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Earl Ofari Hutchinson

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The Tragedy, Triumph and Tragedy of Rodney King

Posted: 06/17/2012 5:07 pm

Less than two weeks before his death, I was scheduled to interview Rodney King on the public stage at the annual Leimert Park Book Fair in Los Angeles. I had two conflicting thoughts about the interview. One was that if the well-worn term, accident of history, ever applied to anyone, it was King. The second was what made King twenty one years after that fateful night that his beating by four white Los Angeles Police officers was captured in shocking detail on videotape still made him such an enduring figure, name and most importantly, a symbol. It was not simply that King was the center of recent press attention with the commemorations of the twentieth anniversary of the L.A. riots. And it was certainly not because he had just published a modestly successful book, The Riot Within: My Journey from Rebellion to Redemption. King was the near classic protean tragic figure of interest and curiosity precisely because there was so much tragedy, followed by triumph, and in the end, tragedy in the way his life ended.

The tragedy was the beating. Those few brutal, savage, and violent moments, catapulted King, a marginally employed, poorly educated, ex-con, into a virtual global household name. It cast the spotlight on one of the nation deepest sore spots, police abuse, brutality and misconduct against African Americans, minorities and the poor. It turned the LAPD into the national poster symbol of a lawless, out of control, big city racist police force. King was the most unlikely of unlikely figures to spotlight this deep national sore, to launch a painful national soul search, and in the coming months, become the trigger for the most destructive urban riot in modern U.S. history. King, of course, was only the centerpiece for the colossal tragedy that engulfed a city and nation.

The warning signs that L.A. was a powder keg were there long before the Simi Valley jury with no blacks acquitted the four LAPD cops that beat King. There was the crushingly high poverty rate in South L.A., a spiraling crime and drug epidemic, neighborhoods that were among the most racially balkanized in the nation, anger over the hand-slap sentence for a Korean grocer that killed a black teenage girl in an altercation, and black-Korean tensions that had reached a boiling point.

The triumph was that King lived long enough to see the issue of police misconduct especially that of the LAPD, become the focus of intense discussion, debate, and ultimately reform measures that transformed some police agencies into better models of control, accountability, the reduction of use of force violence, and more emphasis on community partnership. The recent spate of police shootings of young unarmed black and Hispanic males in some cities under dubious circumstances shows that the job of full police reform is still very much a work and progress, and there is wide room for backsliding. The irony here is that the very day that King died thousands took to the streets in New York City in a silent march sponsored by the NAACP to protest the stop and frisk tactics of the New York Police Department that allegedly targets mostly black and Latinos for unwarranted stops and searches.

But the fact remains, that the King beating and the subsequent riots permanently raised awareness that police abuse is a cancer that must be excised. There was personal triumph for King as well. His magnanimous statement "People, I just want to say, can we all get along? Can we get along?" at a press conference the third day of the riots to help staunch the violence, his utter lack of any expression of public bitterness toward the LAPD and with the exception of a few minor scrapes with the law, his relatively low profile, softened some of the anger and vilification, some of it borderline racist, that King got from a wide swatch of the public. This was capped by the publication of his autobiography, and the relatively warm rush of favorable reviews it got.

The final tragedy was King's surprising and untimely death. He was only 47. He had attained a partial rehabilitation in terms of his bad guy image. He was a recognized author. His name was eternally synonymous with a pantheon of transformative figures at the center of the many monumental events in the nation's history. This indeed was the tragedy, triumph and final tragedy of Rodney King.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is a frequent political commentator on MSNBC and a weekly co-host of the Al Sharpton Show on American Urban Radio Network. He is the author of How Obama Governed: The Year of Crisis and Challenge. He is an associate editor of New America Media. He is the host of the weekly Hutchinson Report on KPFK-Radio and the Pacifica Network.

 

Follow Earl Ofari Hutchinson on Twitter: www.twitter.com/earlhutchinson

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Less than two weeks before his death, I was scheduled to interview Rodney King on the public stage at the annual Leimert Park Book Fair in Los Angeles. I had two conflicting thoughts about the intervi...
Less than two weeks before his death, I was scheduled to interview Rodney King on the public stage at the annual Leimert Park Book Fair in Los Angeles. I had two conflicting thoughts about the intervi...
 
 
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09:35 AM on 06/21/2012
I hope RK is at peace now...that said, we shouldn't glorify him
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Claudia King
Tax the rich; avoid war; create justice.
09:50 PM on 06/18/2012
Though anticipating it, I'm saddened by some commenters' need to trash Rodney King, expressing no condemnation for those who tried to annihilate him. Kidney damage was among resulting health issues. Author Lou Cannon says the real tragedy of Rodney was that he didn't get help he needed, that he had neurological problems, and, of course, addiction issues, but also unaddressed childhood learning difficulties. Rodney and I shared a last name, and I always remembered that he was beaten while I was celebrating on my birthday. Seeing King/others hang in there, work to move forward, helped me do that. Meanwhile, bad cops still beat/kill (Blacks/Latinos still preferred targets). Bad officers/many others, including some commenting here, are still overtly racist, or manage to cover that ever so slightly. Institutional racism still thrives. Recently, asked how he wanted to be remembered, Rodney said he wished to be known as someone who'd tried to "throw water on the flames." He succeeded at that in a critical moment, pivotal for him; though soon after his beating, he spoke, without malice, words he'd hoped would calm a justifiably enraged LA after officers wanting his death (total submission, was the only thing that would satisfy them) weren't held criminally accountable. If spirits go someplace after death, I hope Rodney's found the peace eluding him in life. Its up to the living to build peace through creation of justice and elimination of bigotry/hate.
03:44 PM on 06/18/2012
So a criminal whose biggest payday came when he was beaten by cops never cleaned up his act and died as he lived. That whole sentence summed up the entire article.
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MendingFences
Love is a verb.
02:10 PM on 06/18/2012
I agree with putting an end to the stop and frisk tactics but when a criminal resists arrest, thereby putting others at risk of injury or death, then I am all in favor of a good old-fashioned wood shampoo.
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11:26 AM on 06/18/2012
Sign me up for the next riot!
10:58 AM on 06/18/2012
I dislike the media "hero worship" that swells around cases such as this. The media would do much better to elevate those who really work to make a change. Thugs and criminals should not be glorified.

On the night of the incident, allegedly, while on parole for robbery of a store and at over double the legal limit for alcohol (.19), King was running from police in a 2000 lb vehicle at up to 80 mph (@ 3x the speed limit) on residential streets.

Most of us would not think highly of a convicted felon committing other felonies and endangering anyone else on/near the road because he evading arrest. That us a textbook definition of ... a thug.

My point is not to attack him personally, but I am sick of media glamorizing him. The vast majority of people would not hire him or have had him over to thier houses. And a much, much higher percentage would not do so before he was famous.

He was a victim at the end of THAT incident, BUT he just as easily could have gotten famous for wiping out a family pulling out of their driveway earlier in the SAME incident. He also had a history of victimizing others.

I do not justify the police actions that night after the stop but do not like him being painted as a hero. he wasn't.

I do feel for his family and hope he is at peace.
11:57 AM on 06/18/2012
He was not painted as a hero, he was painted as a pivotal figure. A catalyst. There is a difference. Also, don't know if you are a Christian or not, but apparently, you don't believe in redemption. For you, once a criminal, always a criminal. In my opinion, it's not that simple. People can change, and it appears that Rodney King had worked very hard to turn his life around -- something that, in your world, people are condemned never to do. Harsh as it sounds, I would say that the beating Rodney took was a blessing in disguise. He was thrust into a position where he had to either sink or swim. And he had enough courage to first tread water, and then to swim. A lot of people would have been broken under similar circumstances. Anyway, my sympathy goes out to his family and fiancee. And just for the record: I would have had the changed Rodney over to my house for dinner any time.
04:38 PM on 06/18/2012
Sink or Swim? I'm sure the millions he got paid from the city made it much easier for him to swim. What about an innocent victim like Reginald Denny who was forever scared from the mob mentality perpertrated by the black community.
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12:34 PM on 06/18/2012
Your words are very troubling to me. Mr. king could have come to my home any day to have dinner.
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10:40 AM on 06/18/2012
You can't shut off me... when I'm ready you'll know it!
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thorrsman
Why should I define myself by quoting others?
09:55 AM on 06/18/2012
A lot of mythology, little truth.
05:27 AM on 06/18/2012
The most nationally-significant video recording, made since the Zapruder film. George Holliday changed the tangent of history, by choosing to become citizen-media, point the camera, and shoot. We look at everything differently than we would otherwise, because of this video. OJ was acquitted of murdering two people, in part because Det. Marc Furman used the "N-word", and the LAPD had a commonly-known practice of roughing up and shaking down racial minorities. It is relevant that the officers claimed that they believed King was "on PCP." That remains a blanket excuse for excessive force. And it is true that "Stop and Frisk" policies that unfairly target minorities are still common practice in NYC and LA and elsewhere. So the filming of the beating (and the clear injustice of the jury's verdict) did not change practices. But we damn well cannot say that we have never seen police brutality go unaddressed.
04:42 PM on 06/18/2012
Rodney King recovered from the brutality thanks in part for the millions he received from the taxpayers. Reginald Denny received nothing even though he has been in a wheelchair ever since. I think most people know who the real victim is.

Blacks are 7 times more likely to commit murder than whites - Department of Justice Statistics
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bighouse300
03:58 PM on 06/19/2012
you are full it.stop your lie
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sweet kiki16
Pay It Forward...
10:47 PM on 06/17/2012
This was an excellent blog. I hope Rodney King is at peace.