Four Los Angeles police officers, all white, were acquitted of assault charges in the Rodney King beating case. The beating, captured on amateur videotape, showed excessive force used against King, a Black motorist. The verdict sparked immediate and widespread unrest in Los Angeles, including fires, looting, and attacks on motorists.
Mayor Tom Bradley declared a state of emergency in Los Angeles. Governor Pete Wilson announced that he would deploy the National Guard. Mayor Bradley made an impassioned plea for calm on television.
The jury, after reviewing seven weeks of testimony and the 81-second videotape, found the officers not guilty. The prosecution indicated a possible new trial for one of the officers on a charge where the jury was deadlocked.
The highly publicized trial and the subsequent riots brought national attention to issues of police brutality, racism, and racial tensions in America.
Four Los Angeles police officers were acquitted of assault today in the videotaped beating of a black motorist that stunned the nation. The verdicts immediately touched off a storm of anger and scattered violence in the city.
As residents set scores of fires, looted stores and beat passing motorists in the downtown area and pockets of predominantly black south-central Los Angeles, Mayor Tom Bradley declared a state of emergency, and Gov. Pete Wilson said he would send in the National Guard.
After hearing seven weeks of detailed testimony and studying the 81-second amateur videotape of the beating, the jury concluded that the policemen, all of whom are white, had not broken any laws when they clubbed and kicked the mostly prone motorist, Rodney G. King.
It was deadlocked on one of the 11 charges, and the prosecution said it might seek a new trial on that charge, which affected only one defendant.
The beating last spring, with its kicks and its 56 baton swings, was shown over and over on television. It immediately became one of the most visible uses of force by police in this country's history and put the issue of police brutality on the national agenda.
Immediately after the verdicts, an unusually impassioned Mayor Bradley appeared on television to appeal for calm in a city where the videotape has come to symbolize complaints about police brutality, racism and street violence.
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