Betty Van Patter was a 45-year-old Black Panther Party bookkeeper and idealist who admired the party and its programs to fight racism and help the poor.
But somebody killed her and despite many clues and much evidence the mystery has remained unsolved for 49 years.
Meanwhile, over the course of my 58 years in journalism, I have worked on a lot of big stories. We got some of them, we didn’t get others, and I have a few regrets.
The Betty Van Patter case is one of my major regrets. The Alameda District Attorney, the Berkeley Police Department, several private investigators, and a number of other journalists are among those who have looked into the case and come up empty.
Some of the best work on the case has been done by investigative reporter Kate Coleman, who published one plausible scenario for Betty’s murder in the now defunct magazine Heterodoxy in 1994. Coleman revealed that the well-known private investigator David Fechheimer, who was working for the Panthers at the time of Betty’s murder, told his mentor, the legendary private eye Hal Lipset, who it was inside the Panthers who ordered Betty’s murder and who carried it out.
Lipset was working for Van Patter’s family at the time and he confirmed Coleman’s report to me. Both Lipset and Fechheimer have since died.
Yet nobody has ever been charged in the case.
By now, interest by law enforcement and the media has all but vanished. The problem with this as a story is obvious. Historians, academics, young activists and old activists alike want to be able to celebrate the positive legacy of the Black Panthers, which includes exposing systematic racism, the harassment and arrest of countless black people, as well as the poverty and oppressive living conditions endured by millions to this day.
I want that too.
The issue is that to honestly tell the story of what happened to Betty Van Patter may seem to some to run counter to the ideal narrative, because it brings up the Panthers’ internal corruption, violence, sexism, prostitution, drugs, shakedowns, weaponry and justification of gratuitous violence.
All of which are just as true as the good stuff.
Therefore, any honest appraisal of the group’s place in history must first be capable of holding both sides of the truth in one hand, both the good and the bad, unflinchingly.
And for that, Betty’s case must be solved.
(Part Three appears tomorrow.)
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Thank you for revisiting this important story and for acknowledging Kate Coleman's role in the original reporting. Kate is now living in a memory-care facility in Oakland and unfortunately is unable to read your stories, but I've shared them with her friends, who will be glad to know that she is remembered.