R.I.P., John Sinclair.

Apologies for no post coming into Monday. Honestly, I was kinda empty, and in cases like this, it’s best to respect the dry well and let it refill.

Then, today, John Sinclair died. :::cracks knuckles::: Ok, then.

If you don’t know who he was, no worries. He was strictly a local celebrity who briefly went national, if you’re the sort of obsessive music fan who reads the liner notes. He’s most often described as the manager of the MC5, a local activist in the hot heart of the ’60s, an unapologetic stoner who co-founded the White Panther Party and lured John and Yoko to Ann Arbor for a benefit after he was sent to prison for giving two joints to an undercover cop. You might remember the White Panthers from one point in their multi-point manifesto: Total assault on the culture by any means necessary, including rock ’n’ roll, dope and fucking in the streets.

I can’t recommend my friend Bill McGraw’s obit in the Freep highly enough; he really captured the guy, including his rock-solid, lifelong sense of humor and absurdity. The White Panthers weren’t Maoist scolds, or even 100 percent serious, and damn, I’d have liked to party with those guys.

I only met Sinclair once, although you could often spot him at this or that event around town. He’d been in declining health for some time, getting around with a walker or in a wheelchair, but his mouth was always in good shape. After marijuana was fully legalized in Michigan, a local attorney held a news conference in his conference room, and Sinclair was a guest. There wasn’t much news coming out of the event, something about a lawsuit, but at one point Sinclair went off on a recent story in one of the papers, that had showcased police concern for what might happen to their drug-sniffing dogs in this new era. “They’re boo-hooing about their dogs!” Sinclair raged. “Their fucking dogs!” The TV reporters despaired of a spicy clip they couldn’t use, but I laughed. And I quoted him accurately in my story.

He wasn’t all about weed, as this passage from Bill’s obit notes:

In 1972, after having been freed from prison for his marijuana conviction, Sinclair found himself in more serious difficulty. A federal grand jury indicted him and two other White Panthers, Plamondon and Jack Forrest, for conspiring to dynamite a clandestine CIA recruiting office on Main Street in Ann Arbor in 1968. The FBI maintained Plamondon planted the bomb.

After U.S. District Judge Damon Keith in Detroit ruled against the government for tapping Plamondon’s phone without a warrant, the three hippies squared off against the Nixon Justice Department in a landmark wiretapping case before the high court in Washington. Sinclair and friends won, in a unanimous decision that scuttled Nixon’s national legal strategy against numerous other radicals. It was a major defeat for the self-proclaimed law-and-order president.

“When that case came down, every pending Black Panther, Weatherman, antiwar conspiracy case in the country had to be dismissed,” said Hugh (Buck) Davis, a Detroit lawyer who worked on the Sinclair appeals as a recent law school graduate, with nationally known legal heavyweights William Kuntsler and Leonard Weinglass, fresh from defending the Chicago 7. “They were all based on illegal wiretaps.”

Good for him.

John Sinclair got high every day, and moved to Amsterdam for a while to make it easier, but he came back. Detroit is a pretty lawless town, and getting marijuana isn’t exactly difficult, even when it was a crime. Or, as he put it:

Detroit, Sinclair said, “was the place where you could hear jazz all night long and cop weed or pills whenever you wanted to.”

So farewell, John. As a final note, here’s a piece of research Bill passed along to me when he was composing his pre-written obit. Note the police description of a jam session: “…a party at which the participants entertain themselves with bongo music and marijuana.”

Posted at 2:17 pm in Detroit life |
 

11 responses to “R.I.P., John Sinclair.”

  1. alex said on April 2, 2024 at 3:14 pm

    Wow. Didn’t know anything about this bit of history.

    I noted the name Pun Plamondon in the obit. I think Charlotte (of the NN.C commentariat) once mentioned being a descendant of the Plamondon family of Chicago, although this guy was an adoptee of native-American ancestry and was raised in Michigan.

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  2. Jenine said on April 2, 2024 at 4:16 pm

    “…and his granddaughter Beyonce.” I honestly find that adorable. May his memory be a pot-scented blessing.

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  3. Deborah said on April 2, 2024 at 5:03 pm

    John Eastman has been disbarred I’m happy to learn.

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  4. Minnie Fleming said on April 2, 2024 at 6:36 pm

    I had a white cat named Sinclair.

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  5. Ann said on April 2, 2024 at 9:07 pm

    “Maximum penalty is life imprisonment.” And this was before the great war on drugs. That’s really a great piece from the archives. I was going to ask what year it was, but I suppose I can do the math myself. Roughly 60 years ago if he was 23 then and just died at 82. I would have been in high school, soon to head to Ann Arbor, where of course we all knew he was.

    I enjoyed your Deadline Detroit piece when it ran. Enjoyed it even more a second time.

    And wait, wait. Plamondon was picked up after he was arrested for littering? Straight out to Alice’s Restaurant. Wonder if I can find out what fine U.P. police force made the catch?

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  6. Dexter Friend said on April 3, 2024 at 7:20 am

    John Sinclair was inspirational to me and my friends, just reading of his life events so well documented today, here.
    I never wanted to disturb this icon when I began to take in Tiger games in the center field bleachers at Tiger Stadium. I had no qualms about driving 250 miles r/t for Tiger games whenever I could. I had read of Sinclair’s devotion to Detroit Tigers baseball, and I knew what he looked like. People let him alone there in the bleachers and gave him room, and he was easy to spot, as I always climbed to the top row in the left center bleachers. To me, there was a aura surrounding him. He was a hero. He was one of us. https://dd-res.s3.amazonaws.com/photos/joe_photo_update_37574.jpg
    Note the sign mentioning The Lindell, (Lindell Athletic Club), a bar. I’d go there hoping to see some of the famous clientele , but never saw anybody famous. The Labatt’s was cold and in glass bottles.

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  7. alex said on April 3, 2024 at 7:42 am

    Gifting a free link from the NYT:

    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/03/magazine/national-enquirer-trump-lachlan-cartwright.html?ugrp=u&unlocked_article_code=1.hk0.DXp6.UmQrMDHqnYWQ&smid=url-share

    An Enquirer insider breaks his silence (and NDA) with one helluva story.

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  8. Jeff Gill said on April 3, 2024 at 9:37 am

    I tip my hat to Bill McGraw. That’s a beautiful piece of writing, obituary or otherwise.

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  9. Dexter Friend said on April 3, 2024 at 5:27 pm

    To conclude the mentioning of The Salton Sea communities:
    https://www.sfgate.com/travel/article/bombay-beach-biennale-explainer-photo-essay-19381624.php

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  10. Ann said on April 4, 2024 at 12:17 am

    St. Ignace. A 1991 article by Eve Silberman, who later became my sister-in-law. https://drive.google.com/file/d/13a9A4DnqVZ9e4YdzfJ2GnVc4dcKGv5sJ/view?fbclid=IwAR0ZrzkiMOH_EnXV5INeGJbVf9nXjNsFYpOOZadDnlHinuN6fE-ppBnGmoU

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  11. Jeff Borden said on April 4, 2024 at 1:07 pm

    Nancy mentioned seeing the gigantic Icon of the Seas at anchor when visiting Miami. There’s a funny story about the inaugural cruise of the world’s largest passenger ship in The Atlantic. People paid a premium for the first cruise, which meant the magazine paid for a suite lacking an ocean view for $19,000. The writer didn’t enjoy himself, but it’s an interesting read.

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