Home / Full timeline / Rioting erupts in Miami, FL, with at least 15 dead, after the announcement of guilty verdicts for all four white deputy sheriffs that beat a Black insurance executive to death, then attempted to cover it up and make it appear that he died in a motorcycle accident.
Rioting erupts in Miami, FL, with at least 15 dead, after the announcement of guilty verdicts for all four white deputy sheriffs that beat a Black insurance executive to death, then attempted to cover it up and make it appear that he died in a motorcycle accident.
1980 (May 18)
At least fifteen people died after two nights of racial rioting in Miami, Florida. The disturbances were the worst in the nation since the Black ghettos of Watts and Detroit erupted in the late 1960s. The Miami riot began in the wake of a controversial verdict in a case of alleged police brutality. The violence began on May 17 after the announcement that not guilty verdicts had been returned in Tampa, Florida, against four white deputy sheriffs from Dade County (of which Miami is the county scat). The four former deputies were charged with beating Arthur McDuffie, a Black insurance executive, to death and then covering up the beating to make it appear that McDuffie had died in a motorcycle accident. The all-male, all-white jury was empaneled in Tampa because Dade Circuit Court Judge Lenore Nesbitt had ruled that the case was "a racial time bomb" in Miami. In the wake of the rioting, U.S. Attorney Aticc Wampler III said that evidence already assembled by the FBI in the McDuffie case would be presented to a federal grand jury in Miami on May 20, 1980. During the riot, snipers shot at cars, civilians, and police. Three Miami police officers were wounded by gunfire on May 18. At least two of the rioters were shot dead by police. Florida Governor Bob Graham called up eleven hundred National Guardsmen, three hundred highway patrol officers, four helicopters, and an armored personnel carrier to assist local law enforcement authorities. At least 216 people were injured in the rioting and widespread looting and property damage were reported. The disturbances occurred in a section of northwest Miami known as "Liberty City." Black leaders in the area said they had seen the violence building for months and blamed the unrest on a long series of accusations of police brutality against Blacks, none of which resulted in significant action against the accused white officers; the conviction and suspension of leading Black officials on corruption charges; and a new wave of Cuban refugees, sharpening the economic competition that had left Blacks on the margin of the city's economy since the first Black workers went to Miami in the 1920s to work in the city's new resort hotels. As the riot progressed, Miami Mayor Maurice Feree received a set of eleven demands from a grassroots Black organization. Feree said he thought at least nine of the demands, including hiring and promoting Blacks, could be readily met. He also said he would consider granting amnesty to all of those accused of looting but could not agree with the demand to fire state attorney Janet Reno, the prosecutor in the McDuffie case.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.