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Tragic details of Marvin Gaye’s death at the hands of his father on the 40th anniversary of his murder

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As the world sits back and reflects on the life and tragic death of Motown singer Marvin Gaye 40 years ago, many individuals are shocked to learn that his father shot him in his home the day before his forty fifth birthday, which was April 2, 1984.

Gaye’s life was complicated. At one point in his profession, he was a Motown star, gifting the world with love ballads like “Let’s Get It On” and “I Want You” in addition to socially conscious anthems like “Mercy, Mercy Me” and “What’s Going On.” However, there have been other moments where he struggled with drug addiction, femininity, and dark demons, which were evident in songs like “Troubled Man”.

But on that fateful day, Marvin Gaye was neither of them.

A person’s love for his mother and his father’s jealousy result in death

He was a son who intervened to guard his mother from his father, a person of God who was combating his own demons, including an indignant temper that usually resulted in domestic violence.

The murder occurred in the early morning of April 1, 1984, ending the artist’s 25-year profession.

Marvin Gay Sr. – his son added the “e” to his last name when he began his showbiz profession – and Alberta Cooper Gay were married for nearly 50 years and produced 4 children during their union. Reverend Gay was a preacher at the Hebrew Pentecostal Church in Washington, D.C., and a member of the strict Christian House of God tradition that was strongly against secular life, including music, television, and even makeup and sleeveless clothing for girls.

On the 40th anniversary of Marvin Gaye's murder, learn the tragic details of his death at the hands of his father.
On the 40th anniversary of Marvin Gaye’s murder, learn the tragic details of his death at the hands of his father. (AP Photo/Doug Pizac, File)

According to David Ritz, Gaye’s biographer, his father’s rigid lifestyle stifled creativity.

“Life with a father was like living with a king – an all-cruel, changeable and all-powerful king” – Gaye he said Ritz. “If it weren’t for my mother, who always comforted me and praised me for my singing, I think I would have been one of those suicide children you read about in the newspapers.”

Alberta all the time believed that her husband never “wanted” or “liked” their famous son, as she once stated, “He said he didn’t think he was really his child. I told him that was nonsense. He knew Marvin was his.

Adding, “But for some reason he didn’t love Marvin and, worse still, he didn’t want me to like Marvin either. Marvin wasn’t very old before he realized this.

Biographer Steve Turner examined Marvin Gaye’s strained relationship with his father. Turner highlighted the gay man’s cruelty, which included ravenous his children as punishment and a supposed sacrifice to God.

Turner suggests that Gay’s jealousy of his son’s achievements, coupled with his disapproval of his lifestyle, further soured their relationship and made the already disapproving parent resent his child and jealous that he was not gaining the same international recognition as his talented son.

Gaye’s ex-wife, Janis Gaye, said that her father also hated that his son was a sex symbol and that girls liked his handsome appearance.

“He considered himself a prophet and a messenger, and then Marvin was hailed as the voice of his generation, and yet Marvin did not live a godly life” – Turner explained. “It seemed very unfair to Reverend Gay. Besides, Marvin was very near his mother.

As much as Alberta loved her eldest son, he loved her. She was one of those individuals who never lost hope in him during the difficult years of the late Nineteen Seventies when his addiction gave the impression to be spiraling out of control.

The dark days of addiction

Gaye began using cocaine in the Nineteen Sixties, early in his profession, and started freebasing in the late Nineteen Seventies. Smokey Robinson once said during: interview with DJ Vlad that Gaye had a falling out with him because he would not lend him money to purchase powder while he was living in Hawaii.

In the early Nineteen Eighties, Gaye attempted to return clean and made a spectacular comeback with his 1983 hit “Sexual Healing” and a tour promoting his catalog.

However, on April 1, the day he was murdered, an autopsy revealed that not only had he fallen from the wagon, but he also had small traces of cocaine in his system, which can have contributed to the confrontation on Monday afternoon.

Confrontation and fatal shooting

Gaye was shot twice by his father after they got right into a physical altercation over the treatment of his mother. The singer was living with his parents at home in Los Angeles when he heard the couple arguing.

According to Gay’s father, the argument began because he asked his wife to locate one of his insurance policies before the “Heard it Through The Grapevine” singer entered the room and attacked him.

He tried to intervene when he saw his father, a preacher, shouting in his mother’s face. According to Turner’s biography, “Trouble Man” said, “You can’t talk to my mother like that.”

Alberta said Gaye got between them and pushed her father, then knocked the senior down.

“Marvin hit him. I screamed at him to stop, but he didn’t pay attention to me,” said Alberta in the biography “Divided Soul: The Life of Marvin Gaye. “He gave my husband a good kick.”

Gay confirms there was a physical altercation with his son.

“He took me from behind, grabbed me, threw me on the floor and commenced punching and kicking me. He kicked me wherever he could,” he added he said to the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner.

“He knocked me down on the bed and when I fell I accidentally felt the gun under my pillow,” he said.

When the father got his .38 special pistol, he shot him twice in the chest. Gaye gave him the gun 4 months before the incident to maintain the family secure. His father said he shot him in self-defense.

Brother Gaye and his wife Irene were at the boarding house and heard the shots.

Lieutenant Bob Martin of the Los Angeles Police Department he said The New York Times reports that the incident began around 12:30 p.m. (the biographer places the event an hour earlier based on interviews with the family) and that the star died of his injuries at 1:01 p.m. at California Hospital Medical Center.

Martin said the evidence showed the father was lying.

He said the argument began in an upstairs bedroom and agreed that at some point during the fight the father was pushed to the floor.

Despite this, the officer found that there have been no signs of head trauma or serious physical injuries, so the mother intervened and separated them.

After the separation, Gaye talked to his mother while lying on the bed. That’s when the father reappeared in the doorway, brandishing a gun and firing a fatal shot at close range.

The police arrested a 70-year-old father.

Gay later confessed to the murder every week later, on Monday, April 8, 1984.

“I know I actually shot,” the father told the newspaper.

“I regret what happened right now,” he said, explaining that he believed the gun was loaded with BB bullets or blank bullets.

“I pulled the trigger,” he continued intimately.

“Mom comes in and says, ‘Marvin’s bleeding.’ I walked down the hall and looked around, he recalled, “Honey,” I said, “call an ambulance.” “

The father went on to say that his son had been shooting up, which turned him into “some sort of beast-like creature” that brutally beat him.

Bill Gold, coroner’s spokesman he said then: “A small amount of cocaine residue was detected in the blood, but no other drugs were detected. “This finding indicates that the deceased had used cocaine at some point in the past but was probably not under the influence of cocaine at the time of his death.”

Although many sources, even then, he suggested that Gaye on PCP or angel dust in his system, the judge only upheld the report prepared by Gold’s office.

Gay Sr. claims the shooting was accidental

“I didn’t want to do it,” the father said. “I’m afraid of God. I respect God. I’m sorry and regret what happened at this moment.

When asked if he loved his son, he replied: “Let’s just say I don’t like him.”

Ironically, Jeanne Gay, Gaye’s sister, stated that she believed her father desired to kill her son, and he or she said this repeatedly, and that her brother “wanted to die”. His brother Frankie Gay believed the same.

“I got what I wanted… I couldn’t do it myself, so I told him to do it” – brother he wrote in his book “Marvin Gaye, My Brother” about his brother’s last words that he heard from the boarding house.

Adding: “It’s good, I ran my race; there is nothing more in me.”

Settlement and verdict

Initially charged with first-degree murder, Gay avoided conviction due to a plea agreement agreed to by Superior Court Judge Gordon Ringer. On September 20, 1984, he filed a motion to dismiss the charge of intentional manslaughter.

As a result, he received a six-year suspended sentence and a five-year probation period, during which he was banned from possessing firearms and drinking alcohol. During this ordeal, Gay was diagnosed with a brain tumor that worsened his health.

Ultimately, his condition required transfer to a nursing home. He died on October 10, 1998, at the age of 84, of pneumonia.


This article was originally published on : atlantablackstar.com

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