-
I found this man laying,
-
with his head roughly the center of the bed,
-
his body coming back like this.
-
His two hands were laying over the, the bed like this,
-
and just off, or right below his, uh, right hand,
-
was a 45 automatic. Just a short way away from his left hand
-
was a shotgun. I didn't know if he was, uh, how bad he was injured,
-
so I picked up, I grabbed him by the left wrist,
-
and I pulled him out into, or onto the door
-
which had been used as a barricade.
-
I then backed off again.
-
That's where he (unclear)
-
I'm the Deputy Chairman of State of Illinois Black Panther Party, Fred Hampton.
-
I have pledged tonight to introduce you to who I believe
-
is one of the baddest motherf***ers in the world.
-
A man that did something that a lot of us
-
oughta be very glad that he did.
-
He was a part
-
of making the only party which exists
-
in the United States today
-
that represents the people.
-
As a matter of fact, he was one-half
-
Him and Huey P. Newton started out in 1966.
-
Sometimes I think where some of us went in 1966.
-
I think what we would've said
-
if we'd heard about some n***ers,
-
going out in the street, talkin about sheriffs and guns,
-
fight all them policemen, because we didn't know they was pigs,
-
out there in the streets.
-
And I think I'm speaking for the whole Party of the state of Illinois,
-
I know I am, when I say that we love Huey P. Newton.
-
(Crowd) Right on! (Hampton) We love Eldridge Cleaver.
-
(crowd) Right on! (Hampton) We love Bobby Hutton. (crowd) Right on!
-
(Hampton) We love the Black Panther Party. (crowd) Right on!
-
(Hampton) And we love Chairman Bobby Seale. (crowd) Right on!
-
(Hampton) We love him because they was the first ones
-
to take a stand against capitalism and racism
-
and said we are going to fight it to the end.
-
We said, we'll join the line somewhere motherf***er,
-
if you try to pass us, we'll blow your brains out. (crowd) Right on!
-
They was the first ones that came through with the program
-
that was initiated for the, uh, for the benefit of the people.
-
All those things that I named, and reasons why we love them
-
are reasons that make it beneficial to us.
-
But let me simply say that when I introduce Brother Bobby
-
that we love him. Because he loves
-
to hear the love. Chairman Bobbby Seale. (crowd erupts in approval)
-
(Seale) Right on!
-
(Seale) Alright. We here for some jive conspiracy.
-
You know what we gonna do?
-
We are going to defend ourselves.
-
Because Huey P. Newton said,
-
that power, power is the ability to identify phenomena
-
and make it act in a desired manner.
-
Power is the ability to define phenomena.
-
And make it act in a desired manner.
-
What kind of phenomena? Social phenomena.
-
What is the social phenomena?
-
Black people, Mexican American, any kind of people,
-
begin to learn that the social phenomena
-
is that, in fact, U.S., racist, decadent, capitalist, imperialistic America
-
is a phony state. That a phony state exists here
-
that these pigs are doing nothing but
-
protect the avaricious businessman,
-
and the demagogic politician.
-
Protecting the exploitative system that they got going.
-
That, in fact, we are tired of it,
-
sick of it,
-
you've been brutalizing Black people.
-
You been murdering and lynching them.
-
Black people are tired.
-
Black people are the vanguard of the revolution all of a sudden.
-
And its phenomena correct also.
-
But we are concerned with that social phenomena.
-
We are concerned with that exploitation.
-
We are concerned with the, uh, oppression that Black people
-
and all other peoples in the world,
-
who are suffering the same common oppression
-
that we are suffering today.
-
The thing is that we have the ability to define it.
-
If we have the ability to define it,
-
the only next thing to do
-
is get organized.
-
Get organized.
-
So when a pig walks up to you,
-
or a pig get too jive with the people,
-
you'll be so organized,
-
you'll be learning some tactics,
-
you'll be learning some revolutionary principles,
-
you'll be having some guns hid out somewhere,
-
you'll have some proper tactics.
-
That when the pig get to jiving with you,
-
the pig is wrong. You whip your gun out on him,
-
blow him away,
-
and then you have the ability, in fact
-
you have made that pig act in a desired manner.
-
(crowd) Right on!
-
(Seale) But for what?
-
But for what?
-
For the system, brothers. We need a new system.
-
The people need a new system.
-
(Rennie Davis) I sat yesterday afternoon next to Bobby Seale,
-
while he said that a federal marshal
-
tried to ram a 4-inch piece of cloth
-
gauze, into his mouth,
-
three marshals held his head,
-
one marshal held his nose so that he couldn't breathe,
-
and a fifth marshal attempted to press against his mouth,
-
with all his weight,
-
this gauze.
-
That ultimately resulted in Bobby bleeding profusely
-
around the mouth and the lips
-
as they tried to jam this piece of object into his mouth
-
to silence him.
-
(Seale) I'm so thirsty for revolution.
-
I'm so crazy about the people.
-
We're gonna stand together.
-
We're gonna have a Black army, a Mexican American army,
-
and our lines of solidarity with progressive whites.
-
All of us.
-
And we're going to march on this big power structure,
-
and we're going to say, "Stick 'em up, motherf***er,
-
we come for what's ours." (crowd voices approval)
-
(Seale) Up against the wall!
-
Power to the people. Thanks, brothers.
-
(crowd cheers)
-
When they got together, Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale
-
yes, they got together with guns,
-
and there's nothing wrong with that.
-
Because we need some guns,
-
Black people need some peace.
-
White people need some peace.
-
And we're going to have to fight,
-
we are going to have to struggle,
-
we're going to have to struggle relentlessly
-
to bring about some peace, because the people that we are asking for peace,
-
they are a bunch of megalomaniac war-mongers,
-
and they don't even understand what peace means,
-
and we've got to fight 'em, we've got to struggle with them,
-
to make 'em understand what peace means. (crowd applause)
-
(Hampton) Bobby Seale is going through all types of physical
-
and mental torture. But that's all right,
-
because we say it, even before this happened,
-
and we going to say it after I'm locked up, and after everybody's locked up,
-
that you can jail the revolutionary,
-
but you can't jail the revolution.
-
Right.
-
You might run a liberator like Eldridge Cleaver out the country,
-
but you can't run liberation out the country.
-
You might murder a freedom fighter like Bobby Hutton,
-
but you can't murder freedom fightin',
-
and if you do, you'll come up with answers that don't answer,
-
information that don't explain,
-
you come up with conclusions that don't conclude.
-
And you have come up with people
-
that you thought should be acting like pigs,
-
is acting like people,
-
and moving on pigs, and that's what we've got to do.
-
So we going to see about Bobby,
-
regardless what these people think we should do.
-
Because schools is not important,
-
and work is not important.
-
Nothing is more important than stopping fascism,
-
because fascism will stop us all.
-
We going to see about Bobby,
-
because Bobby saw about us.
-
(Davis) When I saw he had sixteen pieces of adhesive
-
strapped across his mouth,
-
when I saw the gauze around his head,
-
when I saw that his ankles were strapped in leg-irons to his chair
-
and his hands handcuffed to his side,
-
I knew that we would unite in this country
-
to stop this outrageous, criminal,
-
Nixon stampede over elementary human rights.
-
We will free Bobby Seale,
-
and we will stop this trial.
-
(Hampton) A lotta people don't understand
-
the Black Panther Party's relationship with white mother-country radicals,
-
lotta people don't even understand their words and their refusals a lot.
-
But what we're saying is that there are white people in the mother country,
-
that are for the same types of things that we are for:
-
stimulating revolution in the mother country.
-
And we said that we'll work with anybody,
-
form a coalition with anybody,
-
that has revolution on their mind.
-
And we're not a racist organization
-
because we understand that racism is an excuse
-
used for capitalism.
-
If we know that racism is, it's just a by-product of capitalism.
-
Everything would be alright if
-
everything was put back in the hands of the people,
-
and we going to have to put it back
-
in the hands of the people.
-
Everybody in the state of Illinois,
-
is going to have to be involved,
-
or even around, the revolution because we're going to have one.
-
We going to have to, we're going to have to do more than talk,
-
we're going to have to do more than listen.
-
We're going to even have to do more than learn.
-
We're going to have to start practicing,
-
and that's very hard.
-
We're going to have to start getting out there
-
with the people.
-
And a lot of times we think we better than the people,
-
and that's an insult,
-
that's criminal,
-
It's going to take a lot of hard work.
-
(male Panther) Come on in, little brother,
-
come on in, little sister.
-
Y'all can sit down and get something to eat.
-
Y'all take off y'all's coat.
-
We need some more cups out here.
-
(Kids talking)(male Panther) Sit down, man!
-
Y'all can eat as much as y'all want to.
-
Right on.
-
(Kids chatting)
-
(male Panther) Who wants seconds?
-
Who all wants cereal?
-
One, two...who wants milk? Raise their hand.
-
Who...anybody want milk?
-
Alright.
-
If you want milk then so be it.
-
Well take it.
-
That's for your teeth, man, that makes your teeth strong.
-
Who else didn't...who else (unclear)
-
(Hampton) That's a (unclear) to the program meals,
-
a lotta people think it's charity,
-
but what...it takes the people on the stage, another stage,
-
and another stage, and any program of the revolutionary
-
is an advanced program.
-
Revolution gets change, unending, just keep on changin',
-
that's what we do.
-
We take the people in there,
-
and take them through those changes,
-
and before you know it, they are, in fact,
-
not only knowing what socialism is,
-
they do not need to know what it is, they are endorsing it,
-
they are participating in it,
-
they are observing, and they are supporting socialism.
-
(female Panther) Alright. All power to the people.
-
(Hampton) That's the people's thing!
-
Socialism is the people!
-
You afraid of socialism? If you afraid of socialism you afraid of yourself.
-
Basically, you knowing my ideology,
-
and basically, me knowing yours,
-
you can, um, support some of our programs,
-
that what you're saying?
-
(Diaga) Why not?
-
(Hampton) And you believe in the program Breakfast for Children program,
-
free health clinics? Brown brothers?
-
(Diaga) We believe they are good things (Hampton) Uh-huh.
-
(Diaga) As the focal point to organize their mothers and fathers. (Hampton) Uh-huh.
-
(Diaga) Peace. (Hampton) M-hm.
-
There's no educational program in here?
-
(Diaga) Uh, that's a social license thing, you know, you set that up, brother,
-
you can't put everything on one piece of paper.
-
(Hampton) What about this bank?
-
(non-Panther) Credit union? (Hampton) Mm. (non-Panther) Credit union.
-
Credit union, my brother, is a bank.
-
Are you hip to credit unions? It is a bank.
-
(Hampton) Yeah, you go and buy money...?
-
(Diaga) Yeah, that's a bank. It's a bank. Owned by the people.
-
Run for the people. And by the people.
-
(Hampton) What would money be given out to people for?
-
(Diaga) Well, the people would decide that...you want money for
-
whatever, you know the people in the community decide.
-
(non-Panther) You need some living room furniture maybe?
-
You need a car, maybe?
-
(Hampton) See, the thing is with me, Diaga,
-
I need to know some more about...I wish you had some
-
more literature about the educational thing here.
-
Because, you dig, as far as we concerned
-
y'know, you struggling,
-
the way you look at struggling is that, uh,
-
this depends on the educational thing, you dig.
-
(Diaga) This depends on the education.
-
But the whole thing... (Hampton) No, but ain't any of this does.
-
You, you could form this without education.
-
(Diaga) Uhhh
-
(Hampton) You could form this here.
-
(Diaga) Uh, no, not the way we talk about forming it.
-
Y'know, right, we talking about forming it right.
-
Y'know, it's not on paper.
-
We didn't write it on paper.
-
(Hampton) You know, form it right.
-
You dig?
-
Let me give you an example:
-
Uh, Jomo, Jomo Kenyatta formed an excellent revolution
-
with no education, and all it did in the end
-
thing, Jomo told them motherf***ers,
-
he said...well, uh, you know,
-
you can educate, uh, hate in every blood.
-
I mean, the brother, after he beat the revolution,
-
now I'm going to oppress you.
-
Another example: Papa Doc in Haiti.
-
Papa Doc in Haiti hated everything white.
-
Man, you couldn't put this white paper in front
-
of Papa Doc's face, but he moved all the white people
-
out and he took over to be oppressor, he did,
-
because of no education.
-
And if the people had been educated
-
they'd have said, that "We don't hate the motherf***er
-
white people, we hate the oppressor,
-
whether he be white, Black, brown, or yellow."
-
So we got to know the educational program
-
to find out what is going to be in the finale.
-
Lot of people would, Jomo Kenyatta's called not a
-
'never-revolutionary' but an 'ex-revolutionary.'
-
So is Papa Doc. They brought on successful revolution.
-
That thing in the Mau-Maus was a b**ch.
-
Bantu, freedom fighters, all that kind of action.
-
What we saying is, is that the end.
-
But you don't judge Castro now. You can't do it.
-
Nobody in this room can judge whether Castro's
-
going to be a revolutionary now.
-
Uh, (unclear).
-
We talking 'bout things, y'know, meet with, uh, China, the People's Republic,
-
and even at the state they in now,
-
talking about even going on further
-
into a Communistic state.
-
That's what we talkin' about.
-
Those are revolutionary.
-
So we got to understand here,
-
the educational program you have,
-
to be able to figure out whether we're going
-
the right lines, where the people will end up in a situation,
-
where they can be able to really control themselves.
-
You understand what I'm saying?
-
Uh, with no education, the people that take the local foundations
-
start stealing money, because they won't be really educated
-
to why it's the people's thing anyway.
-
You understand what I'm saying?
-
With no education you have neocolonialism
-
instead of colonialism.
-
Like you got in in Africa now,
-
like you got in, uh, in uh Haiti.
-
So, what we talking about is, it has to be
-
uh, educational program,
-
that's very important.
-
As a matter of fact, this is so important to us
-
We, it's so important to us,
-
that a person has to go through a six-week
-
of our political education,
-
before they can consider themself a member of the Party,
-
able to even run out ideology for the Party.
-
Why? Because if they don't have any education,
-
then, they're nowhere.
-
You dig what I'm saying?
-
You nowhere.
-
Because you don't even know why they doing what they doing.
-
You be, you might get caught up in the emotionalist,
-
uh, you understand me? You might, you know,
-
you done caught up, and caught being poor,
-
and they want something.
-
And then, if they're not educated,
-
they'll want more,
-
and before you know it, they'll be capitalist,
-
and before you know it we'd have Negro imperialists.
-
(Diaga) Yeah, but see brother,
-
the reason we don't do a lot of talking,
-
is because you see it's a foregone conclusion
-
with us.
-
(Hampton) Yeah, well see, brother,
-
the reason I do do a lot of talking
-
is because I don't, there's no foregone conclusions with me.
-
Who the programs are geared towards?
-
you got Black Easter, you got Black Christmas,
-
you got Black Groundhog Day, you got Black April Fool's,
-
ain't geared toward nobody but Black businessmen.
-
And I said that anybody that comes into
-
our community, and sets up any type of situation
-
that does not meet the needs of the masses,
-
then I, Chairman President of the Black Panther Party,
-
say that I catch that n***er by his collarneck,
-
and beat him to death with a Black Panther paper.
-
We not foolin'. (crowd voices approval)
-
(Bobby Rush) In that area, where you have
-
a high infant mortality rate,
-
where you have, uh, lead poisoning,
-
where you have inadequate medical service,
-
we saw, we saw the basic need for free medical service,
-
and we worked hard, and work over long period of time,
-
in order to make that a reality.
-
Now up to this date in the Black community,
-
you have doctors there who are more concerned with
-
private wealth rather than public health.
-
The concept behind the medical center is
-
that we'd take the profit out of the medical profession.
-
Our medical center is a direct result
-
of the basic need in the Black community
-
for free medical service.
-
(Doctor) You had this done about three days ago, you said?
-
This is not the burned hand? (Patient) Right.
-
(Doctor) Oh.
-
(Doctor) Does it feel painful?
-
Like it's infected and everything?
-
(Patient) No, it's not painful.
-
('Doc' Satchel) We got doctors every day this week,
-
next week, we got, no, we need one for next Thursday.
-
(Secretary) Come to the clinic tomorrow for an appointment.
-
(Rush) What are the chances we get an ambulance down?
-
(Satchel) We can buy an ambulance.
-
That's about the best chance. (Rush) Well, what about...ain't a bad idea?
-
(Satchel) Idea's alright, but...you know, the idea's alright,
-
but we just gotta have money to get an ambulance.
-
(Rush) But how is it...can we get a used ambulance?
-
(Doctor) A couple of pharmacists from the hospital where I am,
-
they're going to come out, and see,
-
and they're interested in working, y'know.
-
(Satchel) We can have patients come through
-
see a doctor. After they gets through,
-
get tested, what have you,
-
then they comes in and see the people's advocate.
-
That's a community person or personal partner
-
that acts like a liaison between the center here itself
-
and the community.
-
He asking, what type of service
-
they thought they got here, in the center.
-
You know, any other criticisms of the medical center itself.
-
It's also to deal with problems outside medical problems,
-
you know.
-
People's Advocate has a resource file;
-
in this file we have, uh, teachers, uh,
-
sociologists, speech therapists, social workers,
-
y'know this is all a part of resource files.
-
(Hampton) Okay, well look it here. Look it here.
-
You sit over here, and talk about all that
-
jail time he had behind his motherf***in' badge,
-
and said, "I got the rap, too."
-
This is Bobby Rush. The Deputy Minister (inaudible) of the State of Illinois...
-
Bad motherf***er. You can tell the way that
-
Huey...that if, that if the Chairman Bobby Seale
-
feels the way about Huey P. Newton,
-
that I feel about Bobby Rush.
-
We didn't start the Black Panther Party,
-
but we do know this:
-
That we are some bad motherf***ers. (crowd) Right on!
-
(Hampton) Black Panther Party going to remain
-
in the State of Illinois. (crowd) Right on!
-
(Hampton) You know some time we get to talkin',
-
and I go to court, and they say "Well, Fred," I come back and Rush say,
-
"Fred, we got to keep you on the streets."
-
Then Rush'll go to court, and he come back,
-
and I'll say, "Rush, we got to keep you on the streets."
-
And he and I, that we just went back and forth,
-
we decided that we like each other so well,
-
Goddamnit, we're going to both stay on
-
the motherf***in' streets. (crowd) Right on!
-
(Hampton) Ain't nobody goin' nowhere. (crowd applause)
-
We in there, they ain't taking us nowhere,
-
we going to stay right here with the people.
-
We are going to have to move,
-
and we're going to have to move fast,
-
we're going to have to move hard,
-
and we're going to have to move organized.
-
To be able, to keep Bobby Rush on the streets.
-
They got our field secretary, Dave Samuels, Jr., up against the wall.
-
They got our Minister of Information, Chaka,
-
up against the wall.
-
Everybody...they even got Chairman Fred
-
up against the wall.
-
Everybody against the wall.
-
They even talking about giving folks twenty years,
-
talking about giving me twenty years.
-
They did...for the ice cream truck robbery.
-
That's right.
-
71 dollars' worth of ice cream,
-
710 ice cream bars.
-
I might be big, but I can't eat 710 ice cream bars.
-
(crowd applause)
-
But even though they tried to give me
-
all that bad publicity,
-
they still came out, in the end,
-
showing the true nature of capital.
-
Because they said I went in to the truck,
-
beat up this pig that was in our community,
-
exploiting people, took the ice cream bars from him,
-
handed them out to the kids. (crowd cheers)
-
(Hampton) Even though they make me a thief,
-
they make me a Robin Hood-type thief.
-
Yay, to the people.
-
Here is a man of the revolution, people,
-
(inaudible) Field Secretary for the State of Illinois,
-
bad motherf***er, a brother of mine,
-
a brother I've been working with a long time,
-
and don't pretend to work with,
-
I'm going to eat with him, I'm going to sleep with him,
-
I'm going to die with him, I'm going to live with him,
-
I'm going to lead with him: Bobby Rush. (crowd applause)
-
(Rush) We going to take the case to the people,
-
the people said that Fred is going to remain free,
-
that Fred is innocent of anything against the people,
-
he might be, uh, guilty of, uh, f***in' with the power structure,
-
but we can relate to that. (crowd) Right on!
-
(Rush) Power to the people...
-
and we are going to move on this power structure,
-
like Bobby said, we going to say
-
"Get up against the wall, motherf***er,
-
because this is a hold-up,
-
and we came to get what's ours." (crowd) Right on!
-
(crowd applause)
-
(Hampton) Okay now, we're going to organize the movement so big,
-
to make sure that the leader of the Black Panther Party
-
in this state, are not political prisoners,
-
and not exiled, and not killed,
-
that that movement is going to be so big,
-
that we might have to go and get Huey P. Newton,
-
and let him carry a sign.
-
We going to have everybody come.
-
We're going to have everybody involved.
-
Ay, we going to start a thing called "Free Fred."
-
Know what that sound like?
-
Ay, let's do that.
-
"Free Fred!" (crowd) Free Fred!
-
(Hampton) Free Fred! (crowd) Free Fred!
-
(Hampton) Free Fred! (crowd, louder) Free Fred!
-
(Hampton) Hey, I ain't even in jail yet.
-
(Bailiff) The State of Illinois versus Fred Hampton,
-
the Honorable Judge Elijah presiding.
-
(Judge) The defense will call its first witness.
-
(Hampton) I like you, uh, again, to describe to me
-
what happened, if anything, after you and
-
Officer Dunn pulled onto the school ground.
-
(Witness) Um, I identify you, as the person who, uh
-
grabbed me by the throat and held me down
-
in the ice cream van.
-
(Officer Dunn) We were walking,
-
looking through the crowd,
-
and looking for the one that beat him up.
-
(Hampton) And what, if anything, did he say when he saw me?
-
Or what, if anything, did you say to him?
-
Who said something first?
-
(Dunn) He said, "That's him.
-
I'll never forget his face. That's the one."
-
(Hampton) Okay, now when that police car pulled up,
-
what, if anything, happened? (Witness) Well,
-
the policemen, one policeman was on the outside
-
of the car, and one was on the inside of the car.
-
Officer Dunn pointed to Fred, and said,
-
"That's the man that did it, isn't it?"
-
(Hampton) Mm-hmm.
-
(Witness) And the ice cream man, um,
-
he said, "Yes, I think so."
-
(Hampton) So in other words,
-
the officer pointed out me as being the, the, the
-
person who had robbed this man,
-
and in response to that, after that,
-
the, um, ice cream truck driver said, "Uh,
-
yes, that's the man."
-
(Witness) That's right.
-
(Hampton) What race was this policeman?
-
(Witness) One was white, and one was colored.
-
(Hampton) Right on. (crowd laughter)
-
(Hampton) Officer Dunn,
-
do you know the defendant Fred Hampton?
-
(Dunn) Yes, I know Fred Hampton.
-
(Hampton) Do you know, of, uh, basically what
-
Fred Hampton stands for?
-
Politically.
-
(Dunn) No, I don't.
-
(Hampton) Uh, Officer Dunn, do you know,
-
do you know, the, the, the situation that...
-
core people, black people and white poor people,
-
and red people, and the brown people in
-
in this country today?
-
(Dunn) Well, not completely.
-
(Hampton) But you do know that, that -
-
a part of you do know that, is that part
-
include the fact that, uh, these people are being, uh
-
oppressed, by the white people, that, uh,
-
like to oppress people to make profit?
-
Do you know - (Lawyer) Objection!
-
(Judge) Sustained. (Hampton) Let me rephrase the question.
-
Do you know, uh, a whole lot of, uh,
-
blood-sucking pigs are vampires -
-
(crowd interrupts with laughter) Right on!
-
(Hampton) Do you know, uh...
-
Do you think you're free, officer?
-
(Dunn) Yes, I think I'm free.
-
(Hampton) No more questions, Officer Dunn.
-
God help you.
-
So we say, as we always say at the Black Panther Party,
-
that they can do what they want to, to us,
-
we might not be back, I might be in jail,
-
I might be anywhere,
-
but when I leave, you can remember I said,
-
with the last words out of my lips,
-
that I am, a revolutionary.
-
And you're going to have to keep on saying that.
-
You are going to have to say that I am a
-
proletariat. I am the people. I'm not the pig.
-
You got to make a distinction.
-
And the people are going to have to attack the pigs.
-
The people are going to have to stand up against the pigs.
-
That's what the Panthers are doing,
-
and that's what the Panthers are doing
-
all over the world.
-
(Plaintiff) We have brought to trial here, Fred Hampton.
-
You are here to judge between two conflicting testimonies.
-
Somebody is lying. Now reason stands,
-
the reason is very clear here, that Private Jones,
-
who had come from Sanford, North Carolina,
-
would have no great desire to see Fred Hampton
-
up in this trial.
-
But, Fred Hampton, a key figure in this community,
-
has great reason for not wanting to be put, uh, in jail.
-
(Hampton) But, the state's attorney,
-
and the state's attorney office,
-
has reason to see Fred Hampton in jail.
-
We've got a new state's attorney.
-
And he said already what he's all about.
-
People that had different, uh, political beliefs than he had...
-
his speeches sound somewhat like those of Hitler.
-
And we know why he wants to see Fred Hampton put in jail.
-
Why do I have a lot of arrests? Because of harassment.
-
Why is there harassment? Because the people that harass me
-
has set up a problem that made me.
-
Disagree with them violently, and they,
-
they set up this problem in order to exploit me
-
and other people like me.
-
And why do they want to get rid of me?
-
Because I'm saying something that might wake up
-
other exploited people,
-
and some other oppressed people.
-
And if all these people ever get together,
-
then these pigs that are exploiting us,
-
we'll be able to run into the lake.
-
That's why they want to get rid of us.
-
And, it's just, uh, it's sorta like a primary thing
-
with me. I'm the, the first move that they'll make.
-
I'm a part of the organization that will be
-
the first organization they'll move on
-
because I happen to be a part of an organization in
-
the Black Panther Party, that is the only organization, in fact,
-
that has came out and stood up, loud and clear,
-
and said that we don't care what anybody says,
-
whether they have guns or not,
-
and badges, or eighteen uniforms,
-
if whenever they step outside the bounds of legality,
-
into the bounds of illegality,
-
we will blow they brains out.
-
If they bother the people.
-
And what makes them mad about that?
-
They constantly bothering the people.
-
Anybody that's out there for the protection of the people
-
happens to be in direct conflict with them.
-
What makes them mad about it?
-
What makes them mad about it is,
-
that they had Black people, and white poor people,
-
and red poor people, and Puerto Rican poor people,
-
and Latin American poor people, of, uh,
-
poor people of all descent.
-
They had them caught up in their movements
-
based on racism when the Black Panther Party stood up and said,
-
"We don't care what anybody says.
-
We don't think to fight fire with fire.
-
We think to fight fire with water."
-
We ain't going to fight the racist not with racism,
-
but we going to fight with solidarity.
-
We say we not going to fight capitalism with Black capitalism,
-
but we going to fight it with socialism.
-
We stood up and said, "We not going to fight reactionary pigs,
-
and reactionary state's attorneys like this,
-
and reactionary state's attorneys like Hanrahan,
-
with any other reactions on our part."
-
We're going to fight their reactions with
-
all of us people getting together, and having
-
an international, proletariat revolution.
-
(crowd) Right on.
-
(Hampton) And that's saying all power to the people.
-
(crowd) Right on.
-
(Hampton) Best saying that no matter what color you are
-
you go into two classes.
-
And that's saying there's a class over here,
-
and there's a class over there,
-
and the reason that this class over here
-
has never did anything to get this class off its back,
-
because this is lower, this is upper,
-
this is the oppressed, this is the oppressor,
-
this is the exploited, this is the exploiter,
-
and these people in this class have divided themselves,
-
and said, "I'm Black, and I hate white people."
-
"I'm white, and I hate Black people."
-
"I'm Latin American, and I hate hillbillies."
-
"I'm hillbilly, and I hate Indians."
-
So we fighting amongst each other.
-
And here you heard the testimony of pigs here,
-
and you got pigs of all colors, you know that.
-
You got pigs that are white,
-
you got pigs that are Black.
-
You've even got pigs that are Black and white.
-
Propagating the same kind of madness
-
that, uh, this buffoon Hanrahan would be propagating
-
if he were here himself.
-
And why?
-
Because they want to keep you to believing
-
that I'm your enemy.
-
And that everyone else that's Black,
-
and that wears a lot of hair on his head,
-
and hair on his face,
-
they want to keep you thinking that he's your enemy.
-
Why?
-
Because if ever you were to disregard him,
-
and overlook him for just a minute,
-
and throw away the cause of the racist,
-
and start to dealing with a little logic,
-
then they can be beaten.
-
There would be no one else you could attack.
-
Other than Hanrahan. Other than Daley.
-
And other than 'Tricky Dicky' Nixon.
-
If you make the right decision,
-
then the oppressed people of the world
-
give complete satisfaction.
-
I know you'll return the verdict of 'Not Guilty', thank you.
-
(Announcer) Today is May 1st.
-
Huey P. Newton's promise is fulfilled today.
-
(crowd) Free Huey! Free Huey!
-
(Announcer) Our Chairman Fred Hampton has not arrived yet.
-
The pigs are trying to incarcerate him,
-
these are some of the things we have to deal with.
-
(Rush) Somebody, somewhere, knows what happened
-
to Fred this afternoon. So dig,
-
you motherf***in' pigs, get off your dead asses FBI,
-
and J. Who Edgar, and go,
-
and find Fred before 7 o'clock.
-
(crowd) Right on!
-
(Rush) You find Fred, motherf***er.
-
And anybody out there, with him,
-
that's harming him, or that's kidnapped him,
-
and he happens to be a pig,
-
well then we just don't discriminate about who,
-
who's ass we going to kill.
-
(crowd) Right on!
-
(Rush) Y'all go home, now, and, uh,
-
grease some pieces. (crowd) Right on!
-
(Rush) And set them sights, and what-not,
-
raise the windows, and if we can't find Fred
-
we going to give y'all the call.
-
I know somebody going to construe this
-
to be that we advocate people to go out and ride,
-
but I told y'all before, that riding just ain't no hip thing no more.
-
And we want everybody, when they leave here,
-
we gotta leave here,
-
at 2 o'clock I think, uh, hey pig right there,
-
do we have to leave at 2?
-
(lady in crowd) Ask him again!
-
(Rush) Hey pig in the back...
-
(crowd catcalls)
-
(Rush) Why don't you talk to that chief pig,
-
old, decrepit motherf***er, and ask him
-
why don't we stay a little longer?
-
(Rush) Marxism consists of thousands of truths,
-
but they all boil down to one single thing:
-
Right to rebel.
-
(Narrator) Panther headquarters.
-
A police raid is expected.
-
(Hampton) We praying that Hanrahan leaves his charge.
-
(Woman) What type of blood do you have?
-
(Man) B-positive. Make sure you don't give me no pig's blood.
-
(Woman) If, uh, an atom bomb, I mean,
-
tear gas is thrown, here's your water and your mask,
-
keep this on you. All times.
-
(Hampton) You know, I know a lot of people in here
-
saying it's a cheap thing like this,
-
couldn't understand the motive behind this.
-
Some of us young people, you know what I mean,
-
know a lot of people couldn't understand
-
the, uh, me myself, you know, I was born in a so-called
-
bourgeois community, and had some of the better things
-
you could say it lightly,
-
and I found that even some of the better things in life
-
for Black people, they want to improve.
-
And I found that there were more people starving,
-
than people eating, and I found there are more people
-
didn't have clothes, than did have clothes,
-
and I found that I just happened to be one of the few.
-
And I made it a commitment to myself that
-
I wouldn't stop doing what I was doing
-
until all those people are free.
-
A lotta times, I wanted for it to be possible
-
for people to be free under capitalism,
-
I wanted for socialism to be able to be brought about
-
through means other desired means.
-
But those were times when I was trying to be subjective,
-
I was looking at the things and try to make them
-
the way I wanted to make them to be.
-
Because I didn't Nine-and-Dine, but I thought,
-
well, anybody shouldn't have to die.
-
What we saying is, that we're more than people
-
that are for armed struggle.
-
We're people that are for armed struggle,
-
for the purpose of bringing on the revolution.
-
For the purpose of setting up initially the socialistic state,
-
and for the purpose, secondarily, of advancing into
-
what you could call utopia,
-
or what you could call the Communist state.
-
We are saying, that by observation and participation,
-
by educating, and by arming, and by
-
teaching the people their revolutionary political power,
-
we think that we as vanguard can move those people,
-
that need to be moved that way.
-
We can let those people ride our backs
-
down the path to social revolution.
-
And on, and on, and on, and finally,
-
like we say, utopianism or what you call Communism.
-
(to other man) I be very confident that no one
-
is coming through the front door.
-
Nobody gettin' on the roof.
-
(man) You see, in other given situations,
-
like when you're trying to fight, and you see
-
because, uh, you got height, and you got firepower too.
-
Only way we could, uh, get him, is out-shoot him,
-
get more firepower.
-
See, we keep him pinned down.
-
He can't get up and shoot, when he feel the bullets comin' at him.
-
So the only way that we can, uh, get him,
-
is out-shoot him, put too much firepower on,
-
where he can't jump up.
-
(Hampton) Just, that, and a whole lotta semi-automatic and
-
automatic action on him over there,
-
he ain't got no time to save nobody.
-
Keep him down.
-
(Man) I just wish they would come tonight.
-
(Hampton) This is the difference between 20 million n***ers,
-
and 20 million n***ers armed to the hilt.
-
We, we put Rush out there, and you...
-
he won't even be able to get up.
-
(Sounds outside the building)
-
(Man) Wait a minute, what was that?
-
(Hampton) We draw the line right here.
-
Pigs will come no further.
-
They are not going to make us retreat.
-
We are going to have somewhere,
-
no matter how far we run, no matter how long we got to run,
-
that when we reach that point,
-
we going to be able to stop and say,
-
in the voice that Huey would say it in,
-
that, uh, motherf***er, you done went too far,
-
you dig?
-
Because, uh, I got my gun, motherf***er,
-
and you got yours.
-
And you got to shoot me with your gun, motherf***er,
-
and, if you try to take my gun, well then,
-
I had to throw your motherf***in' brains out.
-
(crowd roars)
-
(Hampton) That's what it's got to be about.
-
(Judge) Has the jury reached a verdict?
-
(Juror) We have Your Honor.
-
(Judge) What is your verdict?
-
(Juror) We, the jury, find the defendant,
-
Fred Hampton, not guilty. (crowd) Right on!
-
(Rush) Illinois Chapter, Black Panther Party,
-
2350 West Madison, Chicago, Illinois.
-
Press Release, May 27th, 1969.
-
Pig Power Structure, and their lackeys,
-
in another attempt of pig repression,
-
have sentenced Deputy Chairman Fred Hampton
-
to two-to-five years in prison.
-
(Narrator) While Chairman Fred is in prison,
-
the police attack Panther headquarters.
-
There are 3 Panthers in the office,
-
5 policemen are shot, the 3 Panthers are beaten
-
when they run out of ammunition.
-
(crowd singing) The Revolution has come!
-
It's time to pick up the gun!
-
No more brothers in jail!
-
No more brothers in jail!
-
Off the pig!
-
Off the pig!
-
(speaker) I am! (crowd) I am!
-
(speaker) a Revolutionary! (crowd) a Revolutionary!
-
(crowd singing) Piggy Wiggy, oh Lord,
-
I say you gotta go now,
-
Oink Oink, Bang Bang, Dead Pig!
-
Piggy Wiggy, oh Lord, I say you gotta go now,
-
Oink Oink, Bang Bang, Dead Pig!
-
Piggy Wiggy, oh no, I say you gotta go now,
-
Oink Oink, Bang Bang, Dead Pig!
-
Piggy Wiggy, oh oh, I say you gotta go now,
-
Oink Oink, Bang Bang, Dead Pig!
-
(crowd yelling at passing police vehicles)
-
(Reporter) This is the first day that the, uh,
-
headquarters have been raided?
-
(Panther) It wasn't raided this time,
-
we were attacked.
-
They just, they just, you can look at the windows,
-
man...
-
(Reporter) Was there a fire in the...
-
(Panther) They set a fire. They got...
-
the pigs set a fire.
-
They did it.
-
(Satchel) They went down there,
-
and the fire started.
-
(Reporter) Nobody was up there,
-
except the police, when the fire started?
-
(Satchel) Right.
-
(Reporter) Frank, you wanna come...
-
(Satchel) Get a picture of that, too, man.
-
(reading from newspaper) The Panthers' cook said
-
he had strict, standing orders to not fire,
-
or return any fire directed at them.
-
A man, identified as Larry White (inaudible)
-
(Man) We here, we ain't goin' nowhere.
-
(Rush) We say to pigs Daley,
-
Hanrahan, Pig Connor, and the rest,
-
no more brothers will be taken from us
-
without cause.
-
Chairman Fred is gone, gone from the streets
-
where his heart and people are.
-
But not for long.
-
For the people's love of Fred Hampton
-
is lovelier than lovely.
-
(crowd singing) Free, Fred Hampton.
-
Free, Fred Hampton! Hampton!
-
For he's our warrior to guide us.
-
Free, Fred Hampton.
-
Free Fred Hampton! Say!
-
Free Fred Hampton.
-
For he's our warrior to guide us.
-
(Satchel) Last night, when the pigs
-
vamped on the office,
-
the community were all out there.
-
They were in an uproar, they couldn't dig it.
-
They know we, are the People's Party.
-
We are working in the interest of the people.
-
You dig? (crowd) Right on!
-
(Satchel) I like to talk about what we doing,
-
because we're in the Black Panther Party.
-
Yeah, we armed - we are an armed propaganda unit,
-
but we spend most our time working with these programs,
-
and helping the people,
-
serving the people.
-
Huey P. Newton, our Minister of Defense, says
-
that the Black Panther Party, uh,
-
is an organization like ASHN,
-
to be ridden by the people
-
down the path of social revolution.
-
You dig it? (crowd) Right on!
-
(Satchel) That's what it's all about.
-
They vamped on our offices
-
because of these programs.
-
That we putting these programs out for the people,
-
dig it? That's what they're for.
-
The programs are the answer to the basic needs
-
and desires of the people.
-
They let the people know that the Black Panther Party
-
is concerned about the basic needs and desires
-
of the people.
-
They educate people to the fundamentals of socialism,
-
and the height of the contradiction.
-
That's what it's all about.
-
And they going to attack us,
-
'cause we ain't talking about the Black Panther Party
-
that's going to take over the government,
-
we said, we going to heighten the contradiction,
-
so the people can see the injustices that's going on,
-
and the people can decide whether the government
-
needs changing or not.
-
(crowd singing) People get ready.
-
The Revolution come.
-
(crowd singing)
-
(Hampton) I learned a lot while I was in prison.
-
I had an educational process.
-
A learning process.
-
Some take the time to decide to think about
-
action that's going to be taken against me
-
and other members of the Party.
-
And after I don't see why I'm not scared.
-
You know what I decided it's being?
-
I decided it's being a people high.
-
I decided to be high off the people.
-
You high?
-
(crowd) Right on!
-
(Hampton) I'm high, you understand what I'm saying?
-
I'm high off the people.
-
Sent me away to the penitentiary,
-
and I went to penitentiary,
-
way down in Menard, Illinois.
-
I'm thinking, I said, well I'm way down here
-
in the country,
-
I might get in no people, when I got to Menard,
-
I'm not them, even being the vanguard,
-
had to get on my knees and learn from the people.
-
I had to put my ear to the ground.
-
And when I pressed my head to the ground,
-
I heard the people. (crowd erupts in approval)
-
(crowd begins to chant)
-
(Hampton) Give me a beat, now, c'mon now.
-
(crowd chanting)
-
(Hampton) Ain't you high?
-
Is you high?
-
I'm high.
-
I'm high.
-
(crowd chanting, clapping)
-
(Hampton) High, high, high, high
-
(crowd chanting, clapping)
-
(Hampton) Oh, I'm high,
-
Oh, I'm high.
-
(crowd cheering)
-
(Hampton) I'm free.
-
Yeah.
-
Y'know what we talking about,
-
we talking about a beat that can't be stopped
-
by anybody.
-
We talking about, we going to make some changes
-
in this system.
-
We know they have our pictures.
-
We know they looking for us.
-
We know they want us.
-
But we've still said, that even though we could be in offense,
-
as far as this system goes,
-
on the mountaintop,
-
we in the Black Panther Party,
-
because of our dedication and understanding,
-
of what's in the valley,
-
knowing that the people are in the valley,
-
knowing that we originally came from the valley,
-
our Black is the same Black as the people in the valley,
-
knowing that our enemies is also on the mountaintop,
-
our friends in the valley.
-
We say that even though it is nice to be
-
on the mountaintop,
-
we going back to the valley.
-
(crowd) Right on! (applause)
-
(Hampton) I be in the office everyday.
-
I be in the streets propagandizing everyday.
-
I be working with everybody everyday.
-
I be preaching that solidarity is the thing.
-
The end of, uh, a complete wipeout of the imperialism is the thing.
-
So if people can be thinking about here,
-
that's what Bobby would be teaching.
-
If you going to be thinking about us,
-
all we said, we don't, ain't no thing about
-
goin' nowhere.
-
Getting killed.
-
All we want to know is that you doing
-
what we'd be doing if we were there.
-
And you got to do that.
-
You can't do it unless you believe you can do it.
-
(crowd) Right on! (cheers)
-
(Hampton) In the spirit of liberation,
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) we understand that we want
-
everybody in the Party in jail.
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) And we know,
-
(Hampton) that if we try to figure out
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) and separate,
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) and divide,
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) who should go,
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) and who shouldn't go,
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) We spend more time
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) doing that
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) than working for the people.
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) So the quickest solution,
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) to speed it was,
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) Nobody goes.
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) No-body goes.
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) We all stay right here.
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) With the people.
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) 'Cause we love the people.
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) Okay, you can put your hands down now.
-
And say, "All power to all people."
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) Say, "White power to white people."
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) "Brown power to brown people."
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) "Yellow power to yellow people."
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) "Black Power for Black people."
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) "'X' power for those that we left out."
-
(crowd repeats)
-
(Hampton) We say, "Panther power for the vanguard Party."
-
(crowd) Right on!
-
(Hampton) When you leave here, you saying the last words,
-
before you go to bed tonight,
-
"I am a revolutionary."
-
Make that the last words,
-
in case you don't wake up,
-
then somebody might believe in it.
-
And you might end up in, what they call it,
-
Revolutionary Happy Hunting Grounds.
-
(crowd) Right on.
-
(Hampton) Say that. That "I am a revolutionary."
-
(crowd) I am a revolutionary.
-
(Skip Andrew) God.
-
That's where the (inaudible) was done.
-
(Rush) We can mourn today.
-
But if we, understood Fred,
-
we are dedicated, that his life wasn't given in vain.
-
Then there won't be no mournings tomorrow,
-
then all our sorrow will be turned into action.
-
He said, "But you have to remember one thing,
-
to be strong."
-
He wasn't afraid of anything.
-
(Hanrahan) The immediate, violent, criminal
-
reaction of the occupants
-
in shooting at announced police officers,
-
emphasizes the extreme viciousness of
-
the Black Panther Party.
-
So does their refusal to cease firing at the
-
police officers when urged to do so
-
several times.
-
(Reporter) This is 2337 West Monroe,
-
described by police as a depot
-
for Black Panther Party arms and ammunition.
-
14 State's Attorney's policemen,
-
led by Sergeant Daniel Groth,
-
found out indeed it was a depot
-
for weapons.
-
After a 15-minute gun battle that cost
-
Illinois Black Panther Party Chairman Fred Hampton
-
his life,
-
Sergeant Groth described the raid as
-
15 minutes of hell,
-
and a miracle.
-
A miracle because not one policeman was killed.
-
A miracle because not more policemen were shot.
-
The firing stopped only when the occupants realized
-
their arsenal was no match for the police arsenal.
-
An arsenal that included a 45-caliber
-
sub-machine gun, and two shotguns.
-
(Andrew) What they didn't understand,
-
and what Edward V. Hanrahan doesn't understand,
-
and what Richard Jolbeck's chief assistant didn't understand,
-
and what those police officers
-
who put those two bullets in his skull,
-
and in his head as he lay and sleep
-
didn't understand,
-
and what Richard Nixon and his assistant lackey
-
Mr. Mitchell don't understand,
-
is that you can't kill Chairman Fred.
-
(crowd) Right on!
-
(Andrew) What they didn't understand is
-
that anyone who would try to kill him, is,
-
and shall ever be, an enemy of the people.
-
And whoever would do that can only be appropriately called
-
not a person, but a pig.
-
(crowd) Right on! (crowd applause)
-
(Andrew) What they didn't understand
-
what they didn't understand, when they did that,
-
is that pigs die, but Chairman Fred lives.
-
(Rush) You are ones, who are gonna,
-
decide for yourselves what happened
-
in that apartment, on the morning of December 4th,
-
you are going to decide whether or not
-
Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were the victims
-
of premeditated murder.
-
(Sergeant Groth) At this time,
-
no response from within.
-
I take my revolver,
-
in my right hand, and I pound possibly four or five,
-
or six times.
-
A voice from within, a male voice from within,
-
replies, "Who's there?"
-
I reply, "Police officers,
-
I have a search warrant, open the door."
-
(Hanrahan) As soon as Sergeant Daniel Groth
-
and Officer James Davis, who were leading our men,
-
announced their office,
-
occupants of the apartment attacked them
-
with shotgun fire.
-
(Groth) I wait several seconds,
-
with no replies from within,
-
the door's not open, I again take my revolver
-
with my right hand. (pounds door)
-
I wait a second or so, a male voice
-
from within the apartment says, "Just a minute."
-
(Reporter) There was no response from the group?
-
(Hanrahan) The response from the group
-
was the firing of a shotgun blast at our police officers.
-
(Reporter) There was no verbal response?
-
(Hanrahan) The response to our police officers
-
was the firing at them by a person in the apartment.
-
(Reporter) Didn't they ask who was it?
-
(Hanrahan) When the police officers, uh,
-
announced their office, they were fired upon.
-
(Reporter) Didn't they ask who is it?
-
(Groth) I looked at Duke, I said okay Duke,
-
(Officer Davis) Going in, going over to about here,
-
And I hit the door,
-
I go to the back.
-
(Groth) Duke forces this door open,
-
simultaneously we enter,
-
a shot rings out, Duke falls in this direction.
-
I enter, in a semi-erect position,
-
there's a woman, lying on the bed with a shotgun,
-
calmly pumping it,
-
right in my direction,
-
and fires.
-
The, uh, fire illuminates her face, I get
-
a good look at her.
-
I feel something go over my left shoulder.
-
I then step back here,
-
I look in, get up on my toes, point my revolver,
-
look in again, cover my face,
-
and fire several shots at the girl.
-
(Harris) I heard a knock on the door,
-
they said, policemen told us to open up.
-
And Mark Clark said, "Just a minute."
-
He got up, and next thing I knew,
-
they had busted into the door,
-
and came in shooting. They shot my leg,
-
they shot Mark Clark.
-
(Davis) This woman fired a shot, and she,
-
the illumination apparently, illuminates
-
the fella sitting behind the door in a chair,
-
he's pumping his shotgun.
-
I turn in his direction, and fired two shots at him,
-
as he shot the ground.
-
He stands up, I stand up with him,
-
we struggle, he falls down over the chair in the floor,
-
with his head facing the corner of the door, here,
-
in the wall, I fall across his body.
-
(Panther) This here is the room
-
where first brother Mark Clark was murdered at.
-
(Panther) Don't touch nothin', don't move nothin',
-
'cause we want to keep everything just the way it is.
-
Don't touch no walls.
-
Okay, this here is the door, they said
-
sister Fahd went through with the shotgun.
-
If the sister had fired through this door with a shotgun,
-
can look at the wall there and see some, uh,
-
holes that the bullets that left out there,
-
you see no signs of a shotgun blast being fired
-
through this door here.
-
(Reporter) Sir, you say your men were fired upon?
-
Witnesses who have seen the apartment
-
say there is no evidence of bullets
-
from the direction where the, uh,
-
Panthers were supposedly to be.
-
(Hanrahan) I said that, uh, after our officers
-
announced their, uh, purpose and their station
-
several times, uh, they were fired upon
-
from within the room.
-
(Panther) We say this is nothing more
-
than a fascist lie,
-
justifies the murder that took place
-
in this crib here.
-
The doorway here, is absent of a door,
-
the door's been removed.
-
And now is in possession of our defense attorney,
-
and is going to be used in our case to prove
-
what happened here, was nothing more than
-
murder.
-
(Reporter) After days of maneuvering,
-
Black Panther attorney Francis Andrew finally
-
brought a bullet-punctured door panel to the inquest.
-
However, a controversy immediately arose
-
to whether Andrew's panel was the same one
-
that was removed from the Black Panther apartment.
-
This is Andrew's version.
-
(Reporter) Which side is the outside, sir?
-
(Andrew) The outside, uh, you're looking from the inside now.
-
(Reporter) Looking from the inside now?
-
(Andrew) Yes.
-
(turns panel) This is the outside.
-
(Reporter) It looks like the door is
-
splintered on both sides.
-
(Andrew) There's a hole up here,
-
which none of the police in their testimony
-
have mentioned,
-
as a matter of fact,
-
they have denied.
-
This hole up here, shows a bullet coming from the outside
-
to the inside.
-
(Reporter) The hole at the bottom there?
-
(Andrew) The hole at the bottom was made
-
while the door was standing wide-open.
-
(Reporter) Assistant State's Attorney
-
Nicholas Motherway says Andrew could've gotten
-
the panel at any lumberyard.
-
Motherway's point was backed-up at least in part
-
by a police crime lab technician,
-
who examined the door in the Panther apartment
-
the same day as the raid.
-
The technician said that, first of all,
-
there was only one hole in the panel
-
the day he examined it.
-
And second of all, he couldn't be sure
-
the panels were one and the same.
-
(Andrew) December 4th, 1969, at 10:54am.
-
My name is Skip Andrew, and I am at
-
2337 West Monroe Street, Chicago, Illinois.
-
This door, was the door entering into
-
the living room, has two holes in it.
-
This one I'm pointing to right here,
-
10 inches from the edge,
-
and this one, uh, down here,
-
12 inches.
-
Uh, the first one I referred to is 25 from the top,
-
and the second one 36 from the top.
-
Now, as you open this, there's also of course
-
a knob door in this one,
-
as you open the door, there's, uh, blood
-
behind the door.
-
The, uh, top hole shows that the bullet was
-
incoming.
-
(Panther) They flied through the door,
-
and hit the brother through the door.
-
The brother fell here, and most of the blood
-
is dried up but you can see a little bit of it there,
-
and a little bit of it on the floor.
-
The brother was shot four or five times throughout,
-
they came through the door, they shot him again,
-
to make sure he was dead.
-
(Reporter) Mr. Montgomery, Dr. Constantino
-
testified today that Mark Clark could not
-
have struggled after receiving that shot
-
through the heart.
-
Now in your mind does this contradict the testimony
-
of Officer Davis, who described a struggle?
-
(Montgomery) Uh, yes, it seems to me
-
that was a very startling thing.
-
We also learned that, uh, the bullet
-
which was in fact recovered from Mr. Hampton's body
-
was a bullet fired out of a carbine by Officer Davis.
-
So that indicates also that Officer Davis,
-
uh, may well have walked into that back bedrooom,
-
contrary to his testimony.
-
And fired a shot into the body of Fred Hampton
-
at one point in time or other.
-
(Officer Carmody) There were six others assigned to the back porch.
-
I came up on the back porch,
-
I placed myself to the right of the door.
-
I put my head down enough so I could hear
-
if there was any conversation in the building.
-
I heard people talking in the front,
-
and then I heard a loud, uh, shot, sounded
-
like a shotgun.
-
I backed up, and kicked the door open.
-
I started in, and before I could get past the threshold,
-
there were three shots fired from the rear bedroom.
-
They were directed directly at the back door,
-
uh, as I was coming in.
-
I backed out again.
-
(Hanrahan) Only by the grace of God,
-
uh, were one of our, or two of our police officers
-
prevented from being killed, uh, when
-
they were fired upon as soon as they announced
-
their office and knocking on the door.
-
(Andrew) On December 11th, 1969,
-
the Chicago Tribune carried a story that had
-
characterized as an exclusive version
-
from the State's Attorney's office.
-
(Reporter) Why was the exclusion made in the Chicago Tribune?
-
(Hanrahan) Because that that newspaper,
-
the Chicago Tribune, in my opinion,
-
gave a very balanced, fair report of the events
-
that occurred.
-
(Reporter) It has nothing to do with the fact that
-
the class of people, or the type of people that buy
-
the Tribune as opposed to other papers in the city?
-
(Hanrahan) Does anybody have a sensible question?
-
(Andrew) Included in the exclusive was a photo,
-
carefully circled to show bullet holes
-
supposed to be in the back door.
-
(Hanrahan) The account that we made public yesterday,
-
gave a detailed explanation of what happened
-
in that apartment, I stand whole-heartedly
-
behind it as absolutely accurate.
-
(Reporter) There is one inconsistency,
-
well, for example -
-
(Hanrahan) I do not intend to quibble about
-
that account.
-
(Reporter) Do you intend to get the truth?
-
(Hanrahan) The account that we gave
-
of the events, is the truth.
-
(Reporter) One of the four pictures you gave
-
the Tribune had two bullet holes
-
in the right side of what was
-
supposed to be the rear door.
-
(Rush) Hanrahan has lied before, he's going
-
to lie again.
-
That, that hole he's blown up in the paper
-
is, uh, the whole of a nail.
-
(Reporter) Tight close-up of the nail head.
-
Plus the door hasp.
-
I...here you see the large nail heads
-
being pointed out.
-
(Hanrahan) I have said that, uh, we released
-
the pictures we have not characterized,
-
or described, uh, the, uh, conditions that they portray,
-
other than to say, that that is a accurate portrayal
-
of that, uh, particular object.
-
(Reporter) Do you know if any of the four pictures
-
they received had portrayed bullet holes in
-
any of the walls?
-
(Hanrahan) I...
-
(Andrew) Another photo claimed to show the bullet-riddled
-
door across from the bedroom.
-
The officers testified that the Panthers fired
-
into that door from inside their bedroom.
-
In fact, the door in the photo was the bedroom
-
door, and the holes in the door were made
-
by police gunfire at the Panthers.
-
(Panther) As you can see,
-
the bathroom door is intact.
-
Not only does the bathroom door, but the entire wall area
-
is intact.
-
(Hanrahan) There was a, there was a picture
-
of the, uh, the inside of the door to the bathroom,
-
yes.
-
(Reporter) That door, our reporters discovered,
-
corresponded to one on the front living room
-
adjoining the bedroom.
-
There were holes in the door, when the door was opened,
-
they, those holes corresponded to holes that
-
were in the wall adjoining between the bedroom
-
and the living room.
-
When they stuck a stick through the holes,
-
they all matched up.
-
(Hanrahan) I have, I make, I say, I make
-
no evaluation of the pictures,
-
other than to say they portray conditions
-
as they existed in that apartment at the time
-
those pictures were taken.
-
(Panther) This is the door that is supposed
-
to contain numerous marks, from, uh,
-
stray shotgun blasts, small arms fire,
-
which again was fired by members of the "vicious"
-
Black Panther Party,
-
who was standing in this bedroom here,
-
shooting out into the hallway here.
-
(Hanrahan) I urge, I urge your inventory of
-
each of these vicious weapons.
-
This attack, this attack by the Black Panthers
-
on the police, plus the weapons that were recovered,
-
uh, at the, uh, depot where they were storing them,
-
clearly demonstrates the true character
-
of the Black Panther Party.
-
(Rush) Nobody...I have never denied that there was
-
no weapons there.
-
As a matter of fact, you'd be a fool
-
if you didn't have a weapon there.
-
Knowing, uh, the ferociousness of the pigs,
-
how they just jumped out of the cars
-
and shoot you down.
-
How they knock on your door and blow, uh,
-
19-year old sister's head off with shotguns,
-
how they kill two brothers in one week.
-
Yeah, he's...and as a matter of fact,
-
everybody that's concerned should have a,
-
or something in their homes to protect themselves,
-
because Hanrahan is a madman.
-
(Reporter) Mr. Hanrahan, can you tell me
-
why your officers did not try to use tear gas?
-
Isn't this the usual procedure to flush
-
someone out of a building?
-
(Hanrahan) Our officers, uh, used the means
-
necessary to effect the search.
-
And to present, prevent themselves from being
-
killed upon after they were,
-
killed after they were fired upon.
-
(Reporter) Isn't it the truth, that you
-
would usually use, your men usually use, uh,
-
tear gas, in situations such as this?
-
And why didn't they use it this time?
-
(Hanrahan) No, that is not true.
-
(Reporter) It is not true?
-
(Panther) They came, uh, with murder
-
on they mind.
-
Even if they wanted to take someone to jail,
-
it would have been just a simple matter of
-
just shooting some tear gas, and it'd brought
-
everybody out.
-
(2nd Panther) Right on.
-
(Panther) This is where our Chairman
-
had his brains blown out, and he, uh,
-
laying in bed, sleeping at 4:30 in the morning.
-
(Johnson) Someone came into the room,
-
started shaking the Chairman.
-
Said, "Chairman, Chairman, wake up.
-
The pigs was mapping."
-
Still half asleep, I looked up,
-
and I saw bullets coming from it looked like
-
the front of the apartment.
-
From the kitchen area.
-
They were, pigs just shooting.
-
And, uh, about this time,
-
I jumped on top of the Chairman,
-
he looked up,
-
looked like all the pigs just,
-
merged into the entrance-way to the bedroom-area,
-
back bedroom-area.
-
Mattress is just, going,
-
you could feel the bullets going into it.
-
I just remember thinking they dead,
-
everybody in there.
-
Um, when he looked up, he just looked up,
-
he didn't say a word, didn't move,
-
except for moving his head up.
-
He lays his head back down, to the side like that.
-
He never said a word, never got up off the bed.
-
Um, the person who was in the room,
-
he kept hollering out, "Stop shooting,
-
stop shooting! We have a pregnant woman,"
-
or "a pregnant sister in here!"
-
At that time, I was 8 1/2, 9 months pregnant.
-
My baby was to be delivered in two weeks.
-
Pigs kept on shooting.
-
So I kept on hollering out,
-
and finally they stopped.
-
They pushed, um, me and another brother
-
by the, uh, kitchen door,
-
he told us to face the wall.
-
Heard a pig say, "He's barely alive,
-
he'll barely make it."
-
I assumed they were talking about Chairman Fred.
-
So then, they started shooting, the pigs they started
-
shooting again.
-
I heard a sister scream.
-
They stopped shooting.
-
A pig said, "He's good and dead now."
-
Pigs running around laughing,
-
they were really happy, you know,
-
talking about Chairman Fred is dead.
-
I never saw Chairman Fred again.
-
(Hanrahan) Inflammatory statements
-
and false charges against our office have been made
-
by spokesmen for the Black Panther Party
-
and others.
-
Despite the fact that the speakers had no reliable
-
knowledge about the occurrence.
-
(Satchel) Well, the best account that I can give,
-
is, uh, the room where I was in, uh,
-
the actions, the things around me, you know.
-
First thing I remember, when I woke up,
-
was, uh, a knock on the door,
-
and it was only a matter of seconds,
-
in fact, I would say it was less than 5 seconds
-
that I heard, you know, shots.
-
Now, the thing that struck me, is that,
-
I not only heard shots, but I can see plaster
-
coming out of the walls, of the, of the walls in my room.
-
So, I knew that the bullets were coming through
-
the room that I was in.
-
(Groth) I stepped over,
-
and I put the machine gun still on single-fire,
-
and I started from the left side of the wall,
-
coming across, watching where the rounds were hitting,
-
and I went over the girl's head, down on the other
-
side of her, continued fire across this wall.
-
(Panther) One strange thing about this wall,
-
is, the State's Attorney's Gestapo raiding pigs say
-
that they fired, uh, numerous, uh,
-
slugs, going up and down, up-and-downward motion,
-
attempting to avoid hitting the people in the apartment here.
-
You notice that all these slugs are on a straight line,
-
and also notice that all were fired at a low level,
-
and about bed level.
-
(Satchel) Next thing I remember is, uh,
-
someone, I think it was one of the pigs,
-
told us to come out of the room.
-
But there were still shots being fired.
-
Now I didn't know at this here time,
-
that the people that had came
-
Not Synced
were coming through the back door,
-
Not Synced
but I took it that shots were being fired
-
Not Synced
at the back of the house and the front of the house.
-
Not Synced
And, uh, you know, they were all coming through
-
Not Synced
the walls, the walls were nothing but plaster board.
-
Not Synced
And, you know, bullets come through the front of the house,
-
Not Synced
and go all the way through, out the back.
-
Not Synced
Somebody told us to get out, but I remember
-
Not Synced
we were afraid, the bullets were still coming,
-
Not Synced
we remained on the floor.
-
Not Synced
I heard another pause, and then one of the pigs
-
Not Synced
told us that, if we don't come out,
-
Not Synced
he's going to put something in there,
-
Not Synced
that would really get 'em out.
-
Not Synced
The idea came to my mind, that they
-
Not Synced
were going to shoot tear gas or something in there.
-
Not Synced
(Groth) We realized that there were still
-
Not Synced
some people remaining in the front bedroom,
-
Not Synced
we don't know whether they're injured or not,
-
Not Synced
so I pleaded, I chanted, I begged them to come out,
-
Not Synced
"Please come out with your hands out,
-
Not Synced
put down your weapon."
-
Not Synced
(Satchel) The next thing I heard
-
Not Synced
was a barrage of shots, real fast.
-
Not Synced
And, uh, you know, we were hit this time.
-
Not Synced
(Groth) I started with the gun, still
-
Not Synced
on single-fire, being very careful
-
Not Synced
and watching where each round hit on the wall,
-
Not Synced
I walked them around, uh, the girl sitting on the bed,
-
Not Synced
and brought it all the way across the wall again.
-
Not Synced
As I was doing this, Officer Davis was
-
Not Synced
stepping up, and he started firing across the wall,
-
Not Synced
from right to left.
-
Not Synced
I put one shot in the door.
-
Not Synced
I put a short burst with the machine gun on automatic
-
Not Synced
fire, into that closet.
-
Not Synced
(Officer) I fired four or five shotgun blasts
-
Not Synced
into the bedroom.
-
Not Synced
(Groth) The second form, still coming up,
-
Not Synced
caught a blast as the gun came further across the room.
-
Not Synced
(Satchel) They told me, uh, to you know,
-
Not Synced
to get up, and walk.
-
Not Synced
And I told them I couldn't.
-
Not Synced
And then I think they hit me, some of they
-
Not Synced
told me they'd kill me if I stay there.
-
Not Synced
So I kept trying, I managed to, you know,
-
Not Synced
get up, and uh, I needed a little hop,
-
Not Synced
and I hopped out.
-
Not Synced
You know.
-
Not Synced
(Hanrahan) I am taking the word of our policemen,
-
Not Synced
uh, over what we understand is supposed to be
-
Not Synced
a version provided by a defense attorney
-
Not Synced
and by the occupants of the apartment.
-
Not Synced
(Satchel) I was hit 5 times.
-
Not Synced
I was hit, um, 2 times in the stomach,
-
Not Synced
one time in the leg,
-
Not Synced
and I was hit, grazed in each hand.
-
Not Synced
Yeah.
-
Not Synced
This is just a scar, you know,
-
Not Synced
I had to have a section of my colon
-
Not Synced
taken out.
-
Not Synced
Because of infection.
-
Not Synced
And I was shot over here.
-
Not Synced
(Hanrahan) I expect the general public
-
Not Synced
to recognize the quality of these men's work,
-
Not Synced
and the political consequences can take care
-
Not Synced
of themselves.
-
Not Synced
Of course I don't plan to resign.
-
Not Synced
(Rush) He's changed the story every time, uh,
-
Not Synced
from newspaper to newspaper,
-
Not Synced
Channel 1 to another channel,
-
Not Synced
and he's had changed the story as we've brought up
-
Not Synced
facts, truths about the evidence, uh, that he
-
Not Synced
reportedly had given out.
-
Not Synced
Such as the nail heads, such as the bullet holes
-
Not Synced
and what-not in the walls.
-
Not Synced
And it's only my conclusion, is that Hanrahan,
-
Not Synced
if he wants to give an objective opinion
-
Not Synced
about what happened here, that morning,
-
Not Synced
he would have to come to this apartment and find out,
-
Not Synced
because he's done a whole lot of subjective analysis
-
Not Synced
because the man hasn't come to the, uh,
-
Not Synced
apartment to find out what really did go down
-
Not Synced
in the apartment.
-
Not Synced
We have invited Hanrahan here to see
-
Not Synced
for himself the evidence, that we have shown
-
Not Synced
to the masses of people and to the public.
-
Not Synced
(Hanrahan) No, I have not been at the scene.
-
Not Synced
(Kennon) Based on available evidence,
-
Not Synced
namely the physical condition of the home
-
Not Synced
and its contents, they physical conditions of
-
Not Synced
the remains of Fred Hampton,
-
Not Synced
the search warrant was merely a subterfuge
-
Not Synced
and the mission of the police was to murder and maim.
-
Not Synced
(Streeter) This blatant act of legitimatized murder
-
Not Synced
strips all credibility from law enforcement.
-
Not Synced
In the context of other acts against militant Blacks
-
Not Synced
in recent months, it suggests an official policy of
-
Not Synced
systematic repression.
-
Not Synced
The "pious" statements of State's Attorney Hanrahan
-
Not Synced
concerning the brave response of the police,
-
Not Synced
against the "vicious" Panther attack,
-
Not Synced
and his allusion to the "grace of God" concerning
-
Not Synced
the sparing of the policemen, only makes
-
Not Synced
the situation more macabre and terrifying.
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) As an individual, are you convinced
-
Not Synced
that the official version is a lie?
-
Not Synced
That, it is a case of murder?
-
Not Synced
(Robinson) Personally, I am.
-
Not Synced
(Andrew) Anyone who went through that apartment
-
Not Synced
and examined the evidence that was remaining there,
-
Not Synced
could come to only one conclusion, and that is
-
Not Synced
that Fred Hampton, 21 years old,
-
Not Synced
and a member of a militant, well-known militant group,
-
Not Synced
was murdered in his bed, probably as he lay asleep.
-
Not Synced
It seems very clear to us that he was assassinated.
-
Not Synced
And the police officer who did that assassination
-
Not Synced
then walked away from it, walked away from it
-
Not Synced
and said to other people, "Bobby Rush is next."
-
Not Synced
Now all of you who know Bobby Rush
-
Not Synced
know that he is the Minister of Defense
-
Not Synced
for the Black Panther Party,
-
Not Synced
and also one of our clients.
-
Not Synced
And all of you also, I assume know,
-
Not Synced
that Bobby Rush's apartment was broken into last night,
-
Not Synced
and also searched, but fortunately for him
-
Not Synced
he's still alive because
-
Not Synced
he was not in the apartment.
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) You think that if you had been
-
Not Synced
in your apartment yesterday,
-
Not Synced
you would've been shot by police?
-
Not Synced
(Rush) Yes, I would have been murdered,
-
Not Synced
I still think there's a, a great possibility
-
Not Synced
of people trying to murder me.
-
Not Synced
All the moves, in the past, initially was done
-
Not Synced
on the part of the police, they murdered
-
Not Synced
Fred Hampton, they are out to murder me,
-
Not Synced
it's like they'll murder anybody that's Black
-
Not Synced
in this country.
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) Bobby, do you think there's going to be
-
Not Synced
retaliation by the Panthers?
-
Not Synced
(Rush) There won't be any retaliation by
-
Not Synced
the Panthers.
-
Not Synced
I think that there are, the time will come
-
Not Synced
when the people themselves will, uh,
-
Not Synced
take the power that belongs to them,
-
Not Synced
into their hands, and move, uh, to,
-
Not Synced
guarantee life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
-
Not Synced
We would not be forced underground till the
-
Not Synced
people, we really feel satisfied that we've done
-
Not Synced
our duty, our duty to educate the masses of the people
-
Not Synced
to the injustices that the power structure
-
Not Synced
inflicts upon poor people in this country.
-
Not Synced
All the mass demonstrations and young people
-
Not Synced
know this is happening right now.
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) Bobby, what's the next move for you
-
Not Synced
personally?
-
Not Synced
(Rush) There's no personal, anymore,
-
Not Synced
I'm the People's man, and whatever the people
-
Not Synced
decide, it's nothing personal about it.
-
Not Synced
And, uh, the Panthers will be there to serve the people.
-
Not Synced
(Andrew) Of course, numerous people have
-
Not Synced
attempted to make formal and informal investigations,
-
Not Synced
with a report by the Grand Jury for the Federal District
-
Not Synced
Court, the Northern District of Illinois.
-
Not Synced
And I quote, "This report contains the findings
-
Not Synced
of the Grand Jury after hearing nearly 100 witnesses,
-
Not Synced
and considering over 130 exhibits.
-
Not Synced
Including police records, photographs, moving pictures,
-
Not Synced
transcripts of testimony before other bodies,
-
Not Synced
voluminous investigative and scientific reports,
-
Not Synced
and reports of investigative interviews with over
-
Not Synced
100 potential witnesses who were not called."
-
Not Synced
And of course, among the main witnesses before
-
Not Synced
the Federal Grand Jury were the 14 raiders in the
-
Not Synced
apartment, the police officers who were assigned to
-
Not Synced
the State's Attorney's office.
-
Not Synced
The report tells us, contrary to some of their
-
Not Synced
testimony prior to the Grand Jury proceedings,
-
Not Synced
the report tells us that, "At 4am, on December 4,
-
Not Synced
Sergeant Groth briefed the 13 assembled officers
-
Not Synced
and told them the location of the raid,
-
Not Synced
and that Panther arms were involved."
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) Did you know that they were
-
Not Synced
Black Panthers?
-
Not Synced
(Carmody) No, we didn't. We just knew that
-
Not Synced
we were informed that there were guns,
-
Not Synced
and some contraband in the building.
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) Did you have information that
-
Not Synced
indicated that Fred Hampton might be there?
-
Not Synced
(Carmody) Not to my knowledge.
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) You just knew that there were guns,
-
Not Synced
and the possibility that these might have been
-
Not Synced
Black Panthers?
-
Not Synced
(Carmody) All we knew is that there were guns in there.
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) At this point, it appears that, uh,
-
Not Synced
the people who were deceased were, uh,
-
Not Synced
in a gun battle?
-
Not Synced
(Carmody) Oh, they were definitely in a gun battle.
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) I mean, that they were firing
-
Not Synced
at police?
-
Not Synced
(Carmody) Yessir. We saw the shots coming out
-
Not Synced
of the two bedrooms.
-
Not Synced
(Andrew) Sergeant Groth, of course,
-
Not Synced
from the beginning claimed, along with his fellow officers,
-
Not Synced
that a shot had been fired by a young Panther woman,
-
Not Synced
in the far corner of the living room door,
-
Not Synced
as the officers entered the door.
-
Not Synced
The report, however, explains the impossibility of this
-
Not Synced
account given by the officers.
-
Not Synced
Reading again now from the report from
-
Not Synced
page 181, it says, "Groth, Davis, Jones,
-
Not Synced
and Gorman..." Those are all officers.
-
Not Synced
"...all insist that a shot was fired by Brenda Harris,
-
Not Synced
at them, as they came in the door.
-
Not Synced
None of them could explain
-
Not Synced
what had become of this shot.
-
Not Synced
And it is not possible to draw a line
-
Not Synced
from the southeast corner of the living room
-
Not Synced
where Harris was said by Davis and Groth to
-
Not Synced
be on the bed and holding the gun,
-
Not Synced
out through the living room door,
-
Not Synced
the entrance hall door, and the outside door.
-
Not Synced
There are no holes in the west wall of the apartment."
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) Officer Carmody, when you knocked on the door,
-
Not Synced
what happened?
-
Not Synced
(Carmody) Well, I didn't actually knock,
-
Not Synced
I heard our officers at the front, uh,
-
Not Synced
announce their office, and shots fired,
-
Not Synced
uh, so I kicked in the back door,
-
Not Synced
and as soon as the back door opened,
-
Not Synced
I could see, uh, shots being fired at us
-
Not Synced
at the back door.
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) Do you have any idea how many
-
Not Synced
shots were fired?
-
Not Synced
(Officer) Uh, quite a few.
-
Not Synced
I have no idea.
-
Not Synced
(Reporter) Any idea over how long a period
-
Not Synced
the gun battle ensued?
-
Not Synced
(Officer) Seemed like an hour to me.
-
Not Synced
(Andrew) Of course the raiders would have us
-
Not Synced
believe that they, approached the apartment
-
Not Synced
in a gentlemanly fashion, that they were
-
Not Synced
attempting to save human life.
-
Not Synced
They knocked on the door,
-
Not Synced
and they announced their purpose.
-
Not Synced
They fired no shots, until they were fired at.
-
Not Synced
They called for "cease fire" on at least
-
Not Synced
three different occasions.
-
Not Synced
(Hanrahan) Thereafter, three times, Sergeant Groth
-
Not Synced
ordered all his men to cease firing,
-
Not Synced
and told the occupants to come out with
-
Not Synced
their hands up.
-
Not Synced
Each time, one of the occupants replied,
-
Not Synced
"Shoot it out."
-
Not Synced
And they continued firing at the police officers.
-
Not Synced
(Andrew) By their own testimony,
-
Not Synced
they admit that, for 12 minutes,
-
Not Synced
for 12 solid minutes,
-
Not Synced
in those early morning hours,
-
Not Synced
there was gun firing in that apartment.
-
Not Synced
And yet the Federal Grand Jury concludes that
-
Not Synced
only one possible shot could've come
-
Not Synced
from a Panther weapon.
-
Not Synced
And that shot could've come through the door
-
Not Synced
by a man who had just been shot in the heart.
-
Not Synced
They would have us believe that,
-
Not Synced
even though there was only one Panther shot,
-
Not Synced
they called for a cease fire on three different occasions,
-
Not Synced
and didn't get it, and so they continued their firing.
-
Not Synced
The great variance between the physical evidence,
-
Not Synced
and the testimony of the officers,
-
Not Synced
raises the question, as to whether the officers
-
Not Synced
are falsifying their accounts.
-
Not Synced
Those officers fired 99 shots.
-
Not Synced
Through the walls of an apartment
-
Not Synced
where they knew people were sleeping.
-
Not Synced
Murder is defined in Illinois as follows:
-
Not Synced
"A person who kills an individual
-
Not Synced
without lawful justification,
-
Not Synced
commits murder if, in performing the acts
-
Not Synced
which caused the death,
-
Not Synced
he knows that such acts, create strong probability
-
Not Synced
of death, or great bodily harm, to that individual,
-
Not Synced
or another."
-
Not Synced
Federal Grand Jury comes to its conclusions,
-
Not Synced
"Unquestionably, the raid was not professionally planned,
-
Not Synced
or properly executed.
-
Not Synced
And the result of the raid was two deaths,
-
Not Synced
four injuries,
-
Not Synced
and 7 improper criminal charges."
-
Not Synced
In spite of those conclusions,
-
Not Synced
the report then goes on to say,
-
Not Synced
"The physical evidence and the discrepancies
-
Not Synced
in the officers' accounts,
-
Not Synced
are insufficient to establish probable cause
-
Not Synced
to charge the officers with willful violation
-
Not Synced
of the occupants' civil rights."
-
Not Synced
(crowd chanting) Power to the People!
-
Not Synced
Power to the People!
-
Not Synced
Power to the People!