Stacey Koon
American criminal and former police officer (born 1950) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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American criminal and former police officer (born 1950) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stacey Cornell Koon (born November 23, 1950) is an American former policeman with the Los Angeles Police Department. He is one of the four policemen who were responsible for beating Rodney King in March 1991. He was sentenced to 2+1⁄2 years in federal prison in 1993 for his role in the beating.
Stacey Koon | |
---|---|
Born | [1][2] Lynwood, California, U.S. | November 23, 1950
Spouse(s) | Mary Koon |
Police career | |
Country | United States |
Department | Los Angeles Police Department |
Service years | United States Air Force: 1971–1974 Los Angeles Police Department: 1976–1992 |
Rank | Sworn in as an Officer: 1976 Police officer 3: 1978 Sergeant I: 1982 |
Awards | LAPD Medal of Valor 100+ commendations[3] |
Other work | Convicted in connection to the Rodney King beating |
Conviction(s) | Deprivation of rights under color of law (18 U.S.C. § 242) |
Criminal penalty | 2.5 years imprisonment |
Koon has a bachelor's degree and a master's degree in criminal justice from California State University, Los Angeles, and a master's degree in public administration from the University of Southern California.[4]
On March 3, 1991, in Los Angeles, a high-speed chase was initiated by California Highway Patrol officer Melanie Singer after motorist Rodney King was observed driving a 1988 white Hyundai automobile 100 miles per hour (160 km/h). The chase ended on the right shoulder of Foothill Boulevard. Koon, the commanding Los Angeles Police Department officer on the scene, and four other LAPD officers (Laurence Powell, Timothy Wind, Theodore Briseño and Rolando Solano) attempted to arrest King. The officers stated that King resisted arrest and Officers Powell, Wind and Briseño had to use force to subdue him, although witnesses denied that King resisted. The incident was videotaped by a nearby resident, George Holliday, who sold it to local TV station KTLA, with the videotape showing King on all fours on the ground while the officers, taking turns tasering and beating King with their batons.
As a result of the incident, King was hospitalized with a fractured skull, broken leg, and burn marks from the taser. The station aired parts of the video and CNN aired it the next day. The trial was moved out of Los Angeles to the largely white suburb of Simi Valley, after the judge ruled that untainted jurors could not be found in Los Angeles. The police officers were tried for assault and the use of excessive force in state court in 1992. Three of them were acquitted on April 29 that year, while the jury failed to agree on a verdict for the fourth. Later the same day the 1992 Los Angeles riots began, which resulted in 63 deaths.
In 1993, the four policemen were tried in a federal court in Los Angeles; Koon and Powell were convicted of violating King's civil rights. The United States Federal Sentencing Guidelines recommended the offenders serve up to ten years in prison.[5] Instead, U.S. District Judge John Davies sentenced the offenders to 30 months.[6] The sentencing was vacated by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in August 1994 for violating the guidelines.[7] In February 1996, that judgment was itself reversed by the Supreme Court of the United States, which found that the shortened sentences were within the district court's discretion.[8][9]
Koon wrote a book in 1992 about the incident, entitled Presumed Guilty: The Tragedy of the Rodney King Affair in which he defended his actions and blamed the riots on the media and community leaders.[3] He appeared as a guest on A Closer Look with Faith Daniels on October 24, 1992.[10]
In November 1995, a gunman, 35-year-old Randall Tolbert, entered a halfway house where Koon was completing the final weeks of his prison sentence and demanded to know where Koon was. Koon was away from the facility, on a holiday pass at the time. The gunman took three hostages, one of whom was 67-year-old Karl Milam. After fatally shooting Milam, Tolbert was shot and killed by the sheriff's SWAT team during a shootout.[3][11][12]
Koon eventually moved to Castaic, north of Los Angeles.[3] In 2012, he began working as a chauffeur in Los Angeles for the limousine company Music Express where his patrons have included former U.S. vice president Al Gore and political commentator D. L. Hughley as well as other prominent Hollywood writers.[13][14]
Both Koon and fellow LAPD officer Laurence Powell have been used as symbols of racism in hip hop and related music. He is referenced by rap metal band Rage Against the Machine in their song "Vietnow,"[15] and is mentioned in Ice Cube's songs "Really Doe" and "We Had to Tear This Motherfucka Up". Koon was also namechecked in The Simpsons episode "Sideshow Bob Roberts" by conservative commentator Birch Barlow as an example of someone "railroaded by our liberal justice system" alongside Sideshow Bob, Oliver North, and Joe Camel. He was parodied twice in 1993 by Jim Carrey on the American sketch comedy television series In Living Color.
In 2007, Time magazine profiled Koon as it marked the 15th anniversary of the riots.[3] They reported that since his release he had been living on the royalties from his book.
In 2018, Koon was arrested for driving under the influence in Santa Clarita, California.[16] Koon pleaded no contest and received a sentence of three years' probation and was required to install an alcohol interlock on his vehicle.[17]
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