In Memoriam

Donnie Andrews, man who inspired ‘Omar’ from The Wire, dead at 58

Donnie Andrews, the Baltimore gangster who inspired the part of Omar Little has died of a heart attack. He was 58.

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Donnie Andrews, the Baltimore “gangster” who inspired the part of Omar Little on the TV series The Wire has died of a heart attack. He was 58.

Andrews grew up on the West Side of Baltimore, and made a living being a stick up kid – robbing drug dealers. He served 18 years in jail, but was let out on parole in 2005.

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In an interview with Vice Magazine, Donnie Andrews said The Wire character resembled him to the tee. ”They made Omar exactly the way I was,” Andrews said. “David [Simon] wrote ‘The West Side Story’ [the initial Baltimore Sun article about Donnie] after my conviction in ’86 and they basically had everything down-pat. The gay part they took from a guy called Billy Outlaw, he was a gay stick-up guy.”

But after confessing to murder and helping authorities crack down on a major crime ring, he took another mission : helping the youth.  He started a non-profit called “Why Murder?” offering counseling to gang members and inner city children.

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