Kathy Boudin obituary: 1960s US anti-war radical

American militant activist imprisoned for fatal Black Liberation Army robbery

Born: May 19th, 1943

Died: May 1st, 2022

Kathy Boudin, who as a member of the radical Weather Underground of the 1960s and ’70s took part in the murderous 1981 holdup of a Brink’s armoured truck and then, in prison and after being freed two decades later, helped inmates struggling to get their lives on track, has died in New York. She was 78.

The cause was cancer, said Zayd Dohrn, whose family adopted Boudin’s son, Chesa Boudin.

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On a March day in 1970, Boudin was showering at a town house in Greenwich Village when an explosion collapsed the walls around her. She and fellow extremists had been making bombs there, the intended target believed to have been the Fort Dix Army base in New Jersey. Three of them were killed on the spot. A naked Boudin managed to scramble away with a colleague and found clothes and brief refuge at the home of a woman living down the block.

She then disappeared.

Within a few years, so did the Weather Underground. A breakaway faction of the leftist Students for a Democratic Society, it called itself Weatherman, borrowing from Subterranean Homesick Blues, a 1965 Bob Dylan song with the lyric, “You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows”. The name evolved into Weather Underground.

In that era of turbulence over civil rights and the increasingly unpopular Vietnam war, the group set off bombs at the Capitol, New York City Police HQ and other buildings. If anything, it was more adept at issuing long manifestoes, laden and leaden with references to Karl Marx, Che Guevara and Ho Chi Minh, and asserting the world’s “main struggle” as being that “between US imperialism and the national liberation struggles against it”.

With the Weather Underground fading by the mid-1970s as the war ended, its leaders, one by one, emerged from hiding to face the legal consequences of having been on the FBI’s most-wanted list.

Kathy Boudin, a member of the radical group the Weather Underground, on her way to her arraignment in the fatal robbery of a Brink’s armored truck, in New York, 1981. Photograph: Joyce Dopkeen/The New York Times
Kathy Boudin, a member of the radical group the Weather Underground, on her way to her arraignment in the fatal robbery of a Brink’s armored truck, in New York, 1981. Photograph: Joyce Dopkeen/The New York Times

Not Boudin. “The very status of being underground was an identity for me,” she recalled years later in interviews with The New Yorker at the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in New York, where she came to be imprisoned. She continued: “I was making a difference in no way, so then I elevated to great importance the fact that I was underground.”

That ended in October 1981, when she teamed up with armed men from another radical group, the Black Liberation Army, to hold up a Brink’s truck in Rockland County, New York, making off with $1.6 million. During the stickup, the gunmen killed a security guard, Peter Paige. They transferred the cash to a truck that was waiting roughly a mile away. Boudin was in the cab of the truck, a 38-year-old white woman serving as a decoy to confound police officers searching for black men.

The truck was stopped by police at a roadblock. Boudin, who carried no weapon, immediately surrendered, hands in the air. But gunmen jumped from the back of the truck and opened fire, killing Sgt Edward J O’Grady and Officer Waverly L Brown. Though some accused her of surrendering as a tactic to get the police to lower their weapons before being attacked, Boudin insisted that that was not the case.

More than a half-dozen suspects were captured, and most were given prison terms long enough to amount to life sentences. Among them was David Gilbert, whom Boudin married after their arrests and with whom she had a son, Chesa, who was 14 months old at the time of the Brink’s job. Divorced while in prison, they reunited in 2021 after Gilbert’s 75-year sentence was commuted and he was freed. Chesa Boudin, reared by a Weather Underground couple, Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers, was elected San Francisco’s district attorney in 2019. Both her husband and son survive her.

Boudin pleaded guilty in April 1984 to first-degree robbery and second-degree murder in the death of Paige. Though unarmed and not even at the scene where the guard was killed, the judge agreed with prosecutors that she bore responsibility, and sentenced her to a prison term of 20 years to life.

At her sentencing, she turned to the victims’ relatives. “I know that anything I say now will sound hollow, but I extend to you my deepest sympathy,” she said. “I feel real pain.” As for her motives, “I was there out of my commitment to the black liberation struggle and its underground movement. I am a white person who does not want the crimes committed against black people to be carried in my name.”

She proved to be a model prisoner at Bedford Hills, mentoring other inmates, attending to those with AIDS, writing poetry and expressing remorse for her role in the Brink’s robbery deaths. In September 2003, after 22 years behind bars, she was freed on parole.

Not everyone was pleased. Diane O’Grady, O’Grady’s widow, wrote in The New York Post that she did not “believe there is a shred of guilt, shame or remorse felt by inmate Boudin”. But Boudin had ample support, including from a few Bedford Hills employees. Even the arch-conservative William F Buckley jnr signed a letter to the parole board asserting a belief in “the possibilities of human rehabilitation and transformation”.

In a 2004 article for a magazine called Fellowship, written before leaving prison, Boudin said she had come to “fully embrace the enormity of my human responsibility: I supported and was part of a robbery that risked and then destroyed human life.”

A 1965 graduate of Bryn Mawr, she got a master’s degree in adult education and literacy from Norwich College while in prison and then, five years after her release, a doctorate from Columbia University. Post-prison, her work focused on present and former inmates, especially women, helping them get parole and preparing them for life on the outside, down to fundamentals like how to comport oneself in job interviews.

She was also a founder of the Center for Justice at Columbia, exploring the social consequences of mass incarceration. What many people fail to appreciate, she said in a 2021 interview for this obituary, is that “there are tremendous resources waiting to be realised in those who are too often defined as throwaway people.”

Kathy Boudin was familiar with radical politics almost from her birth in Manhattan on May 19th, 1943. Her father, Leonard B Boudin, was a civil rights lawyer with a list of clients that amounted to a left-wing Who’s Who, including Paul Robeson, Daniel Ellsberg and anti-war doctor Benjamin Spock. Her mother, Jean (Roisman) Boudin, was a poet. Her great-uncle was Louis Boudin, a prominent civil rights lawyer, and an uncle was liberal muckraking journalist IF Stone.

Besides Gilbert and her son, she is survived by her son’s two adopted brothers, six grandchildren and her older brother.

At Bryn Mawr she majored in Russian studies, receiving her bachelor’s degree in absentia because she was studying in Moscow. In summers she worked in a hospital, at a camp for children and at a blood bank.

Her militancy steadily grew. She joined the “Days of Rage” in October 1969, a window-smashing rampage through Chicago’s Gold Coast district by anti-war militants. She and others were charged with conspiracy and violation of anti-riot laws, cases ultimately dismissed on grounds that the government had obtained evidence unlawfully. Around that time, she co-wrote The Bust Book, which offered advice on what to wear to a demonstration and what to do if arrested.

In hiding after the town house explosion, Boudin assumed various aliases and took low-paying jobs, including as a waitress and as a catering company employee at the US Open tennis tournament in Queens. She was “very sociable,” a company official said.

Then came the Brink’s holdup. “Remorse will always guide me,” she wrote for Fellowship. “It is a very personal journey with stops along the way. It is a road with no end.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.