Home / Full timeline / The New York State Supreme Court acquits Lemrick Nelson, age seventeen, of the August 19, 1991, stabbing death of an Australian rabbinical student during a riot in a Brooklyn neighborhood shared by Blacks and Jews.
The New York State Supreme Court acquits Lemrick Nelson, age seventeen, of the August 19, 1991, stabbing death of an Australian rabbinical student during a riot in a Brooklyn neighborhood shared by Blacks and Jews.
1992 (Oct 29)
The New York State Supreme Court acquitted Lemrick Nelson, age seventeen, of the August 19, 1991, stabbing death of an Australian rabbinical student during a riot in a Brooklyn neighborhood shared by Blacks and Jews. Nelson was accused of murdering Yankel Rosenbaum, age twenty-nine, of Melbourne, Australia, during the melee that erupted in the Crown Heights community after Gavin Cao, a seven-year-old Black child, was killed by a car that belonged in a motorcade escorting the Lubavitch Grand Rebbe, leader of the ultra-conservative Jewish sect based in Crown Heights. Witnesses said the car went out of control before striking the child. Shortly after the accident, Rosenbaum, a bystander, was surrounded by more than a dozen Black youths and was beaten and stabbed. Only Nelson was charged with the murder; police said they discovered a bloody knife on Nelson and that Rosenbaum had identified the youth as his assailant before he died. The police also stated that Nelson later confessed to the crime. Nelson's lawyer contended that his client was framed by corrupt police. Both deaths created a stir throughout New York City. About 200 people marched on City Hall. New York mayor David Dinkins pleaded for calm and later announced a $10,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of Rosenbaum's murderer.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.