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Pieces Of A Puzzle (demos for Yukio)

by R. STEVIE MOORE 500

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1.
2.
section 2 00:28
3.
section 3 00:27
4.
section 4 00:54
5.
section next 00:31
6.
7.
unthoughtout 01:29
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9.
10.
11.
12.
keysdrums 02:44
13.
14.
keysdrums3 01:16
15.
keysbongos 02:21
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17.
18.
19.
20.
perc 00:45
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22.
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25.
berlinwallen 03:04
26.
puzzle piece 05:52

credits

released April 1, 1996

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ALL MATERIAL UNUSED, NEVER SAMPLED NOR RELEASED AS SUCH. PLANS WERE ORIG FOR YUKIO YUNG TO POSSIBLY BUILD OUR NEW COLLAB BASED UPON A DEMO. WE TOOK A DIFFERENT TURN. "OBJECTIVITY."

THIS IS THE DEBUT OF THE ORIGINAL C-60 SESSION TAPE MIXES.

COVER PHOTO: THE WATCHUNG PLAZA, MONTCLAIR NJ POST OFFICE MASSACRE AFTERMATH, MARCH 1995. 2 BLOCKS FROM MY HOUSE, I MAILED OUT RSM CASSETTE CLUB PACKAGES FROM THAT VERY COUNTER SINCE MOVING NORTH IN 1978. MY 4 CLERK BUDS WERE SLAUGHTERED. BLACK TALLON BULLETS.

I COULD'VE EASILY BEEN INSIDE THERE AT THAT MINUTE.

~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

DEATH IN THE POST OFFICE: THE OVERVIEW; Former Montclair Postal Worker Charged With Killings in Robbery
By CLIFFORD J. LEVY MARCH 23, 1995

This is a digitized version of an article from The Times’s print archive, before the start of online publication in 1996. To preserve these articles as they originally appeared, The Times does not alter, edit or update them.

Occasionally the digitization process introduces transcription errors or other problems. Please send reports of such problems to archive_feedback@nytimes.com.

March 23, 1995, Page 00001
The New York Times Archives

A 29-year-old town laborer was arrested today and charged with killing four men and wounding one in a robbery at a small post office here where he once worked. He was accused of forcing his victims, two of whom he knew, to lie face down before shooting them at close range in an act of violence that unnerved this suburban community.

The laborer, Christopher Green, told the police after he was taken into custody at his apartment in nearby East Orange that he had stolen more than $5,000 from the post office on Tuesday afternoon because he needed money to pay his back rent, said the United States Attorney in Newark, Faith S. Hochberg.

A phalanx of Federal and local law enforcement agencies homed in on Mr. Green, a public works employee in Montclair, after the police here received a tip from an acquaintance of his that he might be involved in the killings, officials said. A computer search indicated that Mr. Green was the registered owner of a stainless steel, 9-millimeter Taurus handgun; the caliber matched that of the weapon used in the killings.

Neither Ms. Hochberg nor other senior law enforcement officials could explain why Mr. Green felt that he needed to shoot the two postal workers and three customers in the post office after he had taken the money, though some speculated that he did not want to leave witnesses.

"I think that you can determine something of his mental state that after the killings he went and paid off his debts," Ms. Hochberg said at a news conference in her office in Newark.

Mr. Green had no arrest record as an adult. He had one minor offense as a juvenile that did not appear to foreshadow what he is charged with doing, investigators said. His co-workers at the town's Department of Public Works described Mr. Green as a conscientious employee who came from a middle-class Montclair family that is well respected in its neighborhood.

Mr. Green had worked at post offices in Montclair as a temporary employee from July 16, 1992, until April 25, 1993, officials said. It was not immediately clear how much time he spent at the tiny office where the crime was committed, at 48-50 Fairfield Street in a typical suburban shopping area, or why he left the job.

"Christopher Green stated that he committed the robbery because he had a mountain of debt," Ms. Hochberg said. "This was not a case to our knowledge which involved a disgruntled postal worker."

When confronted at his apartment shortly before noon today, Mr. Green did not try to flee. He was calm and soft-spoken, the police said, and readily described how he had killed the two longtime postal employees, Ernest Spruill, 56, and Stanley Scott Walensky, 42; and the two customers, Robert Leslie, 38, and George Lomago, 59.

Both postal workers had recognized Mr. Green, and at least one of them apparently called his name before the shots rang out, the authorities said.

The only survivor of the shooting, David Grossman, 45, another customer, was listed in guarded but stable condition tonight at University Hospital in Newark. He was shot twice in the face, and apparently saved his life when he abruptly turned his head as Mr. Green fired, the authorities said. He was able to communicate with investigators on Tuesday night by wiggling his fingers and toes, responses that helped them develop a description of the suspect and the gun, and that corroborated the tip they received.

Mr. Grossman was also interviewed by the police this morning.

After Mr. Green was arrested, he led investigators to his refrigerator, under which he had concealed part of the money, and gave them a garbage bag that was outside his apartment, said Thomas J. Russo, chief of the Montclair police. He said that in the bag was a gym bag containing his bloodied clothing from the night before, as well as three postal money orders and 13 rounds of ammunition for his gun.

Officials recovered about $2,000 from the apartment. Mr. Green had apparently used the rest of the money to pay the back rent on his apartment on Tuesday night, the police said.

Mr. Green bought his handgun on March 13, 1993, from a gun shop in New Jersey and followed proper procedures in obtaining it, officials said. They said they did not know exactly why he decided to buy it.

On Tuesday, the police responded to the shootings after receiving separate reports from a customer and a postal worker who had gone to the post office to pick up a load of mail. An investigator with the Essex County Prosecutor's office said the customer had called ahead, asking either Mr. Spruill or Mr. Walensky to remain open a few minutes past the normal closing time of 4 P.M. so she could bring in a package.

The worker agreed and told her to knock on the front door when she arrived. But when she did, either Mr. Spruill or Mr. Walensky rushed to the door and told her to go away, saying that there was a plumbing problem in the building. As she walked away, the woman heard shots, the investigator said.

"He ordered them to lie down on the ground and just shot them," Ms. Hochberg said.

Mr. Green could face the death penalty if convicted of murder charges in the case, which is under Federal jurisdiction because it occurred in a post office. He was also charged with robbery and using a gun in the commission of a crime, the authorities said.

"We are absolutely confident that we have the individual," Ms. Hochberg said, "and that is confirmed by the rather extensive confession he provided."

Mr. Green, wearing a light tan jacket, blue jeans, blue slippers and wire frame glasses, was hunched over as he was led into the Federal courthouse in Newark this afternoon for his arraignment.

His hands were cuffed behind his back, and he fidgeted during the hearing. He spoke only once, answering "yes" when Federal Magistrate Stanley R. Chesler asked if he wished to have a court-appointed lawyer. He was held pending his bail hearing on Monday.

After Mr. Green's arrest, investigators from the Essex County Prosecutor's office continued searching his apartment at the Executive House in East Orange, about four miles south of Montclair, where one-bedroom units rent for about $800 a month.

The police in Newark said they recovered a car involved in the crime. Clifford J. Minor, the Essex County Prosecutor, said that Mr. Green had taken Mr. Spruill's car keys and drove his Chrysler New Yorker to Newark.

The neighborhood post office where the killings took place is a satellite of the main Montclair station. The main office this month put in bulletproof glass to protect its workers, but the smaller office had no protective glass or surveillance cameras.

At the news conference this afternoon, Terence Reidy, the town manager of Montclair, said the municipal government would hold a memorial service for the victims on Sunday.

"The next step for us is to begin the healing process," Mr. Reidy said. "This incident took on a level of tragedy, largely because we have such a tight-knit community."

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R. STEVIE MOORE 500 Nashville, Tennessee

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#1 Veteran Progressive Popster, creativity unmatched. The Home Workshop Man. Content over style, alwaysdiverse nevermediocre. Slays the competition. Thousands of choices. Sub-hipster. Get on it.Get over it^!

500Albums listed in reverse chronology. (new archval & reissues notwthstanding)
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