upper waypoint

Beyond the Bubble: Looking Back at the LA Riots of 1992

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Rachael Myrow here, host of the California Report, with an AM post from somewhere else in California. We're in this Golden State together. Right?

You want to know what makes a reporter feel old? Looking for a story you know you did and failing to find it because the digital archiving system at your former place of work doesn't have it.

Bear with me, dear reader: Today, looking back to the Los Angeles riots of 1992, I will be taking you back in time to RealAudio and what we in the "biz" call "crunchy" sound.

The riots that we in publicly minded media are all talking about this week were sparked by the acquittal 20 years ago of four police officers in the beating of an African-American man named Rodney King.

King was driving under the influence when police pursued him, pulled him over and proceeded to kick him and beat him with batons. Some officers just stood by and watched. The incident was caught on video by a civilian bystander and quickly went viral. (Yes, videos went viral even in 1992, albeit not on the Internet.)

 

Sponsored

The officers, who were tried for excessive force, were acquitted on April 29, 1992, igniting an urban riot that would ultimately claim 54 lives.

That acquittal was just the spark, of course. As civil rights attorney Connie Rice put it in a recent panel discussion covered by the LA Times, the kindling for the fire was laid over decades by hostile policing in black neighborhoods.

"It was kindling built on kindling built on kindling."

One documentary called" Uprising: Hip-Hop & The LA Riots" includes interviews with rappers (as the name suggests), the aforementioned Connie Rice, police officers, and rioters. That's right: rioters. In the trailer on YouTube, one guy speaks with compelling candor about how he assaulted "anybody that wasn't Black."

The interviewer asks about one incident, "Were you looking at him like a human being at that time?"

The guy, 20 years older, his brow furrowed, shakes his head. "No."

"What was he?"

"Nothing."

"Uprising" premiers on VH1 on May 1st.

Have things changed? In short, yes.

As former LA County DA Gil Garcetti noted on the same panel, the LAPD was 59% white in 1992. Now, 37%.

And The California Report has been following up on the story for years...

South LA (please don't call it South Central anymore) has changed a lot, too, in the last two decades. The neighborhood has seen a huge influx of Latino immigrants that's shifted the food scene, among other things; LA's Korean community has come into its own, and the Subway to the Sea promises to do a better job of connecting at least the north side of South LA to the rest of the city.

That story I couldn't find?

Ten years after the riot, I interviewed an African-American woman in South LA who had owned an office above a Korean dry cleaners. On the day of the turmoil,  she came home,  turned on the TV, and found that mobs were going door to door torching Korean-owned businesses.

This woman grabbed her gun, drove back to the mini-mall, parked in front of her downstairs neighbors, and waited.

When the mob arrived, she said something to the effect of "If you burn them down, you burn me down."

And they moved on.

 

lower waypoint
next waypoint
Stunning Archival Photos of the 1906 Earthquake and FireCould Protesters Who Shut Down Golden Gate Bridge Be Charged With False Imprisonment?Why Nearly 50 California Hospitals Were Forced to End Maternity Ward ServicesSan Francisco Sues Oakland Over Plan to Change Airport NameFederal Bureau of Prisons Challenges Judge’s Order Delaying Inmate Transfers from FCI DublinDemocrats Again Vote Down California Ban on Unhoused EncampmentsFirst Trump Criminal Trial Underway in New YorkAlameda County DA Charges 3 Police Officers With Manslaughter in Death of Mario GonzalezDeath Doula Alua Arthur on How and Why to Prepare for the EndDespite Progress, Black Californians Still Face Major Challenges In Closing Equality Gap