CampusNews

Murders of HSU Students of Color

Over the past 40 years, four Humboldt State University (HSU) students have been victims of homicide locally. In a span of 16 years, the last two have been African American men, both cases remain unsolved.

Beginning in the 1980’s, the first victim was killed in the community forest. The second, working toward a teaching credential was killed by high school students. The third was Corey Clark, murdered in Eureka in 2001.  

These deaths are largely untracked by university officials, including the University Police Department. As far as the Dean of Students, Randi Darnell Burke, can remember, nobody aside from her has kept track of student homicides.

“I’ve been here 40 years,” Burke said. “I think David Josiah makes it four … I don’t know that anybody thought about [keeping track]. I don’t know that anything official was ever done.”

Homecoming, 2001

On an October night in 2001, Corey S. Clark went out to Eureka. A regular one-man show, he would have been dressed to the nines in his brown leather jacket with a cranberry vodka in hand. He expected to have a good time at Club West after Saturday’s homecoming football game.

Keion Morgan, Humboldt State University (HSU) alumnus and close friend of Clark, remembers the conviviality that Clark brought to the community and fellow African American students with his presence.

“There was something about Corey, people would just gravitate towards him,” Morgan said. “Coming up to a predominantly white institution such as Humboldt State, the thought of people who look like you, you just gravitate towards them.”

On Oct. 6, 2001, Clark was found in an apartment on the 900 block of K Street in Eureka, shot in the head at point-blank range. In critical condition, he was taken to a nearby hospital where he was later pronounced dead, according to archived articles by both the Times-Standard and The Lumberjack.

Morgan remembers the state of confusion that came with the early morning phone call from another friend and his rush to get down to the hospital to see Clark.

“I just remember getting a phone call like ‘Yo, Corey got shot,’” Morgan said. “To see him in that state, eyes wide open but basically eyes wide shut. I just remember looking at his face. His eyes. The way his facial expression looked. It was just like … ‘This is how it’s gonna end? After all the good I’ve done in my life?’ I mean, who comes to school and has to deal with this?”

Trying to make a positive mark

Clark was a 29-year-old senior sociology student in the fall of 2001. Unsure of what career path to take, he spent the previous decade between school or working.

Despite this, however, he was certain that he wanted to make a positive mark and even graduated from the police academy at the College of the Redwoods in those years.

Determined to succeed, Clark returned to HSU on his last semester to complete and receive his bachelor’s degree in December. But Clark never walked across the commencement stage or even held his diploma. He was awarded posthumously.

Celeste Winders, HSU alumna and another close friend, recalls Clark’s motivation to do public service and good for the world.

“He was very social justice minded,” Winders said. “He cared about fairness and people being treated well. Those things were important to him. He just was such a good person.”

Remembering Corey

After the loss of Clark, many in the university mourned his life, including students who weren’t familiar with him. Vigils were held in honor of his life with a large attendance from students and faculty.

Jennifer Eichstedt, professor of sociology, remembers coming into class the following Monday. Clark was a student in her popular culture course.

“I walked into class and there were flowers sitting on the desk he always sat at,” Eichstedt said. “Everyone was crying. It was so hard and horrible. He was one of those guys, gregarious and funny. At the memorial for him, there were all sorts of folks.”

(Left to Right) Corey Clark alongside Michael “Tech” Williams | Photo Provided by Keion Morgan

Meanwhile, some of Clark’s best friends, including Morgan, wanted to create a support system for other men of color in his name.

“We wanted to do something in honor of Corey,” Morgan said. “We decided to do the Corey Clark Coalition, Triple C. We wanted to bring the males together on campus. We knew the void of not having some type of black or brown male brotherhood.”

The case remained unsolved

In the months that followed, nobody was ever arrested and tried for the murder of Clark. And, despite student pleas to investigate, Eureka Police Department never made an arrest.

Even today, many feel the local police department failed Clark. Knowing his support for law enforcement, Winders feels they should have done more.

“He would have been the person, had he been alive, to say, ‘Give the police a chance, let them do their job,” Winders said. “He would have believed them and trusted them, but they failed him deeply.”

Nearly 16 years later to the day, the case remains unsolved with both lead detectives Dave Parris and Jeff Daniels no longer on the force. When questioned if the 2001 homicide case was still open, neither the Criminal Investigations Unit nor Public Information Officer Brittany Powell could be reached for a comment. According to a representative at the District Attorney’s Office of Humboldt County, no defendant was ever named or charged.

Alexander Foster looks through the archives of Humboldt State student publications The Lumberjack and the Osprey Magazine for info on the murder of a student | Photo by Diego Linares

Easter, 2017

On April 15, 2017, David Josiah Lawson was murdered at an off-campus party. Despite Kyle Zoellner’s arrest the night of, charges were dropped and he was released albeit remaining the prime suspect. Charmaine Lawson, Josiah’s mother, feels that the Arcata Police Department needs to work harder to ensure student safety.

“There’s still a murderer out in the streets,” Lawson said. “Students are not safe, and that’s why I’m going to keep coming back. To make sure the police do their job and arrest this person who, based on the evidence, is the one who took my son’s life.”

Immediately after hearing about the murder of Lawson, those who knew Clark began drawing parallels between the two.

“When I heard what happened, Corey was my first thought,” Winders said. “I don’t want his friends to feel the way all of us do a decade and a half later. I hope this young man gets his justice.”

Morgan, who knew Lawson since he was a child and helped motivate him to attend HSU, described an episode that seemed to mirror Clark’s death when Lawson’s mother called.

“My heart stopped,” Morgan said. “To have to get another phone call about another HSU student … another Black man, his life being taken away … this is Corey all over again.”

The parallel of the two is undeniable, not only because both Clark and Lawson’s cases have not been solved but their family and friends still remain hopeful that justice will be served.

“He is so missed and so loved,” Lawson said. “Everyone that he came in contact with loved him because he was a great person. Evil just came for him that night and took him from us.”