Home / Full timeline / A grand jury in Tennessee decides not to charge any white police officers in the choking death of Black motorist Larry Powell, even after a medical examiner confirmed that the choke hold caused his death.
A grand jury in Tennessee decides not to charge any white police officers in the choking death of Black motorist Larry Powell, even after a medical examiner confirmed that the choke hold caused his death.
1993 (May 11)
In Chattanooga, Tennessee, a grand jury decided not to charge any white police officers in the choking death of a Black motorist. The incident occurred on February 5, 1993, when thirty-nine-year-old Larry Powell was pulled over by two police officers who suspected him of driving while drunk. Powell allegedly resisted arrest, and five other officers responded to a call for help from the two officers on the scene. In the scuffle that followed, the officers handcuffed Powell, put him face down on the ground, then gripped his neck with their hands and batons. A medical examiner testified that this choke hold caused Powell's death but that there was no evidence of abuse. Outraged Black leaders in Chattanooga, as well as Powell's widow, strongly condemned the grand jury's decision.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.