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EX-DRUG KINGPIN WHO HAD A RECURRING ROLE ON ‘THE WIRE’ DIES

A former West Baltimore drug kingpin who had a recurring role on the television show “The Wire” has died.

The Baltimore Sun (http://bsun.md/1MZ5l2K) reports Melvin Williams died Thursday at a Baltimore hospital. The Wylie Funeral Home says it is handling the arrangements.

The Sun reports that the 73-year-old known as “Little Melvin” spent years in federal prison for drug and gun convictions but later spoke out against drug use and gang life.

“The Wire” co-creator David Simon covered Williams as a Sun reporter. After Williams met with Simon and a former homicide detective collaborating with Simon, Williams was offered the role of the deacon on “The Wire.” He appeared in episodes in seasons three and four. The Wire ran from 2002 to 2008.

Melvin DouglasLittle MelvinWilliams (December 14, 1941 – December 3, 2015) was an American actor and criminal. He was known for trafficking heroin in his native Baltimore, Maryland, in the 1970s and 1980s. He appeared as an actor in the HBO series The Wire, which explores many Baltimore-related subjects, including narcotics trafficking, and served as an inspiration for the character of Avon Barksdale.

Williams was born in Baltimore, Maryland. His father worked as a cab driver, while his mother worked as a nurse’s assistant. In the 1960s, Williams was a well known gambler and pool player in Baltimore. He gained notoriety in Baltimore for his role in quelling rioting in the city in the wake of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. in early April 1968. By that time, Williams already had an extensive criminal record and was involved in heroin and cocaine trafficking.

Williams was heavily involved with drug trafficking throughout the 1970s and early 1980s. In the FX documentary Tapping the Wire about the HBO show The Wire, Williams volunteers the information that he made at least “a couple hundred million [dollars]” through heroin trafficking. During that time, Williams was periodically arrested on minor charges culminating in federal agents, along with the Baltimore Police Department, launching an investigation into his activities in the early 1980s. One of the Baltimore Police Department investigators working on the case was Ed Burns.

On December 6, 1984, Williams was arrested on cocaine trafficking charges. On February 7, 1985, he was convicted and sentenced to 34 years in prison. He served part of his sentence in the Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary. In May 1987, the Internal Revenue Service assessed taxes in the amount of $425,055 and seized the Williams home. While still in prison, his life story was featured in a series of articles written by future The Wire creator David Simon. “Easy Money: Anatomy of a Drug Empire”, a series of five articles, was published in the Baltimore Sun in 1987. Williams was released on parole in 1996.

In March 1999, he pistol-whipped a man over a $500 debt. Williams, who at the time was on parole and had an extensive criminal record, was sentenced to 22 years in prison in December 2000 after one mistrial. However, his sentence was reduced by the same judge who imposed the original 22 year term. He was released from prison in September 2003.

Williams began to appear on the HBO show The Wire during the show’s third season. He played a part referred to as The Deacon during the third and fourth seasons. The BET show American Gangster profiled Williams in one episode.

In the 1999 film Liberty Heights, the character Little Melvin portrayed by actor Orlando Jones is loosely based upon Williams in the early stages of his career. Other appearances include his cameo in Baltimore hip hop duo Dirt Platoon’s video for the song “Pennsylvania Avenue” in 2010.

 

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