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King was assaulted outside the home of a man, George Holliday, who owned a new video camera, used it, and swiftly gave a copy of the video to a TV station. Its repeated airing inflamed racial tensions nationwide and was sure, many thought, to guarantee a guilty verdict against the officers. Attorney Harland Braun, who represented one of the officers in a federal trial, said, "If there hadn't been a video there would have never been a case. In those days, you might have claimed excessive force but there would have been no way to prove it." But defense attorneys in the predominantly white suburb of Simi Valley, Calif., made the video part of their case for the officers' innocence, dissecting it frame by frame to argue that King incited his own beating. The jury acquitted three officers and declared a mistrial for a fourth. As many times as the video was played, it seemed someone could find a new reality in it. Video is compelling but is "just what's in the frame. It's completely decontextualized," Thompson said. "The presence of a video ... does not end the story," he said. "The fact that we're still debating the Kennedy assassination proves the Zapruder film didn't seal the deal. All it proved was that Kennedy was shot." Videotape has a role in another fatal beating case involving Southern California police officers; surveillance video that roiled the city captured the assault on a mentally ill homeless man who died after a violent arrest in Fullerton last summer. Two officers will stand trial in the death. A white, ex-police officer from Houston was acquitted earlier this year of beating a black burglary suspect in an assault captured on video; critics said the all-white jury saw what they wanted to see. King himself became part of the reality genre years after his video faded from public consciousness. Unable to surrender the limelight even as he struggled with alcohol addiction and arrests, he appeared on "Celebrity Rehab" and participated in a celebrity boxing match. Society's fixation on the images carried on our TV, computer or tablet screens is just as marked. Where it takes us next may be determined by another gripping image yet to be imagined or shot.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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