(The story of the tape of Rodney King's beating)
TIME MAGAZINE - March 25, 1991
Rodney King, 25, an unemployed construction worker, had suffered
11 fractures in his skull, a crushed cheekbone, a broken ankle,
internal injuries, a burn on his chest and some brain damage.
The matter might have ended there had not a bystander captured
two minutes of the March 3 incident with his video camera. Within
hours, the horrific scene was being replayed on national television.
Within days, outraged protesters were demanding the resignation
of Los Angeles police chief Daryl Gates. By the end of last week,
four
officers had been arrested for assault and 11 others were under
investigation by the FBI, the L.A.P.D.'s internal affairs division
and the Los Angeles County district attorney's office. Said D.A.
Ira
Reiner: "It is a terrible moment, and time for serious reflection,
when officers who have sworn to uphold the law are indicted for
the most serious felonies."
The scandal reverberated far beyond Los Angeles, stirring
a nationwide debate over excessive police violence and finally
prompting Washington to take action. Last week U.S. Attorney
General Dick
Thornburgh announced that the Justice Department would review
all complaints of police brutality received by the Federal Government
over
the past six years--some 15,000 cases. Though it was unclear
what big steps Washington might take, Assistant Attorney General
John Dunne said the immediate goal was "to determine whether
there is a pattern of abuse to a high degree in any particular
region or police department."
Critics of Los Angeles' Chief Gates charged that such a pattern
does exist on his 8,300-member force. The day Thornburgh announced
his investigation, 1,000 angry Angelenos at a police-commission
hearing denounced Gates as the embodiment of a brutal, racist
police department and demanded that he step down. Some in the
crowd chanted, "Hey, hey, ho, ho, Daryl Gates has got to
go!"
Gates, 64, a rawboned, crew-cut career officer with a reputation
as a law-and-order hard-liner, sat stonily through the 3 1/2-hour
meeting. Though he had earlier declared himself sickened by the
King
beating, he said he was "very proud" of his 13-year
tenure as L.A.P.D. chief and refused to resign. Said Gates: "I
didn't invest 42 years of my life to go down the tubes over an
incident that I had nothing to do
with."
Race was a persistent subtext of the controversy. "We
don't know how much racism was involved," says Jerome H.
Skolnick, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley,
"but I believe
that racist police are more likely to be brutal and brutal police
are more likely to be racist." When black people see a police
car in Los Angeles, says state assemblyman Curtis Tucker, "they
don't know
whether justice will be meted out or whether judge, jury and
executioner is pulling up."
Though nonwhites account for 60% of Los Angeles' polyglot
population, white officers make up 61% of the L.A.P.D. Similar
imbalances exist in many heavily ethnic communities around the
U.S.
and, says sociologist James Marquart of Sam Houston State University,
this pattern can encourage police violence. "White police
officers don't understand a lot of things that go on in these
areas," says Marquart. "One way to deal with that is
to use force. It goes across all cultural boundaries."
Last week's federal action was prompted largely by the concerns
of national civil rights leaders. Attorney General Thornburgh's
decision to review claims of police brutality came after a meeting
with Democratic Congressmen John Conyers Jr. of Michigan and
Edolphus Towns of New York, members of the Congressional Black
Caucus. Said
Benjamin Hooks, head of the N.A.A.C.P. : "Police brutality
is one of the recurring, persistent questions that has never
died down because it exists all over the nation."
Statistics do indicate a rise in police-brutality cases in
many urban areas. In the Metro Miami area, 111 excessive-force
complaints were filed last year, up from 67 in 1985. During the
same years, the
number of Washington's complaints jumped from 299 to 415, while
Chicago's went from 2,084 to 2,476. Yet experts seem divided
over whether instances of police brutality are actually rising
nationwide or whether the number of complaints has increased
because of greater public awareness.
Neil Redlener, professor of psychiatry at Tufts University
School of Medicine, argues that police are more prone to use
force these days because they are facing a more lethal environment.
"There is better
firepower and increased violence in the streets," he says.
"A police uniform these days is as much a target as protection."
But Robert Trojanowicz, director of Michigan State University's
School of Criminal Justice, points out that departments increasingly
emphasize better screening of candidates to lower the incidence
of
police violence. "Generally, police officers as a group
use remarkable restraint in highly charged, emotional situations,"
says Trojanowicz, who believes most lawmen are deeply embarrassed
by the Los Angeles
beating.
There was ample cause for embarrassment in the March 3 incident.
The police claim to have clocked King's 1988 Hyundai going 115
m.p.h.
on the Foothill Freeway, although the audio transcript of their
initial radio reports does not mention excessive speed. The manufacturer
later stated that the car could not exceed 100 m.p.h. The
police said they subdued King because he reached into his pocket
as he emerged from the car, a movement they felt was menacing.
Yet the
videotape shows the man lying helpless on the ground as the officers
repeatedly beat and kicked him. One eyewitness said that she
heard
King begging the policemen to stop and that they "were all
laughing, like they just had a party." When King was released
from jail three days later, he told reporters he was "lucky
they didn't kill me."
Though he was still on parole after serving a year for second-degree
robbery, the D.A. declined to press any charges against him.
Instead his tormentors were facing charges. Last week a grand
jury indicted Sergeant Stacey Koon, 40, and Officers Laurence
M. Powell, 28, Timothy E. Wind, 30, and Theodore J. Briseno,
38, on
charges of assault with a deadly weapon and excessive use of
force "under the color of authority." They face possible
prison sentences of four to seven years. When the grand jury
goes back into session this week, it will continue to investigate
the 11 other officers present during the beating. King's attorneys
say he is preparing to file suit against the city of Los Angeles,
which paid out $10 million in
judgments against it in police-brutality cases last year.
Gates, who earlier singled out three of the officers for departmental
discipline, said they had "brought shame and dishonor upon
the police profession." Yet he dismissed the beating as
an "aberration." In fact, the roots of the incident
have much to do with
both the history of the L.A.P.D. and the stewardship of Daryl
Gates.
Over the years, television programs such as Dragnet and Adam
12 have portrayed the Los Angeles force as a model of cool, dedicated
efficiency. But with 8,300 officers serving an increasingly multiracial
population of 3.4 million, the L.A.P.D. has the lowest officer-to-resident
ratio of the nation's six largest police departments. To compensate,
the L.A.P.D. pioneered the use of SWAT teams, helicopter pursuit
and a motorized battering ram, tactics that differ markedly from
the community-patrol approach many other cities
have adopted.
Another factor is the L.A.P.D.'s unique autonomy. In 1937,
responding to a police scandal, the city passed a charter that
in effect gave the police chief life tenure. The chief cannot
be dismissed by the mayor or the five-member police commission
without "cause"--generally defined as misconduct or
willful neglect of duty. This system, argues UCLA sociologist
Jack Katz, has led to "a kind of
organizational egocentrism." Mayor Tom Bradley, himself
a former Los Angeles police officer, has had numerous run-ins
with Gates and has requested on at least four occasions that
the city charter be amended
to allow a mayor to fire the police chief. Though Bradley stopped
short of calling for Gates' resignation, he strongly denounced
the attack on King. Said the mayor: "I have never seen this
kind of intensity, anger and outrage that people have expressed,
and I think rightly so."
Meanwhile, the man in the center of the hurricane seemed to
be the coolest customer in town. A conservative Republican who
exercises regularly and shuns alcohol, Gates lives in a downtown
condominium with his second wife Sima. Supporters describe him
as a disciplined and sensitive professional, fiercely protective
of his men. His
detractors call him an opportunistic cowboy who makes provocative
statements to grab attention. He has, for example, called Hispanic
officers "lazy," described a blond television newscaster
as an "Aryan broad" and branded his own son--whom he
disowned after the youth spent a year in jail for robbery--"a
narcotics addict." In 1982 he was
officially reprimanded when he suggested blacks are more susceptible
to dying than "normal people" when subdued with a choke
hold. That
same year, he speculated that the Soviet Union was flooding Los
Angeles with "spies" posing as Jewish emigres.
The example of such leadership, say Gates' critics, ultimately
trickles down to the cop on the beat and creates the conditions
in which a beating like King's can take place. Sociologist Katz,
who has
studied the L.A.P.D., says its officers are taught "that
there are two kinds of errors police can make on the street.
One is not being aggressive when they should be, and the other
is being aggressive when
they shouldn't." The message the cops get, says Katz, is
that they should err on the side of aggressiveness. And although
Gates can't be
held responsible for every officer's action, he does set the
tone in the department. "If you look at the King videotape,"
says Katz, "there is a cultural sense that this [beating]
is appropriate. It is not as
though the police were personally, emotionally involved. It is
really an ethos that makes this kind of behavior possible."
From what you have read or seen, do you think the Los Angeles
police clubbing of a black man was racially motivated?
Yes 43%
No 20%
Should criminal charges be brought against these officers,
or should
this matter be left to the police for disciplinary procedures?
Criminal charges 67%
Police discipline 17%
How often do you think incidents occur in your community where
police
use violence against private citizens?
Very often 9%
Fairly often 13%
On occasion 48%
Never 23%
Do you think L.A. police chief Daryl Gates should be held
responsible
for the conduct of his officers?
Yes 50%
No 34%
Do you think police chief Gates should resign over this incident?
Yes 15%
No 63%
[From a telephone poll of 500 American adults taken for TIME/CNN
on
March 13 by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman. Sampling error is plus
or
minus 4.5%. "Not sures" omitted.]
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