Father of slain ex-MOVE member files wrongful death claimhttp://www.newsday.com/news/local/wire/ny-bc-nj--move-custodyshoot0927sep27,0,5508784.story?coll=ny-ap-regional-wireSeptember 27, 2004, 7:20 PM EDT
MOUNT HOLLY, N.J. -- Two years after a former member of the Philadelphia separatist group MOVE was found shot to death in his car, the victim's father has filed a wrongful death lawsuit.
John Gilbride Sr. of Herndon, Va., said the lawsuit filed Monday in state Superior Court does not name any specific defendants, but rather maintains his right to sue anyone who may be charged in the Sept. 27, 2002, slaying of John Gilbride Jr. in Maple Shade.
Under a statute of limitations in New Jersey, Monday was the last day Gilbride Sr. could file a wrongful death suit against his son's killer or killers.
Gilbride Jr. and Alberta Africa, the widow of MOVE founder John Africa, had a son together.
In the weeks leading up to Gilbride's death, MOVE protested on the streets of Cherry Hill because a judge had allowed Gilbride to have unsupervised visits with his son. Members of the group said Gilbride was an unfit and abusive father.
Gilbride, 34, was found with multiple gunshot wounds to his head in his car in front of his apartment one week after the protest.
Authorities will not speak about the details of the case and have not named any suspects.
Messages left Monday for a MOVE spokeswoman were not immediately returned. In the past, MOVE has denied any involvement in the slaying.
MOVE, founded in the 1970s, has long advocated resistance to the government, which it claims is racist and oppressive.
In 1978, a Philadelphia police officer was shot to death in a confrontation at MOVE's headquarters. Another clash in 1985 left 11 people dead and 61 homes burned after Philadelphia police dropped a bomb from a helicopter on the group's fortified row house.