On February 21, 1965, Malcolm X was shot 21 times while addressing a crowd at the Audubon Ballroom in Manhattan. Three men were convicted: Norman 3X Butler, Thomas 15X Johnson, and Talmadge Hayer. In 2021, after a 22-month investigation, Manhattan prosecutors vacated the convictions of Butler and Johnson—by then known as Muhammad Aziz and Khalil Islam—admitting that the FBI and NYPD had deliberately withheld exculpatory evidence, suppressed witness testimony, and concealed the identities of undercover officers present during the murder. The men who actually fired the shots were never prosecuted.
At approximately 3:10 p.m. on February 21, 1965, Malcolm X stood at the podium of the Audubon Ballroom in Washington Heights, Manhattan, preparing to address an audience of approximately 400 people gathered for a meeting of the Organization of Afro-American Unity. His wife, Betty Shabazz, sat in the front rows with their four young daughters. Malcolm had just begun his remarks with the traditional greeting "As-salaam alaikum" when a commotion erupted near the back of the hall.
Two men began shouting at each other—a disturbance that drew the attention of Malcolm's security team and much of the audience. In that moment of distraction, a man later identified as Talmadge Hayer rushed toward the stage with a sawed-off shotgun and fired directly at Malcolm's chest. Two other gunmen emerged from the crowd and opened fire with handguns. Malcolm X was struck 21 times—by shotgun pellets and bullets that tore through his chest, arms, and legs. He was dead before the ambulance arrived at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital.
In the chaos that followed, Talmadge Hayer attempted to flee but was shot in the leg by one of Malcolm's bodyguards. The crowd caught him on the street outside and beat him severely before police arrived. Hayer was taken into custody with a gunshot wound and obvious injuries from the crowd's assault. He would be the only assassin captured at the scene. The other shooters escaped in the confusion.
Gene Roberts, an NYPD undercover officer who had infiltrated Malcolm's organization so successfully that he served on the security detail, was photographed attempting to resuscitate Malcolm on the ballroom stage. His identity as a police infiltrator would not be disclosed for years. The presence of undercover officers inside Malcolm's inner circle—and their failure to prevent or adequately investigate the assassination—would become central to the 2021 exonerations.
Within days of the assassination, NYPD detectives arrested Norman 3X Butler and Thomas 15X Johnson, both members of the Nation of Islam's Mosque No. 7 in Harlem. The arrests were based primarily on witness identifications that would later be revealed as questionable at best. Butler had a documented alibi—he was at home recovering from a leg injury sustained in a shooting the previous week. Johnson was working at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx. Multiple witnesses at the Audubon told police they did not see either man at the scene.
These witness statements were never disclosed to defense attorneys. NYPD detectives instead focused on statements that could support the charges, while suppressing exculpatory evidence. FBI agents, who had informants inside both the Nation of Islam and Malcolm's organizations, possessed intelligence that contradicted the prosecution's theory but never shared it with local authorities or defense counsel.
"The FBI and the NYPD had deliberate suppression of exculpatory evidence. This was not carelessness or incompetence. This was intentional."
Cyrus Vance Jr. — Manhattan District Attorney, November 18, 2021The trial began in January 1966. Prosecutors presented a case built largely on eyewitness identifications that were demonstrably unreliable. Talmadge Hayer testified that he participated in the assassination but insisted that Butler and Johnson were not involved. He refused to name his actual accomplices, stating he would not be "a rat." His testimony was dismissed by prosecutors as an attempt to protect his co-defendants.
What the jury never heard was that FBI informants had reported to the Bureau that Butler and Johnson were not at the Audubon Ballroom. They never learned that at least two NYPD undercover officers were present during the shooting and could have provided firsthand accounts of what occurred. They were never told that witnesses had described shooters whose physical appearances did not match the defendants.
On March 11, 1966, all three men were convicted of first-degree murder. Each received a sentence of life imprisonment.
In 1977, Talmadge Hayer—by then known as Mujahid Abdul Halim—submitted a detailed affidavit to the court naming his actual co-conspirators: William Bradley (also known as Al-Mustafa Shabazz), Leon Davis (also known as Abdul Aziz), Wilbur McKinley, and a fourth man he knew only as "J.B." All were members of the Nation of Islam's Mosque No. 25 in Newark, New Jersey. Hayer stated that the assassination had been ordered by NOI leadership and that Butler and Johnson had played no role.
The affidavit was denied by the court. Appeals were rejected. Butler and Johnson—by then known as Muhammad Aziz and Khalil Islam—remained in prison. Aziz was paroled in 1985 after serving 20 years. Islam was paroled in 1987 after 22 years. Both men spent the remainder of their lives attempting to clear their names while the actual killers remained free and uncharged.
FBI documents released through Freedom of Information Act requests in subsequent decades revealed the extent of Bureau surveillance on Malcolm X. The FBI had opened a file on Malcolm in 1953 and maintained constant monitoring through wiretaps, informants, and physical surveillance until his death. Director J. Edgar Hoover had personally authorized the operations and received regular briefings on threats to Malcolm's life from Nation of Islam sources.
The FBI was aware that the Nation of Islam leadership had publicly called Malcolm "worthy of death" and that specific assassination plans were being discussed. Bureau informants reported this intelligence but no protective action was taken. After the assassination, the FBI possessed evidence identifying the actual shooters but never disclosed it to NYPD investigators or prosecutors.
In 2020, the Netflix documentary series "Who Killed Malcolm X?" presented the results of historian Abdur-Rahman Muhammad's decade-long independent investigation. Muhammad had tracked down surviving witnesses, obtained previously unreleased documents, and built a comprehensive case demonstrating that Aziz and Islam were innocent and identifying the likely actual participants.
The documentary's impact was immediate. Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. announced a joint reinvestigation with the Innocence Project. Over the following 22 months, prosecutors reviewed more than 40,000 pages of documents, including FBI files obtained through subpoenas and NYPD records that had been sealed for decades.
The investigation uncovered FBI memoranda showing that Bureau informants within the Nation of Islam had reported immediately after the assassination that Aziz and Islam were not involved. These memos were classified and never shared with local law enforcement. The FBI's failure to disclose this exculpatory evidence represented a clear violation of constitutional due process requirements established in Brady v. Maryland.
NYPD documents revealed that detective notes containing witness descriptions of the shooters had been altered or suppressed when they contradicted the case against the charged defendants. Witnesses who stated they did not recognize Aziz or Islam were not called to testify. The presence of undercover officers—who could have provided definitive accounts of who was and was not present—was actively concealed from prosecutors and defense attorneys alike.
On November 17, 2021, the Manhattan District Attorney's office filed a motion to vacate the convictions of Muhammad Aziz and Khalil Islam. The motion acknowledged that "the past has come to light in a way that demands we take action" and detailed the systematic suppression of evidence that had resulted in two wrongful murder convictions.
The following day, November 18, 2021, Judge Ellen Biben granted the motion. Muhammad Aziz, then 83 years old, stood in the courtroom as his conviction was officially vacated 55 years after the original verdict. Khalil Islam's conviction was vacated posthumously—he had died in 2009 at age 74, twelve years before vindication.
"I do not need this court, these prosecutors, or a piece of paper to tell me I am innocent. I am an 83-year-old man who was victimized by the criminal justice system."
Muhammad Aziz — Exoneration Hearing, November 18, 2021In his statement to the court, Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance acknowledged that "what we can do is acknowledge the error, the severity of the error." Assistant District Attorney Peter Casolaro, who led the Conviction Integrity Unit investigation, detailed the findings: "The FBI and NYPD withheld exculpatory evidence. They failed to disclose the existence of undercover officers. They suppressed witness statements. These failures resulted in one of the most significant miscarriages of justice in modern American history."
The actual participants in Malcolm X's assassination—with the exception of Mujahid Abdul Halim—have never been charged. William Bradley died in 2018. Leon Davis reportedly died in the 1990s. The identities and fates of Wilbur McKinley and "J.B." remain uncertain. No federal or state investigation has ever been opened into the role of Nation of Islam leadership in ordering the assassination.
In October 2024, New York City and New York State reached a settlement with Muhammad Aziz and the estate of Khalil Islam, agreeing to pay $36 million in compensation for the wrongful convictions and decades of imprisonment. The settlement represented $26 million from the city and $10 million from the state.
Aziz's attorney, David Shanies of the civil rights firm Neufeld Scheck & Brustin, stated that "Muhammad Aziz, Khalil Islam, and their families suffered because of these unjust convictions for more than 50 years. The city and state have acknowledged their responsibility." The settlement did not include any admission of wrongdoing by individual officers or prosecutors, and no federal compensation was provided despite the FBI's documented role in suppressing evidence.
The settlement also did not address the larger institutional failures that allowed the wrongful convictions to stand for over half a century despite repeated evidence of their invalidity. No NYPD officers were disciplined for suppressing witness statements. No FBI agents faced consequences for withholding exculpatory evidence. The undercover officers whose identities were concealed have never been required to provide public testimony about what they witnessed.
Substantial evidence indicates that Malcolm X's assassination was ordered by Nation of Islam leadership and carried out by members from Mosque No. 25 in Newark. FBI surveillance records document that Bureau informants reported this information to headquarters. Yet no investigation of NOI leadership was ever conducted. Elijah Muhammad, who died in 1975, was never questioned under oath about the murder despite FBI knowledge of his inflammatory rhetoric calling Malcolm "worthy of death."
The full extent of FBI knowledge and involvement remains classified. In 2020 and 2021, Malcolm X's daughters formally requested that federal authorities release all remaining classified files related to their father's surveillance and assassination. As of 2026, substantial portions of FBI and CIA files on Malcolm X remain redacted or sealed under national security classifications.
The role of undercover officers raises disturbing questions. Gene Roberts was inside Malcolm's security team, trusted with his safety, while simultaneously reporting to NYPD. Why was security at the Audubon Ballroom reduced on February 21, 1965, despite intelligence warnings of imminent threats? Were undercover officers instructed to allow the assassination to proceed? Did federal or local law enforcement agencies make a deliberate decision not to prevent Malcolm's murder?
No comprehensive federal investigation has ever been conducted. The House Select Committee on Assassinations, which investigated the murders of President Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in the 1970s, did not examine Malcolm X's assassination. Congressional requests for declassification of remaining files have been denied or ignored by successive administrations.
What is established beyond dispute is a pattern of systematic suppression of evidence by federal and local law enforcement agencies that resulted in two innocent men spending decades in prison for a murder they did not commit. The FBI possessed information proving their innocence and concealed it. The NYPD suppressed witness statements and concealed the presence of undercover officers who could have provided exculpatory testimony. Prosecutors built a case on unreliable identifications while ignoring alibis and contrary evidence.
The actual shooters—with one exception—were never prosecuted despite being identified by name by the only convicted assassin who was actually guilty. The institutional forces that ordered Malcolm X's death were never investigated. The government agencies that possessed evidence of the conspiracy declined to act on it.
In 2021, 56 years after Malcolm X was shot 21 times in front of his wife and children, two of the three men convicted of his murder were finally exonerated. One had been dead for 12 years. The other was 83 years old. The people who actually killed Malcolm X have never faced justice. The people who ordered his death were never charged. The government files that might explain why remain classified.
The documented failure is institutional, deliberate, and complete. The Malcolm X assassination represents not just a murder, but a comprehensive breakdown of the justice system—from investigation through prosecution to appeals—that was only corrected when independent researchers and advocates forced authorities to confront evidence that had been suppressed for more than half a century.