Involvement in Black Nationalism and The Black Panthers
Sometime after
Malcolm X's assassination in
1965, Parnell, like many other disgruntled
African-Americans became involved in the
civil rights movement, supporting the
Black Panther Party. It was at this time that the Black Panthers were becoming more
radical. He agreed with
Bobby Seale and
Huey P. Newton's rejection of the
intergrationist stance of
Martin Luther King, and also agreed with their rejection of what they called the "
power struggle". At the time of Edward's followership,
Bobby Seale was attempting to reform the
Black Panthers to an institution for worldwide
social justice, regardless of the nationality or ethnicity of the oppressed people.
The Black Panthers supporters eventually rejected cultural nationalists as black racists. Parnell's involvement in the
counter culture movement of the
1960s angered
Jimmy Burke and fellow
mobsters, causing him to be a further
outcast among the fellow robbers. Parnell was a firm radical believer in the Black Panther Party and he adopted the party's radical views on
white people. He complained about suffering from
racism at the hands of the
Italian mobsters. His black radical
nationalist views were displayed to the fellow
hijackers while he was attending a
Christmas Day celebration at
Robert's Lounge in
South Ozone Park, Queens that was being thrown by Burke. Edwards attended the party even after it was known that the authorities had found the
panel truck he was supposed to dispose of. That truck included
fingerprints on a wallet stolen from one of the
Lufthansa employees who was attacked during the robbery.
Henry Hill later recalled the attendance of Edwards at the party in
Wiseguy: Life In A Mafia Family with the following passage:
"We were all having a good time when "Stacks" sees my amount of money on me, and started to do his "black dude" number, "How come I'm fucking broke and all you whities got the money?" And then Edwards would persist in making racial jokes about the "May-fia guys who got all those millions from the airport".
Hill recalled later in
Nicholas Pileggi's Wiseguy: My Life In A Mafia Family that,
"I knew that Stacks had signed his death warrant that day."
Parnell's
black nationalism, his increasing addiction to
heroin, and his bungling of the
Lufthansa heist pushed Burke and the fellow
gangsters to the limit, and Parnell was murdered a short time afterward.