In Concord, a push to reopen 1985 case of young Black man found hanging from a tree at BART station

CONCORD — Tragedy shook the Bay Area in 1985 after the body of a young Black man from Berkeley was discovered hanging from a fig tree near the Concord BART station — news that reverberated across Northern California and made national headlines.

Timothy Charles Lee, a 23-year-old fashion design student and gay man, had fallen asleep on the train after work on Nov. 1, a Friday, in San Francisco. He awoke in Concord, which at that time was the end of the BART line, and called family and friends from a nearby payphone, trying to secure a ride home.

Roughly 11 hours later, Lee was found hanging in the tree in a vacant dirt lot off Mt. Diablo Street.

Local law enforcement quickly closed the case, deeming Lee’s death a suicide. Police said a suicide note was found nearby, and no evidence of a physical struggle had been recorded in Lee’s autopsy report, which also noted that his blood alcohol level was .13, just above the legal driving limit in the 1980s.

But nearly four decades later, the finding in Lee’s death still doesn’t add up for his family and local community leaders, who are skeptical that the young San Francisco College of the Arts student would impulsively commit suicide that night. Instead, they said they believe he may have been lynched, citing odd details in the case that did not make sense, including that Lee’s name was misspelled, as were those of his siblings, in the alleged suicide note.

On Thursday, the 38th anniversary of the day Lee’s body was found, a few dozen people marched through downtown Concord, handing out informational fliers to passersby before setting up an altar and candlelight vigil in Lee’s memory near the vacant BART parking lot.

Frank Sterling, Lee’s cousin and a local journalist, said they hope to petition California Attorney General Rob Bonta — or another independent agency — to reopen the investigation into Lee’s death, which he believes was a racist and anti-gay attack.

“This case has laid dormant and quiet for too long, but I want to hold people accountable,” Sterling said. “That’s why I’m here — I want to find out what happened to my cousin.”

According to a 415-page FBI file that compiled accounts and investigations into what happened that November night, two men wearing white Ku Klux Klan robes were arrested — 12 hours before Lee’s body was found — after stabbing two young black men in the parking lot of a Concord bar located only a few miles away from the city’s BART station.

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