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Hardcover Official Negligence: How Rodney King and the Riots Changed Los Angeles and the LAPD Book

ISBN: 0812921909

ISBN13: 9780812921908

Official Negligence: How Rodney King and the Riots Changed Los Angeles and the LAPD

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

In the Spring of 1992 five days of rioting laid waste to South Central Los Angeles, took scores of lives, cost the city more than 900 million in property damages and captured the attention of... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Balanced and In-depth

This book is an excellent read. If you want to know the real story of the Rodney King incident, the trials, and the riots, this book is a must-read. Mr. Cannon spent a lot of time researching this tome, but his ability to tell the story well is what sets this book apart. Clear your mind, read this book, and think about how your ideas about the incident have changed.

A Full History of the LAPD and how one incident changed it

This is the most engrossing book that I have read in a while.. It is gripping and unbiased. Lou Cannon states the history behind the Los Angeles Police Department, with straight forward, objective proof. Cannon describes the transformation from the beginnings of the LAPD and how it was molded into the elite law enforcement agency in the world. It then goes into great deal behind the whole Rodney King incident and the riots, giving indepth thought to what happened and why. An unbelievable book!!!

A tremendous job of reporting that challenges and provokes.

An outstanding piece of reporting that takes the long view of the effects of the Rodney King trial and subsequent events, "Official Negligence" makes some fresh points about a sequence of episodes most people are tired of talking about. Of the fascinating cast of characters profiled in this book, the only one who emerges as anything approaching a hero is perhaps the least likely candidate: Stacy Koon, the sergeant who oversaw the original arrest of King and was later convicted of violating King's civil rights. Cannon's argument, at root, is that it is highly debateable whether a crime was committed in Pasadena in March, 1991, when King was pulled over and eventually beaten, and that racial animosity played virtually no role in the event. What is NOT debateable, according to Cannon, is the "official negligence" of the L.A. city council, Mayor Tom Bradley, the L.A. court system, and the LAPD leadership that produced the poorly trained officers who originally confronted King and the subsequent chaos that engulfed Los Angeles. Cannon is a terrific reporter who refuses to engage in policy prescriptions, but he does an outstanding job of detailing the sequence of communication breakdowns, judicial fiat, local political arrogance and LAPD miscalculations that produced an environment where riots were a natural consequence. The only (minor) flaw is a sense of repetition that suggests another editorial pass at the manuscript would have been useful, but overall, "Official Negligence" is an absolutely compelling read that will, despite whatever preconceptions you have of Rodney King, the LAPD, or the causes of the 1992 riots, challenge your preconceptions and force a rethinking of basic assumptions surrounding law enforcement, urban America, and Los Angeles.

Finally! Clear-cut dissection of L.A. City's politicos.

As a Los Angeles Police officer who has worked in L.A. since 1988, I found that Joe Cannon took a refreshing look behind the scenes of what it's like to live and work in Los Angeles. Mr. Cannon's writing style cut through the fog which often clouds how city politics is seen from the outside. Part of that for is created by the media, and part of the fog is created by self-serving political "leaders" so that the true responsibility for lack of training and resources of Los Angeles' police department personnel is never truly identified. Mr. Cannon pointed out that the city's leaders rather pay later when it's much more costly, than pay upfront--by adequately funding training programs--when it's cheaper. After all, it's the taxpayers' money.Bravo, Mr. Cannon. Andre' Belotto

The shortcomings of media

Not only does the book give an authoritative account of the Rodney King incident, as well as loosely related ones, the book also indirectly cautions against media's often superficial and overly simplified reporting of major news events. Read it.
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