Home / Full timeline / Judge Edward T. Ginouz sets a limit on the contempt-of-court sentence ordered for the “Chicago 7” defendants and their lawyers, and orders contempt charges against Black Panther leader Bobby Seale entirely dropped.
Judge Edward T. Ginouz sets a limit on the contempt-of-court sentence ordered for the “Chicago 7” defendants and their lawyers, and orders contempt charges against Black Panther leader Bobby Seale entirely dropped.
1972 (Nov 18)
U.S. District Court Judge Edward T. Ginouz set a limit on the contempt-of-court sentence that may be ordered for the “Chicago 7” defendants and their lawyers and ordered contempt charges against Black Panther leader Bobby Seale entirely dropped. The contempt charges arose from the actions of the defendants and the lawyers in the courtroom of Judge Julius J. Hoffman, who heard the case after disturbances during the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. The charges against Seale were dropped at the government's request. An appeals court had ruled earlier that if Seale were prosecuted, the government would have to reveal the contents of electronic surveillance logs. The prosecution refused, claiming such disclosures would endanger the national security.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.