Home / Full timeline / Black Panther Lonnie McLucas is convicted of conspiracy to murder in his trial for the 1969 slaying of New York party member Alex Rackley.
Black Panther Lonnie McLucas is convicted of conspiracy to murder in his trial for the 1969 slaying of New York party member Alex Rackley.
1970 (Aug 31)
Black Panther Lonnie McLucas was convicted of conspiracy to murder in his trial for the 1969 slaying of a New York party member. Twenty-four-year-old McLucas was the first of eight Black Panthers, including National Chairman Bobby Seale, to stand trial for conspiracy to murder Alex Rackley, whose body was found near Middlefield, Connecticut, in May of 1969. The state had charged in the original indictments that Rackley was slain because he had been suspected by the party of being a police informant. McLucas's attorney, Theodore I. Kossoff, contended that the order for Rackley's murder originated from George Sams, Jr., the Panther member whom the defense alleged was responsible for the torture and murder of Rackley. McLucas was acquitted on three other charges: conspiracy to kidnap, kidnapping resulting in death, and binding with intent to commit a crime. He faced a maximum sentence of fifteen years in prison; the three charges on which McLucas was acquitted all carried heavier penalties
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.