EXCLUSIVE: Afrika Bambaataa sex abuse accuser Ronald Savage details years of torment following hip-hop icon's molestation: ‘He damaged me'
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As one of the artists who helped invent the music that exploded out of
South Bronx block parties and Boys Club dances, hip-hop pioneer Afrika
Bambaataa was already a New York legend in the late 1970s.
Ronald Savage was just a kid thrilled to be part of the burgeoning
Bronx hip-hop scene when he met Bambaataa, whose 1982 hit “Planet Rock”
helped turn rap into a global phenomenon. But the thrill of hanging out
with the influential artist evaporated quickly, Savage says, when
Bambaataa sexually abused him in 1980, inflicting deep emotional wounds
that continue to torture him to this day.
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The former music industry executive and author says he struggled
privately with intimacy and struggled with suicidal thoughts for decades
from the abuse that occurred when he was 15 years old, but he broke his
silence in recent weeks with the release of a self-published memoir
entitled “Impulse Urges and Fantasies” that includes the explosive
Bambaataa allegations as well as a YouTube interview with urban radio
veteran “Star” that has rocked the hip-hop world.
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“I want him to know how much he damaged me growing up,” says Savage,
50, who was known as “Bee Stinger” when he was running with the Zulu
Nation, the international hip-hop organization Bambaataa founded in the
1970s.
“I was just a child,” he told the Daily News. “Why did he take my innocence away? Why did he do this to me?”
Ronald
Savage describes his experience as a teenager in the Bronx, where he
says he was molested by hip-hop legend Afrika Bambaataa.
Savage says he’s speaking out because he wants to change New York’s
statute of limitations, which bars child sexual abuse victims from
pursuing criminal charges or civil penalties after their 23rd birthday.
He’s not looking for a payday, he says, but he does want relief from the
secret that has haunted him from years -- and he wants to prevent
children from suffering like he has.
“I think the statute of limitations is unfair for victims,” he says.
“It took me all of these years to speak about this. I was embarrassed. I
was ashamed.”
Savage, also a Bronx Democratic Party activist, says Bambaataa was 23
years old and already perhaps the best-known ambassador of the
burgeoning Bronx hip-hop scene when the rap star molested him 36 years
ago. Bambaataa abused him at least five times, Savage says, but he did
not go to the police or tell anybody else, although he says that years
later, he did confide in his mother, ex-wife and several former
girlfriends.
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“People don’t understand that you are scared. You’re scared if you tell
on this person, what are they going to do to you, what you’re going to
do to your family,” says Savage.
Bambaataa did not respond to requests for comment, but his lawyer Vivian Kimi Tozaki issued a sharp denial last week.
Bambaataa, a hip-hop trailblazer, was already a cultural icon when the alleged abuse took place.
(Johnny Nunez/WireImage)
“Defamatory statements were published seeking to harm my client’s
reputation so as to lower him in the estimation of the community while
deterring others from associating or dealing with him,” she said,
referring to Savage’s book. “The statements show a reckless disregard
for the truth, were published with knowledge of their falsity, and are
being made by a lesser-known person seeking publicity.”
Chuck Freeze of the Jazzy Five, who recorded and performed with
Bambaataa and was friendly with Savage when the abuse allegedly took
place, says Savage is no liar.
“Ronald was the kind of guy you could trust,” says Freeze, whose real
name is Charles Foushee. “You could leave money on the table and know it
would be there when you got back. A really good dude. Easy to talk to.
Very intelligent.
“We had no idea about this — and we would not have tolerated it if we did. Do I believe it? Yes, I do.”
Zulu Nation “minister of information” Quadeer Shakur, who declined
comment for this story, threatened to file a defamation lawsuit against
Savage in a March 31 cease-and-desist letter. The organization, which
promotes unity in the hip-hop community, also issued a statement that
suggests Savage had concocted the allegations to generate sales for his
book.
But Bronx court records obtained by The News suggest Savage told his
ex-wife about the abuse years before he published the book, which he
began writing when a therapist suggested he write down his experiences
and anxieties. Savage got a restraining order against his ex-wife’s
boyfriend, Daniel Harris, after Harris threatened Savage during a Dec.
3, 2010, phone call. Harris was later charged with violating the
restraining order after a confrontation with Savage on a Bronx subway
platform.
“I know about the Bambaataa thing,” the court records say Harris told
Savage in July 2011. Savage believes Harris heard about the abuse
allegations from his ex.
Savage told police that Harris followed him onto a train and punched
him “sharply in the side,” according to the complaint. The case was set
to go to trial in 2012 when a judge agreed to let Harris plead guilty to
a harassment violation, a charge lower than a misdemeanor, as long as
Harris stayed out of trouble for a year.
Two high-ranking Zulu Nation officials, meanwhile, recently called
Savage several times and said they would help him get a sitdown with
Bambaataa so he could confront his alleged abuser. And they vowed to
help him get compensation for the alleged abuse.
“Name your price,” one says on recordings of the conversations reviewed
by The News. “We can take care of this today. Cash money.”
By 1986, Bambaataa was one of hip-hop's biggest names.
(Lisa Haun/Getty Images)
Both men asked Savage to stop speaking to the media about the abuse
allegations, although it is not clear that they are trying to buy his
silence.
“I’m not talking about no $5,000,” the man says. “I’m talking about, let’s get a number, let’s say $50,000.”
“One hundred thousand!” Savage fires back, although he repeatedly adds
during the conversations that he doesn’t want Bambaataa’s money.
Tozaki says Bambaataa has no knowledge of the conversations.
“Neither of the two men were given authority to speak on Bam’s behalf,” the lawyer says.
Star says Bambaata is eventually going to have to address the allegations himself.
“Planet Rock" launched Bambaataa to stardom.
“If Bambaataa wants to retain his credibility, he needs to step up and
talk about what happened here,” says Star, the former Hot 97 and Power
105 DJ whose real name is Troi Torain.
Bambaataa — born Kevin Donovan in 1957 — was a warlord with the Black
Spades street gang during the “Bronx is Burning” 1970s when he took a
trip to Africa that changed his life. He returned to New York and
transformed the Black Spades into the Zulu Nation, an organization to
promote community and unity as well as the hip-hop arts — break-dancing,
graffiti and music.
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Bambaataa organized legendary parties in parks and other places that
drew huge crowds and sparked the hip-hop scene that continues today.
Bambaataa and other hip-hop pioneers — Grandmaster Flash, DJ Kool Herc,
the Sugar Hill Gang, Fab Five Freddy — later took their sound downtown
to the Village and the Lower East Side, where they partied and created
art with punk rockers like Debbie Harry. By the mid 1980s, Bambaataa was
performing around the world.
Savage was just 13 years old but he became part of the scene because he
lived in the Castle Hill Houses in the Bronx, which had a large terrace
that was the scene of many of hip-hop’s earliest events. Freeze
remembers Savage as a “crate boy,” one of the kids who helped Bambaataa
and other DJs haul in the crates of records that fueled the new art
form.
“It was just about fun, hanging out, listening to music,” Savage says.
Savage's self-published memoir, “Impulse, Urges and Fantasies: Life is a Bag of Mixed Emotions, Vol. 1," was released in 2014.
Savage’s friendship with Bambaataa and the Zulu Nation had its advantages.
“I had a big name on the street. I was the youngest of the Zulu Nation.
Nobody bothered me back then because nobody messed with the Zulu
Nation,” he recalls.
Savage says the first sex assault took place at Bambaataa’s apartment,
where Savage sought refuge after cutting school. Bambaataa fondled
himself and Savage that day, then invited another man to join in, Savage
says. During the second incident, Bambaataa allegedly ordered Savage to
perform oral sex on an older Zulu Nation member.
“I hated myself,” Savage says. “I don’t even know why I did that. I
don’t even know how he got me to do that. It was like I was hypnotized.”
Savage says he eventually stopped the abuse by pulling away from his former hip-hop hero.
“He came to my house. I pretended I wasn’t there and that’s how it
began to stop,” Savage says. “But by that time I was already messed up.”
Savage avoided Bamabaataa after that, but he didn’t leave hip-hop. He
later worked for several years for Strong City Records, a Bronx-based
hip-hop label, before he joined Dick Scott Entertainment, a management
company whose clients included New Kids on the Block. Savage headed the
company’s hip-hop division, working with Doug E. Fresh, Snap and other
acts.
Now Savage says he will turn his energies to reforming the New York
statute of limitations, which advocates for sexual abuse survivors say
denies victims justice.
“I promised myself before I die, I’m going to let the world know what happened to me,” he says. “They need to get rid of the statute of limitations. How can anyone who
has not been a victim say when somebody is ready to speak about this?”
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