Home / Full timeline / Four Los Angeles police officers who were captured on videotape beating motorist Rodney King are acquitted, sparking the most severe riot in U.S. history.
Four Los Angeles police officers who were captured on videotape beating motorist Rodney King are acquitted, sparking the most severe riot in U.S. history.
1992 (Apr 29)
The four Los Angeles police officers who were captured on videotape beating motorist Rodney King were acquitted by an Alameda County, California, court jury. Their acquittal sparked the most severe riot in U.S. history. Black youths brutally beat White motorists who drove through the riot-torn area. Rioters burned and looted stores and other businesses in predominantly Black south central Los Angeles. Some Blacks were also upset over Black-Korean relations in the city. Many of the stores destroyed were owned by Korean Americans. The Black residents contended that the Korean merchants were impolite and treated Black shoppers as if they would shoplift. They also cited an earlier incident in which a Korean shop owner shot and killed a girl who was suspected of shoplifting. Fearing for their lives and disappointed over the lack of police protection, some Korean shop owners armed themselves and fired at would-be looters. President George Bush called for calm and dispatched federal troops to the city. He said he would take whatever measures necessary to end the violence. Blacks, Whites, and Asians all believed that the police did not act swiftly enough to quell the rioting and blamed slow response for the property destruction, which was estimated in the billions of dollars. The Los Angeles coroner's office reported fifty-eight people were killed. Rioting also broke out in several other major cities, including Atlanta, Seattle, and New York City, causing federal officials to fear a national crisis. San Francisco suffered more damage than any other city outside of Los Angeles. More than 100 downtown businesses were damaged, and more than 1,500 people were arrested. Immediately after rioting broke out in Los Angeles, many workers in Manhattan left their offices fearing violence. Little happened, however; police officials said there were 13 serious incidents, 14 injured officers, and 116 people arrested.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.