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Los Siete de la Raza : ウィキペディア英語版 | Los Siete de la Raza
Los Siete de la Raza was the label given to seven young Latinos from the Mission District of San Francisco, California who were involved in an altercation with the police that resulted in the death of an officer in 1969. The incident and the subsequent trial became a ''cause célèbre'' of the Latin-American community and the New Left. All seven were acquitted. ==Incident== The young men were approached by Joe Brodnik and Paul McGoran, two plainclothes San Francisco Police Department officers, while moving a stereo or TV into a house at 429-433 Alvarado Street on May 1, 1969 at around 10:30 a.m. A struggle ensued and Brodnik was fatally shot with McGoran's gun.〔 When police descended on the crime scene, they entered the house and assumed the suspects were hiding in the attic after which they flooded the building with tear gas as a helicopter hovered overhead; they sent a fire truck ladder up to the roof to facilitate the search while officer Brodnik's corpse lay untended on the sidewalk. Three days later six of the youths were arrested for murder of Brodnik and the attempted murder of McGoran, and burglary. The seventh defendant, George Lopez, was never apprehended. They were defended by the activist lawyers Charles Garry and Richard Hodge, lauded by left entities like ''Ramparts'' magazine. The young Latinos included four Salvadorans, one Nicaraguan, and one Honduran, some of whom had been involved in the youth group, the Mission Rebels (founded in 1965), and later in pan-Latino organizations such as COBRA (Confederation of Brown Race for Action) at the College of San Mateo, and the Brown Berets.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Los Siete de la Raza」の詳細全文を読む
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