minister and the family moved toNew York City . Agron's relationship with his stepfather wasn't a good one and he asked his mother to send him back to Puerto Rico to his father. In Puerto Rico, his father had remarried, but one day Agron found the body of his stepmother who had committedsuicide by hanging herself. Agron began to get into trouble and was sent to the Industrial School of Mayagüez.The Capeman
His father sent him back to his mother in New York and in 1958 he became a member of the notorious teenage gang, the . When they arrived, they mistook a group of innocent teenagers for members of The Norsemen (who never showed up) and in the fight, Agron stabbed two teenagers to death and fled the scene. The two victims were Anthony Krzesinski and Robert Young, Jr.
The murders made headlines in New York City and the city went into an uproar. Agron was called "The Capeman" because he wore a black cape with a red lining during the fight, while Hernandez was labeled "The Umbrella Man" because he used an umbrella as a weapon. After Agron was captured he stated "I don't care if I burn. My mother could watch me."
Incarceration
Agron was sentenced to death, which made him, at the time age 16, the youngest prisoner ever sentenced to
death row . While many New Yorkers were outraged, others like former First LadyEleanor Roosevelt and Robert Young, the father of one the victims, campaigned for leniency. While on death row, Agron became a born-againChristian . In prison he learned to read and write, earning his high school equivalency diploma. He wrote poems about his life and about life on the streets, including "The Political Identity of Salvador Agron; Travel Log of Thirty-Four Years", "Uhuru Sasa! (A Freedom Call)", and "Justice, Law and Order", which were published by some newspapers. Later he earned his Bachelor of Arts Degree insociology andphilosophy fromState University of New York of New Paltz, New York. His death sentence was commuted to life in prison by GovernorNelson Rockefeller in 1962.Escape and release from prison
In December 1976 then Governor
Hugh Carey reduced Agron's sentence making him eligible for release in 1977. Agron was enrolled atSUNY New Paltz while spending his nights at theFishkill Correctional Facility . However in April, 1977 Agron took flight and absconded to Phoenix where he was captured two weeks later and brought back to New York. In November 1977 Agron was put on trial for his escape, but was found not guilty of absconding due to "mental defect." His lawyer wasWilliam Kunstler . Agron was finally released from prison on November 1, 1979. A television movie based on his life was proposed and he set up a fund for the families of his victims with the money he received.After prison
Agron was hired as a youth counselor and spoke out against gang violence. On
April 16 ,1986 , he was admitted to a hospital withpneumonia and internal bleeding and died eight days later at age 43.A book about Agron titled "Conversations with the Capeman: The Untold Story of Salvador Agron" was written by
Richard Jacoby . "The Capeman " amusical play written byPaul Simon andDerek Walcott was based on the life ofSalvador Agron . The play opened at theMarquis Theatre in 1998.ee also
*
List of famous Puerto Ricans Bibliography
* Agron, Salvador, Rubinstein, Annette T., and Kresky, Harry. "Salvador Agron: Puerto Rican, Prisoner, Poet", Charter Group for a Pledge of Conscience, 1978.
* Jacoby, Richard. "Conversations with the Capeman: The Untold Story of Salvador Agron." University of Wisconsin Press: Madison, 2004.References
External links
* [http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Workshop/3943/enter/enter.html Salvador Agron homepage]
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