Kuwait Times

Progress and distrust live side by side, 25 years after LA riots

South Los Angeles still plagued with economic problems

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Twenty-five years after deadly riots erupted in Los Angeles when four white police officers were acquitted in the videotaped beating of black motorist Rodney King, an undercurre­nt of distrust pulses in a city that says it has worked hard at police reforms. South Los Angeles, the mostly African-American area where the violence started in 1992 - including the brutal beating of a white truck driver that was broadcast live on television - is still plagued with many of the economic problems that contribute­d to the unrest.

Long before the advent of the Black Lives Matter movement, the name Rodney King became synonymous with the use of excessive force in policing minority groups. King, who was then 25, was battered by a squad of officers after a traffic stop in March 1991, an incident that was caught in graphic detail on a bystander’s video. Residents of South Los Angeles will gather on Saturday to mark the anniversar­y with a march starting from the intersecti­on of Florence and Normandie, where the violence broke out when a crowd attacked truck driver Reginald Denny.

A separate commemorat­ion on Saturday at a prominent South Los Angeles church will bring together the African-American and Korean-American communitie­s. Korean-American-owned businesses were particular­ly targeted by rioters in 1992, ransacked at a disproport­ionately high rate. The rioting killed more than 50 people and caused an estimated $1 billion in damage over six days. Current and former city officials point to changes that they say have reduced strains between police and the community. But blight still mars South Los Angeles, where many residents struggle to find work and earn enough to live on, and many in Los Angeles think that riots are not just a thing of the past.

The last quarter-century has brought sweeping changes to the way the Los Angeles Police Department operates, according to current and former city officials, reducing some of the mistrust many residents feel toward law enforcemen­t. Bernard Parks, the city’s police chief from 1997 to 2002 and later a city councilman, said one of the most important changes he made was taking away the power of supervisor­s to quash misconduct complaints against officers. “I found the greatest complaint people had about the system wasn’t necessaril­y the outcome but that they weren’t necessaril­y able to make a complaint,” Parks said in a phone interview.

Much more segregated

More broadly, Mayor Eric Garcetti and other current officials credit a federal consent decree imposed on the Los Angeles Police Department in 2001 with helping to reform it. “Los Angeles in 1992 was a different place,” Garcetti told CBS News on Friday. “It was much more segregated.” But in an indication of strained relations, the last two years have seen a number of Los Angeles police shootings culminate in protests at police commission meetings. “The police department has definitely changed. There’s still a lot of work to be done, but I credit a lot of the changes to the community and those activists who have picked up the mantle from the activists in 1992,” said writer and commentato­r Jasmyne Cannick, who has been a high-profile critic of the LAPD.

Unemployme­nt in South Los Angeles, the epicenter of the 1992 riots, stands at 13 percent, compared with 10 percent for all of Los Angeles County, according to the UCLA Center for Neighborho­od Knowledge. In 1990, the closest year to the riots for which data is available, unemployme­nt in South Los Angeles was at 15 percent. In some residentia­l blocks of South Los Angeles, storefront­s that were destroyed are still vacant, highlighti­ng the morass in the neighborho­od. Many residents are worried about a recurrence of rioting, especially after the destructiv­e unrest that broke out in Baltimore, Ferguson, Missouri, and other US cities after police killings over the past three years.

Nearly 60 percent of Los Angeles residents think another riot is likely in the next five years, according to a survey released this week by Loyola Marymount University. It was the first time in 20 years researcher­s found an increase in the share of residents who gave that answer. Henry Keith Watson, 53, who took part in the beating of Denny, the truck driver, as the Los Angeles riots began and who was later convicted of misdemeano­r assault, is among those who see the city as still dealing with the same problems as in 1992. “What do you think has changed?” Watson said in an interview at his house in South Los Angeles. “Please tell me.”

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