Home / Full timeline / A federal grand jury in Augusta, Georgia, indicted two white police officers on charges of violating the civil rights of two Black men who were shot during a night of racial rioting that left six Blacks dead. The bi-racial grand jury finds cause for indictment in only one of the six deaths. Georgia Governor Lester Maddox denounces the decision.
A federal grand jury in Augusta, Georgia, indicted two white police officers on charges of violating the civil rights of two Black men who were shot during a night of racial rioting that left six Blacks dead. The bi-racial grand jury finds cause for indictment in only one of the six deaths. Georgia Governor Lester Maddox denounces the decision.
1970 (Sep 1)
A federal grand jury in Augusta, Georgia, indicted two white police officers on charges of violating the civil rights of two Black men who were shot May 12 during a night of racial rioting that left six Blacks dead and sixty others injured. Officer William S. Dennis was charged with the fatal shooting of John W. Stokes, and Officer Louis C. Dinkins was accused of wounding Louis N. Williams. The grand jury had begun its inquiry into the shootings on August 24 and found cause for indictment in only one of the six deaths. After the biracial jury handed down the indictments, the decision was denounced by Georgia Governor Lester Maddox. The "national government, from the president on down," he said, "is only worrying about agitators."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.