Former Washington mayor Marion Barry, who left office in disgrace and went to prison on drug charges only to return for a fourth term, died at a Washington hospital, a spokesperson said yesterday. He was 78.
United Medical Center spokeswoman Natalie Williams confirmed Barry’s death, but declined to give further details.
Local media reports said that he had only just been released from another hospital in the area earlier in the evening after being admitted on Thursday.
Barry, the Mississippi-born son of a sharecropper and a leader in the civil rights movement, dominated local politics in the US capital for decades, despite repeated scandals and multiple arrests.
The most notorious incident came during his third term as mayor, when he was arrested in January 1990 for crack cocaine use and possession in an FBI sting operation that was caught on video.
The “mayor for life” was sentenced to six months in prison, but swept back to the city’s top post in 1994.
Barry, who also served many terms on the DC Council and was head of the board of education, was able to parlay his political disgrace into a theme of redemption during the 1994 election.
In 2009, Barry, who was serving again as a city councilman, was arrested for allegedly stalking a woman.
In his early terms Barry gained recognition as a charismatic leader who used the city administration to further his ambitious social programs, including jobs for the poor.
In his DC Council biography, Barry wrote that he lived by the motto “always fighting for the people.”
However, by his later terms Barry’s fortunes and those of the city had begun to decline. The municipal deficit ballooned, crime rose, and a close mayoral confidant was convicted for misuse of public funds.
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