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This day in History: Police Brutality Caught on Video: March 3, 1991 (Rodney King)
History Channel ^ | March 3, 2006 | staff

Posted on 03/03/2006 11:39:20 AM PST by Rodney King

At 12:45 a.m. on March 3, 1991, robbery parolee Rodney G. King stops his car after leading police on a nearly 8-mile pursuit through the streets of Los Angeles, California. The chase began after King, who was intoxicated, was caught speeding on a freeway by a California Highway Patrol cruiser but refused to pull over. Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) cruisers and a police helicopter joined the pursuit, and when King was finally stopped by Hansen Dam Park, several police cars descended on his white Hyundai.

A group of LAPD officers led by Sergeant Stacey Koon ordered King and the other two occupants of the car to exit the vehicle and lie flat on the ground. King's two friends complied, but King himself was slower to respond, getting on his hands and knees rather than lying flat. Officers Laurence Powell, Timothy Wind, Ted Briseno, and Roland Solano tried to force King down, but he resisted, and the officers stepped back and shot King twice with an electric stun gun known as a Taser, which fires darts carrying a charge of 50,000 volts.

At this moment, civilian George Holliday, standing on a balcony in an apartment complex across the street, focused the lens of his new video camera on the commotion unfolding by Hansen Dam Park. In the first few seconds of what would become a very famous 89-second video, King is seen rising after the Taser shots and running in the direction of Officer Powell. The officers alleged that King was charging Powell, while King himself later claimed that an officer told him, "We're going to kill you, nigger. Run!" and he tried to flee. All the arresting officers were white, along with all but one of the other two dozen or so law enforcement officers present at the scene. With the roar of the helicopter above, very few commands or remarks are audible in the video.

With King running in his direction, Powell swung his baton, hitting him on the side of the head and knocking him to the ground. This action was captured by the video, but the next 10 seconds were blurry as Holliday shifted the camera. From the 18- to 30-second mark in the video, King attempted to rise, and Powell and Wind attacked him with a torrent of baton blows that prevented him from doing so. From the 35- to 51-second mark, Powell administered repeated baton blows to King's lower body. At 55 seconds, Powell struck King on the chest, and King rolled over and lay prone. At that point, the officers stepped back and observed King for about 10 seconds. Powell began to reach for his handcuffs.

At 65 seconds on the video, Officer Briseno stepped roughly on King's upper back or neck, and King's body writhed in response. Two seconds later, Powell and Wind again began to strike King with a series of baton blows, and Wind kicked him in the neck six times until 86 seconds into the video. At about 89 seconds, King put his hands behind his back and was handcuffed.

Sergeant Koon never made an effort to stop the beating, and only one of the many officers present briefly intervened, raising his left arm in front of a baton-swinging colleague in the opening moments of the videotape, to no discernible effect. An ambulance was called, and King was taken to the hospital. Struck as many as 56 times with the batons, he suffered a fractured leg, multiple facial fractures, and numerous bruises and contusions. Unaware that the arrest was videotaped, the officers downplayed the level of violence used to arrest King and filed official reports in which they claimed he suffered only cuts and bruises "of a minor nature."

George Holliday sold his video of the beating to the local television station, KTLA, which broadcast the footage and sold it to the national Cable News Network (CNN). The widely broadcast video caused outrage around the country and triggered a national debate on police brutality. Rodney King was released without charges, and on March 15 Sergeant Koon and officers Powell, Wind, and Briseno were indicted by a Los Angeles grand jury in connection with the beating. All four were charged with assault with a deadly weapon and excessive use of force by a police officer. Though Koon did not actively participate in the beating, as the commanding officer he was charged with aiding and abetting it. Powell and Koon were also charged with filing false reports.

Because of the uproar in Los Angeles surrounding the incident, the judge, Stanley Weisberg, was persuaded to move the trial outside Los Angeles County to Simi Valley in Ventura County. On April 29, 1992, the 12-person jury, which included 10 whites and no African Americans, issued its verdicts: not guilty on all counts, except for one assault charge against Powell that ended in a hung jury. The acquittals touched off rioting and looting in Los Angeles that grew into the most destructive U.S. civil disturbance of the 20th century. In three days of violence, more than 50 people were killed, more than 2,000 were injured, and nearly $1 billion in property was destroyed. On May 1, President George H. Bush ordered military troops and riot-trained federal officers to Los Angeles to quell the riot.

Under federal law, the officers could also be prosecuted for violating Rodney King's constitutional rights, and on April 17, 1993, a federal jury convicted Koon and Powell for violating King's rights by their unreasonable use of force under color of law. Although Wind and Briseno were acquitted, most civil rights advocates considered the mixed verdict a victory. On August 4, Koon and Powell were sentenced to two and a half years in prison for the beating of King.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: colt45
...and on 3/13/1999 he became a FReeper
1 posted on 03/03/2006 11:39:23 AM PST by Rodney King
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To: Rodney King

This one event is what truly opened my eyes to how deceptive and biased the media was and still is.


2 posted on 03/03/2006 11:40:18 AM PST by Coop (FR= a lotta talk, but little action)
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To: Rodney King; Jersey Republican Biker Chick

I've never seen someone who had a beating coming to him like Rodney King.  Every last blow, he deserved. 

As for FR's own Rodney King, probably something like a complimentary overnight canoe trip would be more in line. Maybe hosted by the late Dan Haggerty, that'd be fun.

Owl_Eagle

(If what I just wrote makes you sad or angry,

 it was probably sarcasm)

3 posted on 03/03/2006 11:44:49 AM PST by End Times Sentinel (In Memory of my Dear Friend Henry Lee II)
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To: Owl_Eagle

This is a must-watch video if one wants to avoid a beat-down from the Cops:
http://www.ifilm.com/ifilmdetail/2458063?htv=12&htv=12


4 posted on 03/03/2006 11:47:22 AM PST by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: Owl_Eagle; Rodney King

Rodney, watch out for Owl's canoe trips. If you hear "Dueling Banjos", remember "Deliverance" and RUN!!!!!!!


5 posted on 03/03/2006 11:48:20 AM PST by Jersey Republican Biker Chick (Cleverly disguised as a responsible adult.)
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To: Rodney King
Has ole Rodney smoked up his settlement yet?

I know, silly question.

6 posted on 03/03/2006 11:48:54 AM PST by TexasCajun
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To: Rodney King

The One Billion Dollar traffic stop.


7 posted on 03/03/2006 11:49:56 AM PST by garyhope (Peace through superior firepower, A-10's, C-130Y gunships, rational thought and pragmatism.)
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To: Rodney King
No mention of the fact that the MSM broadcasted only the specific sequences of the Rodney King video that indicted the cops, rather than those that showed the intoxicated King's continual physical resistance.
8 posted on 03/03/2006 11:53:45 AM PST by E. Pluribus Unum (Islam Factoid:After forcing young girls to watch his men execute their fathers, Muhammad raped them.)
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To: TexasCajun
"Has ole Rodney smoked up his settlement yet?"

Yes, and he spends a lot of his time in the San Bernardino County jails

9 posted on 03/03/2006 11:53:47 AM PST by scratcher
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To: Rodney King

Wasn't King high on Meth or something and started fighting the cops before they started beating his ass?


10 posted on 03/03/2006 11:54:15 AM PST by brooklyn dave
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To: Coop

"This one event is what truly opened my eyes to how deceptive and biased the media was and still is."


I would throw the History channel in with the rest of the media, it is as biased as any other network.



11 posted on 03/03/2006 11:54:19 AM PST by ansel12
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To: Rodney King

Rodney King was released without charges

Unaware that the arrest was videotaped, the officers downplayed the level of violence used to arrest King and filed official reports in which they claimed he suffered only cuts and bruises "of a minor nature."

Powell and Koon were also charged with filing false reports

On August 4, Koon and Powell were sentenced to two and a half years in prison for the beating of King.

Good!


12 posted on 03/03/2006 11:55:31 AM PST by Supernatural (Lay me doon in the caul caul groon, whaur afore monie mair huv gaun)
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To: Coop

More on the sorry events this case unleashed:

FindArticles > Reason > June, 1998 > Article > Print friendly

Official Negligence: How Rodney King and the Riots Changed Los Angeles and the LAPD. - book reviews

Fred Siegel
by Lou Cannon, New York: Times Books, 698 pages, $35.00

A decade ago, an African-American teenager named Tawana Brawley captured national attention by claiming she had been raped by a gang of whites, including a prosecutor and law enforcement officers. The story turned out to be a hoax, reversing the KKK myth of a virtuous white woman defiled by black men.

In a classic example of what used to be called racist and is now called multicultural thinking, the truth or falsity of Brawley's claims was beside the point for some. As the famed left-wing lawyer William Kunstler explained, "It makes no difference anymore whether the attack on Tawana really happened. It doesn't disguise the fact that a lot of young black women are treated the way she said she was treated."

But it made a big difference to Stephen Pagones, the young assistant district attorney falsely accused of taking part in the rape. He is suing the Rev. Al Sharpton, who helped broadcast Brawley's allegations, for libel. To this day Sharpton insists, a la Kunstler, that the facts about a particular individual are unimportant. Sharpton also insists he believes Brawley - that's the defense he's using in the libel case.

The same pernicious displacement of individual accountability by group identity stands behind the disastrous policies that helped detonate the 1992 Los Angeles riots. Lou Cannon's book Official Negligence will be read by many as a revisionist account of the Rodney King affair and the L.A. riots. Parts of the book, particularly the story of how Police Chief Daryl Gates left his post at the onset of the riots, are familiar. But the bulk of the book's painstaking 600 pages of main text is devoted to a detailed account of the Rodney King trials that will force readers to revise their old assumptions about the case.

Still, the book offers much more than a provocative take on the King episode. For Cannon, a longtime Los Angeles correspondent for The Washington Post, a respect for the individual and a respect for the evidence go hand in hand. Official Negligence, which deserves the widest possible readership, is a small monument to the ideal of objectivity on the topic of race, where empiricism has long since given way to tribal versions of truth.

Media coverage of the Rodney King case depicted an incident in which a group of racist cops had beaten an innocent black man without provocation and joked about what they had done. For many journalists, the story - or at least the portion of the videotape repeatedly shown on TV - fit an old script, with the LAPD in the role of Bull Connor and Rodney King in the role of a peaceful civil rights marcher.

Most reporters, together with the general public, saw only the edited, 68-second version of the video, which left the impression that Rodney King had been beaten for no reason other than the color of his skin. When the case came to trial in the virtually all-white Simi Valley, jurors discovered there was another section of the tape which had not been shown on TV because of its poor quality. The previously unseen 13 seconds helped frame the case for Simi Valley's conservative jurors, who were already inclined to be suspicious of the media. The restored footage placed the case in a very different context by showing Rodney King charging at Laurence Powell, one of the cops at the scene.

In the five minutes before the tape was shot, Sgt. Stacey Koon of the LAPD had taken charge of the case, in part because he feared that Melanie Singer, the California Highway Patrol officer who was the first to confront the drunken King after a high-speed chase, might use the gun she had drawn. Koon, unlike Laurence Powell, was anything but a racist. A stiff-necked man with a strong sense of his own rectitude, Koon had saved the life of a black transvestite with mouth-to-mouth resuscitation; he had also pursued, on his own time, a white cop who had abused two black homeless men.

Taking over from Singer, Koon found that his commands were ignored by the muscular, six-foot-one-inch, 250-pound King, who tossed two cops off his back and took two shots from an electronic stun gun, only to keep coming. It was then that the police, barred from using a choke hold and fearful that King was hopped up on PCP, subdued him with the numerous blows from metal batons that were recorded on the tape.

Reviewing all the evidence, Cannon concludes that the Simi Valley verdict of innocence for three of the cops, while a very close call, was probably justified. He notes that in the case of Laurence Powell, the one cop whose behavior probably was criminal, there was a hung jury, so he would have had to be retried. (He was ultimately convicted in federal court.) But these shades of gray would not mean much after the innocent verdicts helped trigger the riots.

If Koon was probably innocent and Powell probably guilty, no such mixed judgment was possible regarding the LAPD, which failed to treat the city's African Americans as individuals, with corrosive consequences. The problem with the LAPD was not a lack of minority officers; in fact, there was a higher percentage of African Americans on the force than in the general population. Rather, it was the department's paramilitary, "kiss the concrete" style of operation, which indiscriminately treated civilians, particularly in South Central L.A., as suspects to be confronted rather than citizens to be served.

The LAPD - which, under Gates, pioneered the use of SWAT teams - invested a great deal in high-tech helicopters and very little in community relations. Under the leadership of the legendary William Parker, chief from 1950-1966, the officers were trained to keep their distance from the people they were supposed to protect, on the ground that contact could only lead to corruption. This distance, combined with large-scale sweeps that drew the innocent as well as the guilty into police dragnets, meant that in South Central the old saw about the police as an army of occupation carried more than just a ring of truth.

Part of the problem lay in L.A.'s unique version of the two-party system dating back to the 1950s, under which the police chief, given virtual autonomy by the city charter, was inevitably seen as the mayor's political rival. In the early 1970s, when Parker's successor, Ed Davis, tried to bring police into closer contact with residents through the kind of community policing that has been so successful in Rudy Giuliani's New York, he was rebuffed by Mayor Tom Bradley, who emerges as one of the villains in Cannon's book. In a city without a civic life to speak of, Bradley was afraid that the community relations officers, all 17 of them, might be influential enough to serve as the basis for a political machine operating on behalf of Davis, who was talking about running for mayor. It was a fateful decision, since it meant that, as with the 1965 Watts riots, hostility toward the authorities was left to smolder.

If the Rodney King experience wasn't bad enough, the black population's suspicions of the police and the legal system were stoked by the Latasha Harlins case. The Empire Liquor Market Deli in South Central had been repeatedly robbed and sometimes terrorized by black gang members, explains Cannon, so when Harlins, a teenager with no criminal record, entered the store in March 1991, owner Soon Ja Du "expected the worst from the black girl." Baseless accusations of shoplifting led to a fight, and the storekeeper fired a bullet into the back of Harlins's head as she was leaving the store. The incident was bad enough; what made it worse was the conduct of Judge Joyce Karlin, who let Du off with probation on the ground that her actions resulted from social conditions which left her justifiably fearful. Once again, individual accountability was sacrificed at the altar of group identity, and the murderer of a black girl got off lightly - as would the African Americans who beat truck driver Reginald Denny nearly to death during the riots.

The lesson of Cannon's book can be summed up by an exchange between William Graham Sumner, a Reconstruction-era senator who wanted to punish the South, and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Sumner is supposed to have told Emerson that "in my zeal for the cause, I have risen above consideration for mere individuals." Emerson is said to have replied, "My dear sir, I hadn't realized that even God had reached that stage."

Fred Siegel (siegel@cooper.edu), a senior fellow with the Progressive Policy Institute and a professor of history at Cooper Union College, is the author of The Future Once Happened Here: New York, L.A., D.C., and the Fate of America's Big Cities (The Free Press).

COPYRIGHT 1998 Reason Foundation
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group


13 posted on 03/03/2006 12:25:28 PM PST by robowombat
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To: Rodney King

If rodney had done what he was told, he would not have been beaten. When he was on the ground with cops swarming all over him, he was still trying to get his hands under himself to get up. He should have laid down, and put his hands behind his back.


14 posted on 03/03/2006 1:14:28 PM PST by weezel
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To: Rodney King
George Holiday sold his video of the beating to a local television station .....

Thirty three pieces of silver,George?. 54 deaths eventually. Mostly Koreans and Hispanics.

Sleep well George, cos' the "hated" police are protecting YOUR self righteous backside.

15 posted on 03/03/2006 1:58:00 PM PST by Peter Libra
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To: weezel

If you are being beaten with clubs, the natural instinct of anyone is to put your arms up to protect your head and face.

Same thing with a choke hold the police put on someone. If you can't breath, you start to struggle to get free of the choke hold. Then the police apply still more pressure and kill you, claiming you were resisting.

What would you do if someone were beating you with clubs? Lie there perfectly still while you were getting beat?

And the question is not "Would you have put yourself in that position". The question is would you lie there perfectly still while you were getting beaten with clubs?


16 posted on 03/03/2006 2:26:32 PM PST by Supernatural (Lay me doon in the caul caul groon, whaur afore monie mair huv gaun)
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To: robowombat

I read Stacey's book "Presumed Guilty" years ago. It's amazing what that story looks like when both sides are told. The media and idiots like Maxine Waters should be ashamed of themselves.


17 posted on 03/06/2006 4:31:09 AM PST by Coop (FR= a lotta talk, but little action)
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To: Supernatural

I would have pulled over and laid down as soon as the police said to. As a matter of fact, I've been there, and done what I was told, and was not hit once. rodney brought it on himself.


18 posted on 03/07/2006 9:39:19 AM PST by weezel
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To: Rodney King

And was responsible for the new LAPD motto: We'll treat you like a King


19 posted on 03/07/2006 9:44:23 AM PST by Richard Kimball (I like to make everyone's day a little more surreal)
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To: Richard Kimball

The motto "To Protect and to Serve" leaves out something.

Should read "To Protect and to Serve Ourselves".


20 posted on 03/07/2006 9:50:28 AM PST by Supernatural (Lay me doon in the caul caul groon, whaur afore monie mair huv gaun)
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