Panther 21: Difference between revisions
Zeddocument (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Zeddocument (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
==Arrests and trial== |
==Arrests and trial== |
||
On April 2, 1969 twenty-one [[Black Panther]] members who were indicted.<ref name="e"/> |
On April 2, 1969 twenty-one [[Black Panther]] members who were indicted. Thirteen of the twenty-one who were arraigned before Judge Charles Marks with bail set at $100,000. [[Joseph A. Phillips]] from the District Attorney's Office led the prosecution, with [[Jeffrey Weinsten]] as his assistant.<ref name="e"/> |
||
==Acquittal== |
==Acquittal== |
||
The black panther members were acquitted in May 1971.<ref name="co"/> |
The black panther members were acquitted in May 1971.<ref name="co"/> |
Revision as of 16:02, 9 April 2014
The Panther 21 is a group of twenty-one Black Panther members who were arrested and accused of planned coordinated bombing and long-range rifle attack on two police stations and an education office in New York City.[1] The trial eventually collapsed and the twenty one members were acquitted.[2]
Attempted Bombings
Three attacks were all planned on Friday, January 17, 1969 at 9 am. Dynamite had been placed in the three locations:
Attack | Result |
---|---|
Bronx Forty-fourth precinct police station | Dynamite sticks at the Forty-fourth Precinct station had been switched by a police undercover agent with phonies, so that only a blasting cap exploded |
Manhattan Twenty-fourth Precinct police station | The fuse on the phoney sticks had been improperly lit |
Queens Board of Education office | Real dynamite which was from a source other than the undercover police blew a hole in the side of the building |
At the Queens school near the forty-fourth precinct station, one Panther, nineteen-year-old Joan Bird, was arrested, while two men escaped. The men left behind a long-range rifle with which they had planned to shoot at the police as they rushed out of the burning building after the explosion.[1]
Arrests and trial
On April 2, 1969 twenty-one Black Panther members who were indicted. Thirteen of the twenty-one who were arraigned before Judge Charles Marks with bail set at $100,000. Joseph A. Phillips from the District Attorney's Office led the prosecution, with Jeffrey Weinsten as his assistant.[1]
Acquittal
The black panther members were acquitted in May 1971.[2]
References
- ^ a b c Political Trials in History: From Antiquity to the Present, Ron Christenson.
- ^ a b The Black Panther Party (reconsidered) Charles Earl Jones.