Advertisement

Slaying of KPFK Reporter Shocks Friends

Share via
TIMES STAFF WRITERS

Friends described him as a man on a mission to capture the voices of the disenfranchised: gang members, welfare mothers, junkies.

Whenever he could, Michael Taylor shoved his clunky tape recorder into the faces of ordinary folk on the street. Even as he battled homelessness and a drug habit, Taylor enrolled in 1993 in radio station KPFK’s 18-month apprenticeship program. There, he found a new life as a street reporter.

So when Taylor was found shot to death execution style in a junk-strewn vacant lot in south Los Angeles, friends were stunned.

Advertisement

“He was a very lovely and soft-spoken guy,” KPFK General Manager Mark Schubb said Tuesday. “A lot of people had tremendous affection for him here. . . . That he would be murdered this way is beyond imagination.”

Gregarious and sharply focused on his work as a volunteer programmer, the 45-year-old Taylor made friends fast at the Studio City-based public radio station, operated by the Pacifica Radio Foundation.

“He fulfilled our mission beautifully of bringing voices to the air that otherwise would not be heard,” Schubb said.

Advertisement

Taylor’s body had no identification when he was found April 23 near South Victoria Avenue, his hands tied behind his back. Neighbors say they heard gun shots around 1:30 a.m. and called police, who discovered Taylor not far from railroad tracks in the area.

Los Angeles Police Det. Steve Watson said officers had to wait until late last week to get more information on Taylor’s identity.

“Unless you’re O.J. Simpson, a toxicology report doesn’t come back that fast,” Watson said.

Advertisement

Still uncertain, police and friends said Tuesday, is what Taylor, a Los Angeles resident, was doing at the location.

Officers said Taylor’s 1973 yellow Volkswagen Beetle is still missing.

His two daughters and girlfriend were unavailable for comment.

Watson said police have ruled out robbery or Taylor’s liberal political and social radio commentaries as a motive in the slaying.

“We do not believe it was a robbery,” Watson said. “Usually when someone is bound and shot, it doesn’t fit the description of a robbery.”

But Kwaku Person-Lynn, an ex-KPFK programmer and friend of Taylor, said he is still waiting for more information on the killing before deciding whether Taylor’s radio work was a factor.

Schubb said Taylor had been away from KPFK for three months working on an outside project that Schubb was unfamiliar with.

He doubted Taylor was involved in anything illegal that might have gotten him killed.

“Michael really had gotten his life together,” Schubb said. “We all want to know how this happened to him.”

Advertisement

Last year friends and colleagues raised enough money to send Taylor to Philadelphia to cover the controversial trial of black author and accused murderer Mumia Abu Jamal. They say Taylor was aware of both the rewards and the risks involved with grass-roots reporting in urban communities.

“He knew what he wanted to do,” Person-Lynn said. “He didn’t seem to be concerned about materialism like some radio people. He was concerned about African American issues. Uplifting his people seemed to be his primary interest.”

Advertisement