#BumpyJohnson #DrugWar #HeroinEpidemic
September 15th, 1965. 2:30 AM outside Small's Paradise, Harlem. Bumpy Johnson watched as three young men loaded a bloodied drug dealer into a car. The dealer had been selling heroin to teenagers outside Frederick Douglass Junior High School. He would wake up in a hospital with a clear message: find another neighborhood.
At 60, two years after Alcatraz, Bumpy discovered Harlem under assault from an enemy more dangerous than any he'd faced: heroin was flooding his community, destroying families, creating child addicts, and turning his neighborhood into something unrecognizable.
While America was beginning to acknowledge what would become the heroin epidemic, Bumpy Johnson was already fighting a private war to keep the drug out of Harlem. Not because he opposed all illegal activities—but because he understood heroin was different: it was poison that destroyed communities rather than serving them.
This is the true story of how Harlem's Godfather declared war on heroin dealers and won—until his death ended the protection his community had depended on.
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⏰ TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 - September 15th, 1965: The War Begins
4:20 - 1963: Bumpy's Shocking Discovery of Heroin in Harlem
8:45 - "This Isn't Like Any Drug We've Seen Before"
13:30 - The Anti-Heroin Policy: One Warning, Then Removal
16:15 - Community Intelligence Network: Parents as Informants
💬 COMMENT: Do you think Bumpy's methods were justified to protect children from heroin?
DISCLAIMER: This content is based on community testimonies, police records, and documented events about drug enforcement in 1960s Harlem. This content condemns drug dealing and supports community protection efforts.
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