Home / Full timeline / Associate Judge Stuart Nudelman of the Cook County (Illinois) Circuit Court sentences James Kalafut, a twenty-one-year-old White man, to two hundred hours of community service for his role in an assault on three Blacks in the Gage Park neighborhood in 1987.
Associate Judge Stuart Nudelman of the Cook County (Illinois) Circuit Court sentences James Kalafut, a twenty-one-year-old White man, to two hundred hours of community service for his role in an assault on three Blacks in the Gage Park neighborhood in 1987.
1988 (Feb 25)
Associate Judge Stuart Nudelman of the Cook County (Illinois) Circuit Court sentenced James Kalafut, a twenty-one-year-old White man, to two hundred hours of community service for his role in an assault on three Blacks in the Gage Park neighborhood in 1987. Kalafut, who had stated that he had been "taught to hate Black people,” was also ordered to report to the judge's chambers once a month for a year. Edward McClellan, executive secretary of the NAACP's south side Chicago branch, responded to the sentencing by declaring that Judge Nudelman had “opened up a completely new approach to dealing with an old American problem: racism.” The sharp increase in the number of racist attacks on Blacks in the 1980s led many Black American leaders to link the civil rights policies of President Ronald Reagan to such incidents, contending that the Reagan administration was hostile to civil rights advances.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.