Home / Full timeline / Black Panther Party leaders Mark Clark and Fred Hampton were killed in a raid by Chicago police. No Panther members nor police officers were brought to trial. The incident heightened tensions between the Panthers and law enforcement.
Black Panther Party leaders Mark Clark and Fred Hampton were killed in a raid by Chicago police. No Panther members nor police officers were brought to trial. The incident heightened tensions between the Panthers and law enforcement.
1969 (Dec 4 - 5)
Black Panther Party leaders Mark Clark and Fred Hampton were killed in a raid by Chicago police; four others were wounded. According to police reports, the pre-dawn raid was based on information that Hampton's apartment was being used to stockpile weapons. Police claimed that their knock on the door was answered by gunfire from a woman, and they contended that about two hundred shots were fired during the ten-minute altercation. The next day, spokesmen for the Black Panthers dismissed the police accounts of the raid and claimed that Clark and Hampton were murdered in their beds by police. They purported to show that only police had fired shots in the apartment. State, federal, and congressional investigations were held, but neither Panther members nor police officers were brought to trial in the wake of the controversial encounter. The incident served to heighten tensions between the Panthers and law enforcement, and the Panthers gained some additional sympathy among Americans for their objectives. Hampton had been the state party chairman for the Panthers, and Clark led the Peoria, Illinois, chapter.
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- • Black Panther Party leaders Mark Clark and Fred Hampton were killed in a raid by Chicago police; four others were wounded. According to police reports, the pre-dawn raid was based on information that Hampton's apartment was being used to stockpile weapons. Police claimed that their knock on the door was answered by gunfire from a woman, and they contended that about two hundred shots were fired during the ten-minute altercation. The next day, spokesmen for the Black Panthers dismissed the police accounts of the raid and claimed that Clark and Hampton were murdered in their beds by police. They purported to show that only police had fired shots in the apartment. State, federal, and congressional investigations were held, but neither Panther members nor police officers were brought to trial in the wake of the controversial encounter. The incident served to heighten tensions between the Panthers and law enforcement, and the Panthers gained some additional sympathy among Americans for their objectives. Hampton had been the state party chairman for the Panthers, and Clark led the Peoria, Illinois, chapter.