Location |
Defendant(s) |
Date of Alleged Crime |
Alameda
County, CA |
Huey P. Newton |
Oct 28, 1967 |
“Before any evidence was heard,
many Americans believed that Huey P. Newton, co-founder and ‘minister of
defense’ of the Black Panther Party, had murdered a police officer in cold
blood. Others were equally certain that the charge was a trumped-up
attempt to crush the militant Black Panther Party.”
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|
San Francisco
County, CA |
Billings & Mooney |
July 22, 1916 |
Warren K.
Billings and Thomas J. Mooney, both radical labor leaders, were convicted of
setting off a suitcase bomb at a Preparedness Day Parade that killed 10
people and wounded 40 others. The two were convicted because of police
perjury, concealment of exonerating evidence, and prosecutorial misconduct.
Governor Culbert Olson pardoned both men in 1939. [3/06] |
Los Angeles
County, CA |
Geronimo Pratt |
Dec 18, 1968 (Santa Monica) |
Elmer A.
Pratt, aka Geronimo Pratt, was
convicted in 1972 of murdering Caroline Olson, a white schoolteacher. At
the time of his arrest, Pratt was the leader of the Los Angeles Black
Panther Party and a target of the FBI, which had vowed to neutralize him.
While viewing a lineup, the victim's husband, Kenneth Olson, had identified
another man, Eugene Perkins, as his wife's killer. The police
rectified this situation by conducting another lineup in which the husband
identified Pratt. They then removed all information concerning the
identification of Perkins from the police file. Several jury members
said they would have voted “not guilty” if they had known about the
identification of Pratt. An investigation
by Centurion Ministries found that the state's primary
witness against Pratt was an informant for the FBI, the LAPD, and the L.A.
District Attorney's office. Orange County Superior Court Judge Everett
Dickey ruled that the informant had lied extensively about Pratt at his
trial. FBI agent Wesley Swearingen reported, “My supervisor and several
agents on the racial squad knew that Pratt was innocent because the FBI had
wiretap logs proving that Pratt was in the San Francisco area several hours
before the shooting of Caroline Olsen and that he was there the day after
the murder.” Pratt was freed in June 1997. Pratt's case was
written about in Last Man Standing: The Tragedy and Triumph of Geronimo
Pratt. (CM) (Black
Panthers) (Murder: An Analysis of its Forms) |
Bristol
County, MA |
Frank Grace |
Aug 8, 1972 |
Frank
Grace, a Black
Panther leader in New Bedford, was convicted of the shooting death of Marvin
Morgan, a 19-year-old drug addict. Grace maintained that police framed
him because he was a political radical. Grace's conviction was
overturned after new witnesses came forward and old witnesses recanted.
Prosecutors declined to retry him because they no longer had any witnesses.
(CIPM) (ISI)
[11/05] |
Cook County,
IL |
Haymarket Eight |
May 4, 1886 (Chicago) |
Eight men were
convicted of murder and conspiracy to commit murder in connection with the
death of police officer Mathias J. Degan. On May 1, 1886 there were
general strikes throughout the United States in support of an 8-hour
workday. On May 3
there was a rally of striking workers at the McCormick Harvesting Machine
Company plant in Chicago. This rally ended with police firing on the workers.
Two workers died although some newspaper accounts reported six
fatalities.
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Norfolk
County, MA |
Sacco & Vanzetti |
Apr 15, 1920 (South Braintree) |
Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were convicted of shooting two men to
death while robbing a company of its $15,000 payroll. Both defendants
were political anarchists and the case against them garnered international
attention. The case against the two was weak, particularly against
Vanzetti who had 44 alibi witnesses. However, both were convicted and
the two were executed in the electric chair on Aug 23, 1927. On Aug
23, 1977, Gov. Dukakis declared Aug 23, “Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo
Vanzetti Memorial Day,” and issued a proclamation exonerating the two.
(CIPM) (Famous
Trials)
[11/05] |
Pine Ridge, SD |
Leonard Peltier |
June 26, 1975 |
(Federal Case) In Feb. 1973, 200 American Indian
Movement (AIM) activists launched a 72-day occupation of Wounded Knee, SD
(Site of an 1890 American Indian massacre) to protest living conditions at
the Pine Ridge reservation. During the next three years, the FBI carried
out intensive local surveillance, as well as the repeated arrests,
harassment, and bad-faith legal proceedings against AIM leaders and
supporters. In 1975, two FBI agents entered the reservation and with
tensions being high managed to provoke a firefight between themselves and
local Indians. Both FBI agents as well as Indians were killed. To avenge
the death of the two agents, the government issued arrest warrants against
four men, including Leonard Peltier. It dropped charges against one and
tried two, but during the trial a key prosecution witness admitted that he
had been threatened by the FBI and as a result had changed his testimony
upon the agents' instructions, so as to support the government's position.
The two defendants were acquitted.
Peltier was in
Canada and to get him extradited the government submitted an affidavit from
a mentally unstable woman who claimed to have been Peltier's girlfriend, and
to have been present during the shootout, and to have witnessed the
murders. In fact, she did not know Peltier, nor was she present at the time
of the shooting. She later confessed she had given the false statement
after being pressured and terrorized by FBI agents. At Peltier's trial, the
government withheld thousands of documents. It presented coerced witnesses;
though none placed Peltier at the murder scene before the murders occurred
or claimed Peltier shot the two agents. Peltier was convicted and sentenced
to two life sentences.
Peltier's case is detailed in In the Spirit of Crazy Horse, a 1983
bestseller, and in
Incident at Oglala, a documentary produced by
Robert Redford. (www.leonardpeltier.net) (AJ) (Famous
Trials)
[6/05] |
Salt Lake County, UT |
Joe Hill |
Jan 10, 1914 |
“Just before 10 pm on the night of
10 January, 1914, John Morrison, a Salt Lake City, Utah, grocer and a former
policeman, was closing his store with his two sons, Arling and Merlin.
Two men wearing red bandannas forced their way into the store. One of
the intruders shouted 'we've got you now', levelled a handgun and shot
Morrison. Arling Morrison grabbed his father's old service revolver
and fired two shots at the masked men, who returned fire and fled the scene.
Merlin, the younger child, stayed hidden in the back of the store.”
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|
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