Kathy E <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


After almost 22 hours of deliberations over a little over four days, a 
Detroit jury found former police offficer Walter Budzyn guilty of lesser
charges of involuntary manslaughter in his second trial. During Budzyn's
first trial in 1993, he was convicted of second-degree murder and
received an eight to 18-year sentence. 

Budzyn expressed no emotion as the verdict was read. Under Michigan law,
involuntary manslaughter carries a sententence ranging from probation to
15 years in prison. Budzyn has already served four years in prison, and
under Michigan guidelines, he may have already served any sentence he is
likely to  receive. Budzyn will be formally sentenced on April 17. 

The altercation between Green and officers Budzyn and Nevers occurred  
on Nov. 5, 1992, when the defendants pulled him over, and Green refused
to unclench his fist and show them what he was holding. (A few witnesses
and Budzyn testified during the retrial that Green was hiding crack from
the officers.) Budzyn had maintained that he was not involved in Green's
fatal beating and suggested that his partner Larry Nevers was really
responsible for the death. He had claimed that he did not even see the
beating but only heard a couple of thumping sounds that sounded like
blows to Green. 

The beating death of Green sparked immense public outrage as blacks
called the Malice Green case "Detroit's Rodney King." The first trial of
Budzyn, which came just months after the King acquittals and riots,
further divided an already racially-divided Detroit. Budzyn's second
trial has not been nearly as racially-charged, and there have been very
few public protests. 

Budzyn and Nevers were convicted for the murder of Malice Green during 
their first trials in 1993. Budzyn's original conviction was overturned
in 1997 when it was revealed that his jury was prejudiced by a viewing
of the film Malcolm X, which opens with a videotape of the Rodney King
beating. The Michigan Supreme Court overturned the conviction and
ordered a new trial.
--
Kathy E
"I can only please one person a day, today is NOT your day, and tomorrow
isn't looking too good for you either"
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