Home / Full timeline / Jon Lester, a White teenager, is sentenced in New York City to a prison term of ten to thirty years for his part in the beating death of a Black man in the Howard Beach section of Queens in December 1986.
Jon Lester, a White teenager, is sentenced in New York City to a prison term of ten to thirty years for his part in the beating death of a Black man in the Howard Beach section of Queens in December 1986.
1988 (Jan 23)
Jon Lester, a White teenager, was sentenced in New York City to a prison term of ten to thirty years for his part in the beating death of a Black man in the Howard Beach section of Queens in December 1986. The assault of three Black men in the predominantly white neighborhood inflamed racial tensions in the city and led to several days of protest demonstrations. Lester was the first of three convicted White teenagers to be sentenced. Lester's attorney, Bryan Levinson, said after the sentencing that his client should not have been sentenced "so harshly because this was a reckless act, not an intentional act.” However, Justice Thomas Demakos, who sentenced the youth to the maximum term under the law, commented that Lester showed “no remorse, no suggestion of guilt," but instead demonstrated a "pretty close to craven indifference to life.” The judge also added that the three Black victims were attacked “just because they [were] Black. ... Make no mistake. ... There are no ifs, ands, or buts about it: This was racial violence.” The Reverend Al Sharpton, the civil rights activist who had led demonstrations against the assault, said “the stiff sentencing vindicated those who pressed for appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the case.” Sharpton also contended that Lester's sentence was "an affirmation that racism and racist violence will not have a place in our society."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.