Home / Full timeline / Black activist Cleveland L. Sellers, Jr., is convicted by a biracial jury in Orangeburg, South Carolina, for participating in a South Carolina State College riot in 1968.
Black activist Cleveland L. Sellers, Jr., is convicted by a biracial jury in Orangeburg, South Carolina, for participating in a South Carolina State College riot in 1968.
1970 (Sep 28)
Black activist Cleveland L. Sellers, Jr., was convicted by a biracial jury in Orangeburg, South Carolina, for participating in a riot on the campus of South Carolina State College in 1968. Three Black students had been killed by state highway patrolmen in the incident. Sellers, a former national program secretary for the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), was sentenced the maximum one year in prison and a $250 fine. Sellers was released on a $5,000 appeal bond by State Circuit Court Judge John Grimball, who said he could leave the state to attend college. Two days earlier, Grimball had ordered a directed verdict of acquittal of two other riot charges against Sellers, citing that the prosecution had failed to prove Sellers incited the Orangeburg student riot in which twenty-seven Blacks were wounded, including Sellers, and three students were slain.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.