Pop culture obsessives writing for the pop culture obsessed.

R.I.P. Melvin Williams, actor and inspiration for The Wire’s Avon Barksdale

Melvin Williams, a former Baltimore drug kingpin who served as the inspiration for the character of Avon Barksdale on The Wire, has died. Williams—who, like many of co-creator David Simon’s contacts from his time as a reporter for The Baltimore Sun, appeared on the show—was 73.

Born in Baltimore, and known by his nickname “Little Melvin,” Williams presents a complicated figure to those hoping to summarize his life: a charismatic community leader in one moment, a hot-tempered man of violence in another, and someone who spent much of his life in a jail cell for masterminding a multi-million dollar drug empire (allegedly responsible for numerous deaths) in the next. Much of what’s known about him comes from Simon, who wrote a five-part series on Williams—titled “Easy Money: Anatomy Of A Drug Empire”—for the Baltimore Sun after the man’s 1985 conviction for cocaine trafficking. (Scans of the piece were put up on The Sun’s web site today, in the wake of Williams’ death at the University Of Maryland Medical Center.)

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Simon’s article tracks Williams from his rise as a flashy, high-profile gambler and pool hall shark, into the world of money-laundering and heroin trafficking, and eventually into police custody. To those who’ve watched The Wire, it reads like a blueprint for the show’s early seasons, complete with a charismatic kingpin kept insulated from the actual business of drug trafficking, and the frustrated police detectives—including Ed Burns, who would eventually go on to create the show with Simon—utilizing patience and wire-taps to bring him down. Along the way, it highlights the many facets of Williams’ character, including one memorable week in 1968, when he went from being praised on the front page of the Sun for his efforts in quelling riots in the wake of Martin Luther King, Jr.,’s assassination, to allegedly threatening a police officer with a machine gun in a Baltimore bar.

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Williams was paroled on the drug trafficking charges in 1996, although he later returned to prison in 1999 on charges of pistol whipping another man over a debt. He was released for good in 2003; the next year he began appearing on The Wire as The Deacon, a community organizer and man of the cloth who works to guide the people around him onto less destructive paths.

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Williams was briefly eulogized by Simon on Twitter, who wrote the following about his former subject: