Richmond Free Press © 2016 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
VOL. 25 NO. 52
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
Gift of the heart
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Cherished HolidayMemories
DeCEMber 22-24, 2016
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Earl Fleming, 63, sits in front of the Christmas tree at VCU Medical Center’s cardiac unit on Tuesday, just 19 days after receiving a heart and kidney transplant. “I feel that what is meant for me is meant for me. I try to give the best I can give wherever I am,” he said.
Earl Fleming, a Richmond makeup artist, entertainer and advocate who has given so much to others, receives gift of life from stranger By Lauren Northington
This Christmas, one of Richmond’s living legends, who has spent his life giving to others, received the most beautiful gift of all: The gift of life. Earl Fleming, a celebrated makeup artist, drag performer, singer and Richmond LGBTQ community icon, underwent a long-awaited heart transplant on Thursday, Dec. 1. Along with a new heart, the 63-year-old founder of the oldest existing African-American drag house in Virginia, House of Snow, received a new kidney to improve his chances for a full recovery and a second chance at life. “Right at this moment that I’m talking to you,” Earl said just hours after a cardiac catheterization last week that left his voice raspy,
“I’m the happiest person I can be. I really am. I feel that I am a miracle.” After a decades-long battle with gout and chronic kidney problems, Earl was diagnosed with acute heart failure in 2008. Even after his diagnosis, Earl maintained his unique role as cultural icon in Richmond, serving as emcee during the “Church Crown” fashion show at the Richmond Folk Festival and a judge for Glam Gurls modeling competitions while still doing makeup professionally. Seemingly after every major setback for Earl, there is an even greater comeback.
“It’s amazing,” he said in a hospital interview Tuesday, referring to his transplant recovery time, as his nurse, Kate, nods her head fervently in agreement. “And I’ve been dead three or four times.” Each time, he said, God has given him another reason to live. “When I was younger, a guy stabbed me at my house. I was later in a devastating car accident that severely damaged my sciatic nerve. And when I was getting this heart,” he said, patting his chest under a hospital gown, “I flatlined several times.” Even before an organ donor had been secured, Earl had momentarily given up hope.
“I’m the happiest person I can be. I really am. I feel that I am a miracle.”
Tobacco warehouses breathing new life into South Side By Jeremy M. Lazarus
A one-time wasteland of empty tobacco warehouses in South Side is being transformed into a small business mecca that could generate at least 300 new jobs and uplift a long depressed sector of the city. The father-and-son team of Rick and John Gregory and their partner, Tom Papa, operating as Fountainhead Properties, are undertaking a $30 million redevelopment of the 38-acre property bounded by Maury, Clopton, Decatur and 29th streets. Renamed Clopton Siteworks, the property is already a small beehive of activity. Since Fountainhead bought the property Please turn to A4
Whitney White/Johnson Inc.
Rick Gregory, left, and his son, John, are leading the $30 million redevelopment of tobacco warehouses in South Richmond. The project, called Clopton Siteworks, is now the home of 23 new companies, with room for more.
He was placed on the donor list in the spring of 2016 and was at VCU Medical Center awaiting a donor for 171 days. As the year progressed, Earl said he was becoming increasingly weary. And then, on Oct. 3, Earl was dealt a devastating blow when his closest friend, Dianna Lofton, lost her battle with cancer. “We talked every day, and they came in one day and told me she had lost her life. I was devastated.” But in true form, when Earl thought all was Please turn to A5
Free Press receives award from Diversity Richmond
The Richmond Free Press has received the Partners in Progress Award from Diversity Richmond for its continuing sensitivity to issues facing the LGBTQ community and its reporting, photography and editorials surrounding the June 2015 shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Fla., in which 49 people were killed and 53 others were injured. The Free Press covered local vigils following the massacre and published articles about one of the victims, Darryl Roman “DJ” Burt II, 29, whose family had ties to the Richmond area and who was buried in Amelia County. The award was presented Nov. 29 during a Please turn to A4
It’s official: Electoral College makes Trump 45th president Free Press wire reports
Virginia’s 13 members of the Electoral College unanimously cast their votes Monday for Hillary Clinton, a show of support for the Democratic candidate on the same day Republican electors in other states officially elected Donald Trump president. Although Mrs. Clinton, who won the statewide vote
in November and the popular vote nationally by 2.6 million votes, Mr. Trump won 304 of the 538 electoral votes under the state-by-state distribution of electors used to choose presidents. By comparison, Mrs. Clinton won 227 electoral votes. Electors in all 50 states and the District of Columbia Please turn to A4
Roof guilty in church massacre Reuters
Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press
Sharing with Soul Santa Kennedi Ellis, 4, is shy about giving her wish list to Santa during a recent visit to the Black History Museum and Cultural Center of Virginia in Richmond’s Jackson Ward. The museum’s Soul Santa was a hit with the young — and the young at heart — during the museum’s annual holiday open house. Soul Santa made appearances on two consecutive weekends.
CHARLESTON, S.C. The jury in the federal hate crimes trial of avowed white supremacist Dylann Roof found him guilty on all counts for gunning down nine African-American parishioners at a historic church in Charleston, S.C., last year. Twelve jurors deliberated for a little under two hours before reaching a verdict on Dec. 15. Their unanimous decision came after six days of chill-
ing testimony about the bloodshed during a Bible study at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on June 17, 2015. The jurors will return Tuesday, Jan. 3, to decide whether Mr. Roof should be sentenced to death or life in prison. Mr. Roof, 22, showed no emotion as the guilty verdicts were read on 33 charges of federal hate crimes resulting in death, obstruction of religion and firearms violations.
The victims’ family members, who sat through the trial as lawyers presented graphic crime scene photos and details about Mr. Roof’s months of planning for the attack, felt a sense of relief. “I am just overjoyed that the judicial system, the jurors, saw fit to give us this triumph,” said Sharon Risher, 58, whose mother, Ethel Lance, was killed. “It gives us an opportunity to Please turn to A4