Home / Full timeline / A state appeals court in New York reverses the convictions of three White men who were found guilty in the 1986 death of Michael Griffith, a Black man, in the Howard Beach section of Queens, New York, due to errors in his charge to the jury.
A state appeals court in New York reverses the convictions of three White men who were found guilty in the 1986 death of Michael Griffith, a Black man, in the Howard Beach section of Queens, New York, due to errors in his charge to the jury.
1989 (Dec 11)
A state appeals court in New York reversed the convictions of three White men who were found guilty in the 1986 death of Michael Griffith, a Black man, in the Howard Beach section of Queens, New York. The unanimous ruling found that Thomas A. Demakos, the trial judge, had made two errors in his charge to the jury. He had, the higher court said, supplied the jury with verdict sheets that contained the charges against the defendants (which improperly described some of the alleged crimes) and he had improperly refused to instruct the jury on disorderly conduct, a lesser offense than the ones with which the defendants were charged. The three defendants, William Bollander, Thomas Farino, and James Povinelli, all aged nineteen, were convicted in 1988 of second degree riot charges for their part in the racial attack on December 20, 1986.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.