Home / Full timeline / A jury, consisting of ten Blacks and two whites, acquit twelve Black Panther Party members of charges that they murdered a police officer, and of conspiracy to murder in a gun battle with police at the party’s local headquarters in October 1970. During the trial, nine of the Black defendants participate in a prison uprising.
A jury, consisting of ten Blacks and two whites, acquit twelve Black Panther Party members of charges that they murdered a police officer, and of conspiracy to murder in a gun battle with police at the party’s local headquarters in October 1970. During the trial, nine of the Black defendants participate in a prison uprising.
1971 (Jun 30 - Aug 8)
Throughout the summer of 1971, members of the Black Panther Party were continuously engaged in legal disputes of various kinds. On June 30, a jury in Detroit acquitted twelve party members of charges that they murdered a police officer, and of conspiracy to murder in a gun battle with police at the party's local headquarters in October 1970. Three party members, however, were convicted of felonious assault in the case. This trio, Erone D. Desansser, Benjamin Fandrus, and David Johnson, faced a maximum penalty of four years imprisonment. The Detroit jury, consisting of ten Blacks and two Whites, returned its verdict after four and a half days of deliberations. On July 2, David Hilliard, the Black Panther Party's Chief of Staff, was sentenced to a one-to-ten year prison term by an Oakland, California, judge for assault in connection with a gun battle with police in April 1968. Hilliard, who was convicted on June 12, was denied a retrial and remanded to custody. On August 6, a biracial jury of ten Blacks and two whites acquitted twelve Black Panther Party members of the attempted murder of five New Orleans police officers in a gun battle at a local housing project in September 1970. The biracial jury, which received its instructions from a Black judge, Israel M. Augustine, reached its verdict after only thirty minutes of deliberation. If convicted, the Blacks could have faced terms of twenty years in prison on each of the five counts. During the trial, nine of the Black defendants participated in an uprising involving thirty-four inmates at the Orleans parish prison, where they were held. The uprising was staged to protest what the Blacks called the prison's "corrupt judicial system." The protest, which was held on July 26, ended after almost eight hours as the inmates released two Black guards they had been holding hostage. On August 8, Superior Court Judge Harold B. Hove declared a mistrial in the second manslaughter trial of Huey P. Newton, Co-founder of the Black Panther Party, in Oakland, California. A lone white housewife held out for the acquittal of Newton, who had been charged in connection with the killing of an Oakland police officer in October 1969.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.