Assata Shakur Beyond the Bars — Unveiling the Truth (Part 2)

The trial, the exile, and the resilience they could never cage.



Part One walked you through her life — from a curious college student searching for truth, to a young woman who found her purpose in the fight for liberation.

But her story doesn’t end there…

What came next were the bullets, the hospital, and fifty years of distortion that followed. And if you think the State’s treatment of Assata ended with her bleeding on the highway, you’re mistaken. What she endured afterward was just as cruel — and just as political.


The Trial That Wasn’t About Justice

On March 25, 1977, Assata Shakur stood before an all-White jury in Middlesex County, New Jersey, and was found guilty on eight charges — including first-degree murder, assault with intent to kill, armed robbery, and illegal possession of a weapon. She was sentenced to life in prison, plus an additional 26 to 33 years on the remaining counts.

And this is where the facts don’t align with the punishment — because if the evidence doesn’t prove the crime, what exactly was she serving time for?

How do you convict someone of eight crimes when the evidence presented should have cleared her of all of them — with the exception of maybe one, and even that’s a stretch. The only thing they might’ve had was the charge of illegal possession of a weapon — and even then, there were no fingerprints, no proof she ever touched it, and no prior record to justify it.

The fact that they falsely stacked eight charges against her made it sound as if Assata, Sundiata, and Zayd — members of the Black Liberation Army — were part of some modern-day Queen & Slim reenactment — locked, loaded, and running from the law. When in reality, they were just stopped for a broken taillight — and they never made it home.

Now, if I’m being honest, those eight charges weren’t really eight separate crimes. Prosecutors doubled up, split, and fix each one to make it sound bigger, than what it was. That’s how they do us — inflate the counts until the story fits the sentence. But once they had her behind bars, the goal was no longer conviction — it was control.





Cuba had long condemned the United States for slavery, segregation, and the criminalized of black resistance. Castro looked at Assata and didn’t see a terrorist. He saw a political prisoner.
A woman who had been put on trial not for her fingerprints, not for her actions, but for her identity — for daring to represent something America wanted erased.

He declared her trial unfair, her treatment in prison cruel, and her sentence nothing short of political theater.
In his own words:

Fidel led Cuba for nearly fifty years. He survived assassination attempts, CIA plots, and a embargo designed to starve his country into submission. He stepped down from power in 2008 due to illness, and his brother Raúl took over. Fidel died in 2016 at the age of 90.

And that’s why the U.S. never forgave Fidel and his country. To America, her escape was humiliation.
To Cuba, her presence was proof they could shelter the very people the U.S. feared most: those who refused to bow down.

If you really want to know why these two countries never got along. It was never about missiles, sugar or trade. It was about the fact that Cuba gave refuge to the voices of America tried to silence.

And What About Castro?




[ays_poll id=2]

— Beautiful Truth


Spread the truth:

Comments

2 responses to “Assata Shakur Beyond the Bars — Unveiling the Truth (Part 2)”

  1. Jocelyn Harris Avatar
    Jocelyn Harris

    Wow, this was so powerful to read. I remember when I got to that part in the book, I couldn’t believe how unfair the trial was. It really did feel like they already made up their minds about her before it even started. Like you said, they stacked the charges just to make the story fit what they wanted people to believe.
    What stuck with me the most was how strong she stayed while she was locked up. In the book, when she talked about whispering poems to herself and holding onto her words, that really hit me. She said that even in a cell, her words were her freedom and that line stuck with me. It showed how even when everything around her was meant to break her, she refused to let them take her spirit. The escape part honestly felt like a movie, but it was real life. The amount of planning, trust, and loyalty it took was incredible. And learning how Cuba gave her a place to live freely really opened my eyes. It’s crazy how the U.S. painted her one way, but Cuba saw her as someone who was being persecuted for what she stood for, not just what happened on the highway. Her story made me see how powerful words and truth can be. Like she said in the book “Freedom is never given it’s taken.” That line hit me so hard. She lived that truth. She didn’t just talk about fighting back she actually did it. And seeing how her words still matter today says a lot.

    1. Beautiful Truth Avatar

      Thank you so much for this — you captured exactly why I felt it was important to tell her story in full. Too many people only know the label, not the woman. What you said about her words being her freedom — that’s everything. Because even when they tried to silence her, she still found a way to speak through the bars, through the pages, through time itself.

      That line, “Freedom is never given, it’s taken,” still gives me chills because she lived that truth to the very end. You’re right — it wasn’t just resistance; it was faith, endurance, and reclamation.

      I’m so glad this piece connected with you the way it did.
      Truth doesn’t whisper — it reigns.