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Ray Vitte
Ray Vitte
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Raymond Vitte (November 20, 1949 – February 20, 1983) was an American actor who starred mostly in comedy and drama films in the 1970s and early 1980s. He made numerous guest appearances on television shows and was a cast member of the show Doc in 1976.[1]

Key Information

Vitte, who had been fevered for days and acting strangely for hours in his Los Angeles home, died in 1983 following a scuffle with two Los Angeles Police Department officers who were transporting Vitte to a nearby hospital for a psychiatric evaluation.[2]

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1973 Kojak Prisoner In episode "Requiem for a Cop" (Season 1, ep. #6)
1974 Airport 1975 Passenger Uncredited
Police Woman Ron Daniels In episode "Smack" (Season 1, ep. #11)
Sanford and Son Lewis In episode "Sanford and Niece" (Season 4, ep. #9)
Cannon Joe In episode "The Exchange" (Season 4, ep. #6)
1974–1975 That's My Mama Freddie Hampton 7 episodes
1975 America, You're On Carlyle Green II TV movie
Joe Forrester (TV series) Ethan Gates In episode "Stake Out" (series pilot)
Harry O Richie Harris / Bama 2 episodes
Police Story Slow Pony / Con / Alvin Lewis 3 episodes
Sky Heist Deputy Rick Busby TV movie
1976 Car Wash Geronimo
Doc Woody Henderson 7 episodes
Father O Father (TV movie) Uncredited role
1977 Charlie's Angels Sharp in episode "Terror on Ward One" (Season 1, episode #18)
What's Happening Gene / Dean 3 episodes
1978 Thank God It's Friday Bobby Speed
Mother, Jugs & Speed Mother TV short
Up in Smoke The Band: Bass - James
1978–1979 David Cassidy: Man Undercover Officer T.J. Epps 5 episodes
1979 A Force of One Newton
1979 The Man in the Santa Claus Suit Eddie
1980 9 to 5 Eddie
Cruising Uncredited role
Heart Beat Undercover Agent
1981 Gimme a Break! Ken in episode "A Good Man is Hard to Find" (Season 1, episode #2)
Grambling's White Tiger Rags TV movie
Quincy M.E. Man in episode "Vigil of Fear" (Season 6, episode #18)
1982 The Powers of Matthew Star Dr. Baker in episode "The Fugitive" (Season 1, episode #12)
The Quest Cody Johnson 9 episodes (final appearance)

Death

[edit]

In February 1983, police were called to Vitte's home in Studio City by neighbors claiming that a man had been making "religious shoutings laced with references to Muhammad" for more than 12 hours".[2] Vitte allegedly lunged at one of the officers who subsequently struck him with a baton. Vitte attempted to run away, but was struck again by officers who also used tear gas with no effect.[3] After Vitte ran away again, he fell down at the side of a swimming pool where officers handcuffed him and placed him into a squad car. En route to a hospital for a mental evaluation, the officers noticed Vitte had stopped breathing. He was pronounced dead at the hospital.[2]

A group including singer Donna Summer and the president of the Beverly Hills-Hollywood chapter of the NAACP protested Vitte's death in a news conference,[4] with Summer saying "...a man who's basically minding his own business in his own home, who happens to be creating a disturbance somehow, is now dead because his neighbors called the police".

A spokesman for the coroner's office said preliminary results of an autopsy showed "superficial injuries consistent with a struggle" but which were "not responsible for his death".[4] According to the coroner's report, Vitte died of complications from sickle cell disease.[5]

References

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from Grokipedia
Raymond Anthony Vitte (November 20, 1949 – February 20, 1983), professionally known as Ray Vitte, was an American actor who appeared in supporting roles in films and television during the 1970s and early 1980s, including portrayals of Geronimo in the ensemble comedy Car Wash (1976), a bass player in Up in Smoke (1978), and DJ Bobby Steel in Thank God It's Friday (1978). He co-starred as Cody Johnson, one of two apprentice knights, in the short-lived ABC Western adventure series The Quest (1976). Vitte's career also featured roles in dramas like Cruising (1980) and comedies such as 9 to 5 (1980), alongside guest appearances on series including Gimme a Break! and The Powers of Matthew Star. His death at age 33 occurred in a Los Angeles Police Department patrol car en route to a hospital after he scuffled with officers during an arrest attempt, striking them and fleeing before collapsing; an autopsy determined the cause as acute cardiac failure from anoxia and liver decompensation due to underlying sickle cell disease, with no evidence linking it to injuries from the confrontation.

Early life

Birth and background

Raymond Anthony Vitte was born on November 20, 1949, in , New York. Publicly accessible records offer scant details on Vitte's familial origins or childhood circumstances, with no verified accounts of his parents, siblings, or specific formative experiences. In the early 1970s, Vitte relocated from the East Coast to the area, establishing the foundation for his entry into professional acting amid the region's concentrated entertainment infrastructure.

Career

Film roles

Vitte's early film appearances included a bit role in (1974), a disaster thriller that featured an amid a mid-air crisis scenario. He gained a supporting part as , a character sporting combat gear and a , in the ensemble comedy (1976), directed by , which depicted interconnected stories at a Los Angeles car wash and highlighted urban multicultural dynamics. In (1978), Vitte portrayed James, the bass player in the fictional band fronted by the protagonists, contributing to the film's portrayal of countercultural road-trip antics in a stoner genre staple; the movie grossed $44.4 million domestically, establishing Cheech & Chong's franchise appeal through its low-budget humor rooted in marijuana culture. Vitte appeared uncredited in Cruising (1980), William Friedkin's thriller starring as an undercover detective infiltrating New York City's S&M to track a , a production marked by on-set tensions and protests from advocacy groups over its thematic focus on urban leather bar environments and violence. That same year, he played Eddie, a mailroom worker and friend to Jane Fonda's character aspiring for corporate advancement, in 9 to 5, a workplace satire directed by featuring and ; the film achieved significant commercial success, earning $103.3 million domestically on a $10 million and ranking as the second-highest-grossing release of 1980 behind . Additional minor film credits included an undercover agent in the biographical drama Heart Beat (1980), centered on the Kerouac-Ginsberg literary circle, underscoring Vitte's pattern of supporting roles in genre-driven productions of the era that boosted his on-screen presence without leading billing. These performances, often in comedic or ensemble contexts, aligned with 1970s-1980s trends in satirical and subculture explorations, providing verifiable exposure through association with box-office performers like 9 to 5 and cult favorites such as Up in Smoke.

Television roles

Vitte's early television exposure came through guest appearances on established sitcoms, including the role of Lewis in the episode "Sanford and Niece," which aired on October 25, 1974, as part of season 4. This appearance introduced him to a broad audience via 's popular series, which averaged over 20 million viewers per episode during its peak seasons. In 1975, Vitte appeared in the television movie Sky Heist, portraying Deputy Rick Busby in a story centered on a helicopter hijacking scheme to divert attention from a theft. The film, directed by Lee H. Katzin and starring , aired as a made-for-TV production, reaching audiences through network broadcast but without the episodic recurrence of series work. Vitte secured a recurring role as Woody Henderson in the CBS medical sitcom Doc, appearing in seven episodes during its 1975-1976 run. The series, starring Barnard Hughes as a widowed physician, provided Vitte with steady television work amid its single-season duration of 30 episodes before cancellation due to insufficient ratings against competing programs. His most prominent television series role was as Cody Johnson in The Quest, a 1982 NBC adventure drama co-starring Perry King and Noah Beery Jr., where he played one of four potential heirs to a fictional European throne amid intrigue and quests. The show produced nine episodes in its lone season, folding after low viewership failed to sustain network support. Additional guest spots, such as in Gimme a Break! and The Powers of Matthew Star, supplemented his resume but did not lead to sustained leading parts, positioning his TV career as episodic and supportive rather than starring.

Death and controversy

The arrest incident

On February 20, 1983, officers responded to complaints from neighbors in Vitte's Studio City apartment complex regarding his shouting and chanting of religious slogans for over 12 hours. Upon arrival shortly before 11 P.M., officers found Vitte alone in his apartment, dressed only in undershorts and a shirt, and he ordered them to leave the porch while placing a verbal curse on them. A physical struggle ensued as Vitte lunged at the officers twice, prompting them to strike him several times with batons and deploy , which had no apparent effect. Vitte then ran toward the building's outdoor swimming pool but fell on the concrete, after which officers handcuffed him amid continued resistance. He was carried, screaming, and placed in a patrol car for transport to a for mental evaluation. En route, Vitte ceased breathing, leading officers to divert to Valley Presbyterian Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at age 33.

Official cause and medical findings

The County coroner's , completed in April 1983, determined that Ray Vitte died from acute cardiac failure resulting from anoxia (oxygen deprivation) and hepatic decompensation, with his longstanding identified as the primary underlying factor. Toxicological analysis of Vitte's blood and tissues ruled out drugs or alcohol as contributors, showing no presence of intoxicants that could have precipitated the fatal episode. noted superficial abrasions and contusions on Vitte's body, deemed consistent with minor physical resistance but not indicative of trauma severe enough to independently cause death or . The report emphasized that sickle cell crises, which can lead to vascular occlusion, organ ischemia, and sudden under stress or , aligned with the observed physiological failures in Vitte's heart and liver. Vitte, who carried the , experienced a likely acute on February 20, 1983, with pointing to multi-organ involvement rather than isolated external as the terminal mechanism. The coroner's office closed the medical inquiry with these findings, attributing the outcome to natural progression of his genetic condition rather than acute exogenous factors.

Public reaction and differing viewpoints

Family members and supporters of Ray Vitte alleged excessive force by police during his February 20, 1983, arrest, organizing press conferences in the ensuing weeks to challenge the official narrative and demand independent investigations into potential brutality. Vitte's pregnant wife, Ernesta Vitte, his mother, pastor Rev. Billy Ingram, and actress attended these events, defending his religious chanting as benign "speaking in tongues" rather than disruptive behavior warranting physical confrontation. Civil rights advocates amplified these concerns, with NAACP representative Willis Edwards decrying the police role as contributing to an "extremely sad day" and urging the district attorney to probe for disproportionate force while pressing the Police Commission for accountability. Singer voiced public outrage, expressing shock at the fatal outcome stemming from a noise complaint and questioning priorities. Other Black leaders and entertainers, including , echoed calls for scrutiny amid suspicions of mishandling. Police representatives countered that officers adhered to protocols for a non-compliant who lunged aggressively and persisted in resistance post-handcuffing, employing batons and only as necessary without intent to inflict lethal injury. These defenses highlighted Vitte's active opposition, including verbal curses and physical struggles, as precipitating the escalation rather than unprovoked aggression. Official probes diverged from brutality allegations, with the coroner's April 1983 findings and later reviews attributing death to sickle cell-related cardiac failure under exertion rather than trauma, deeming struggle injuries superficial and non-fatal; by October 1983, authorities concluded insufficient proof of excessive force, leading to no officer indictments or convictions. This outcome underscored tensions between claims of overreach and evidence of medical predisposition amplified by resistance, informing subsequent discourse on vulnerabilities in high-stress detentions without yielding legal repercussions for involved personnel.

References

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