It seemed like an open-and-shut case. The video, played on television so often that an executive at CNN called it wallpaper, showed Los Angeles police officers - as their supervisor watched - kicking, stomping on, and beating with metal batons a seemingly defenseless African-American named Rodney King. Polls taken shortly after the incident showed that over 90% of Los Angeles residents who saw the videotape believed that the police used excessive force in arresting King. Despite the videotape, a jury in Simi Valley concluded a year later that the evidence was not sufficient to convict the officers. Within hours of the jury\u27s verdict, Los Angeles erupted in riots. When it was over, fifty-four people had lost their lives, over 7,000 people...
The rioting that broke out on April 29, 1992 following the not-guilty verdict in the police brutalit...
On November 27, 1978, councilman Dan White bypassed the San Francisco City Hall security systems by ...
This thesis analyses the first modern case of police brutality and race relations - the beating of R...
The Breeze is the student newspaper of James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia
A content analysis of newspaper editorials about the trial of the four officers ac-cused of beating ...
IN 1992, THE acquittals of four police officers in the Rodney King beating trial led to widespread r...
Race and Law: Reflections on L.A.; education as a human right; race, poverty, and the environment
On March 3, 1991, Rodney King was brutally beaten by law enforcement in Los Angeles, California. On ...
This paper explores the exploitation of narrative, character, and ideology to reconstitute the video...
Download PDF version On April 29, 1992, a riot (eventually dubbed the LA Riots) commenced in Los A...
Purpose: We revisit the Rodney King incident and verdict to study their effect on confidence in loca...
This Article begins with the premise that, despite political rhetoric and occasional prosecutions to...
"Policing the police", By the Year 2000, KCET, television broadcast 1991 May 7, regarding the fallou...
The 1991 beating of Rodney King by Los Angeles police provides rich case material in how an attack p...
Student newspaper of California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, CA.https://digitalcom...
The rioting that broke out on April 29, 1992 following the not-guilty verdict in the police brutalit...
On November 27, 1978, councilman Dan White bypassed the San Francisco City Hall security systems by ...
This thesis analyses the first modern case of police brutality and race relations - the beating of R...
The Breeze is the student newspaper of James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia
A content analysis of newspaper editorials about the trial of the four officers ac-cused of beating ...
IN 1992, THE acquittals of four police officers in the Rodney King beating trial led to widespread r...
Race and Law: Reflections on L.A.; education as a human right; race, poverty, and the environment
On March 3, 1991, Rodney King was brutally beaten by law enforcement in Los Angeles, California. On ...
This paper explores the exploitation of narrative, character, and ideology to reconstitute the video...
Download PDF version On April 29, 1992, a riot (eventually dubbed the LA Riots) commenced in Los A...
Purpose: We revisit the Rodney King incident and verdict to study their effect on confidence in loca...
This Article begins with the premise that, despite political rhetoric and occasional prosecutions to...
"Policing the police", By the Year 2000, KCET, television broadcast 1991 May 7, regarding the fallou...
The 1991 beating of Rodney King by Los Angeles police provides rich case material in how an attack p...
Student newspaper of California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, CA.https://digitalcom...
The rioting that broke out on April 29, 1992 following the not-guilty verdict in the police brutalit...
On November 27, 1978, councilman Dan White bypassed the San Francisco City Hall security systems by ...
This thesis analyses the first modern case of police brutality and race relations - the beating of R...