The shooting was officially ruled a
murder-suicide, but the account of the circumstances upon which the ruling was based was questioned by Lambright's daughter and discussed at length in her 2005 self-published book about Stepin Fetchit. In a Los Angeles Times interview, Lincoln Perry stated his belief that his son was set up. Lambright's involvement with the
Black Power movement at the peak of the
COINTELPRO program was believed to be related to his death.[5]
Victims
Traveling in the same car was the Keenan family:[2]
Ignatius Keenan, dead
Ruby Keenan, dead
Paul Keenan, injured
Critically injured:
Vincent Saitta, shot in the head; died at
Harrisburg Hospital on May 9, 1969.
George A. Bonsell, injured
Ernest R. Stephens, injured
Kim Stevens, injured
Traveling in the same car were the shooter and his wife:[2]
Donald Martin Lambright, the shooter, committed suicide
Donald Martin Lambright (born Donald Martin Perry; May 21, 1938 – April 5, 1969) was the son of comedian
Stepin Fetchit, though they only met two years before Lambright's death.[5] A child of divorce, he took the name of his stepfather, Dr. Middleton Hugher Lambright Jr. (November 7, 1908 - June 14, 1999), a thoracic surgeon in
Cleveland. He grew up in
New York City and Cleveland. He studied political science at
Lincoln University in
Oxford,
Pennsylvania, after being discharged from the
US Air Force in 1961, following four years of service and two tours in
Vietnam. Just before the shooting, he quit his job at the Ohio state employment office in Cleveland.