Seattle Mardi Gras riot
The Seattle Mardi Gras riot occurred on February 27, 2001, when disturbances broke out in the Pioneer Square neighborhood during Mardi Gras celebrations in Seattle, Washington. There were numerous random attacks on revelers over a period of about three and a half hours. There were reports of widespread brawling, vandalism, and weapons being brandished. Damage to local businesses exceeded $100,000. About 70 people were reported injured. Several women were sexually assaulted. One man, Kris Kime, died of injuries sustained during an attempt to assist a woman being brutalized.
Seattle Mardi Gras riot | |
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Pioneer Square in February | |
Date | February 27, 2001 |
Location | |
Casualties and losses | |
Arrests: 100+ Injuries: ≈70 Deaths: 1 |
It was Seattle's second serious rioting incident in three years, the first being the 1999 World Trade Organization's Minister Level Conference On World Free Trade. Large crowds and some disturbances occurred during Mardi Gras leading up to the events of Fat Tuesday. The police department's lack of intervention during the disturbance led to allegations of police misconduct. Responses during and after the event by both the Mayor and Chief of Police were met with intense scrutiny. The violence led to a moratorium on large Mardi Gras celebrations in the city and tarnished the neighborhood's reputation.
Background
Pioneer Square was often described as the center of Seattle's nightlife at the time with its numerous bars and clubs. The neighborhood had been the site of Mardi Gras celebrations since 1977; with more than 90 civilians and 30 officers injured during disorders in 1979.[1] Festivities on the Friday and Saturday leading up to 2001's Fat Tuesday were broken up by police with the city's bicycle patrol at the forefront of squashing festivities. On Saturday, the Seattle Police Department estimated a total between 4,000 and 6,000 people gathered in the area after midnight. The crowd pelted the officers with rocks and bottles after a suspect was arrested for carrying a handgun. Windows were also smashed before the crowd was dispersed through the use of pepper spray, rubber bullets, and concussion grenades.[2] The heavy-handed tactics led to complaints from event goers.[3] Up to 2,000 people gathered in the neighborhood on Sunday evening with fewer incidents.[4] Celebrations were also violent in Austin, Fresno, and Philadelphia that year.[5][6]
Fat Tuesday
Over 4,000 party goers initially filled the neighborhood and its bars on Tuesday evening. Police estimated large crowds began forming in the central plaza at 9:00 pm and eventually spilled into the surrounding streets. The celebrations included drinking, dancing, and women baring their breasts for beads.[3] Throngs of men began groping the women as they exposed themselves.[7] Police estimated that the crowd swelled to anywhere between 5,000 and 7,000 people as the evening continued.[2]
Sporadic fighting broke out at about 10:40 pm. Police donned riot gear and formed lines but rarely entered the crowd. Some arrests were made at the periphery of the neighborhood's main square. Cars were vandalized and overturned. Small fires were set and the windows of business were shattered.[2] Police were then notified that young men were brandishing handguns and other weapons towards people. By midnight, groups roved through the crowd randomly attacking people along the stretch of Yesler Way between First and Second Avenues.[3] Paramedics were not able to reach some victims due to the lack of police control in the area.[8]
The police stood by and did nothing as a group assaulted a female teenager; when a bystander, Kris Kime, attempted to protect her, the group beat him to death.[9][10] Witnesses said Kime was struck and knocked to the ground as he tried to help the frightened woman who had fallen in the melee. Kime died of massive head injuries.[11] About 70 others were reported injured with 2 suffering gunshot wounds.[8][12]
At 12:30 am, 25 to 30 young men advanced on a line of police. The police retreated while bottles and other debris were thrown. A team of bicycle officers made a quick charge toward the crowd with pepper spray before retreating. Fighting escalated with little police interference until shots were fired from within the mass of people at 1:30 am. With the assistance of an armored vehicle, police advanced on the crowd with tear gas, pepper spray, and flashbangs. The crowds were finally dispersed shortly after 2:00 am.[3]
Reactions
The day after the riot, local newspapers carried a picture of a black man with brass knuckles engaged in an assault which came to symbolize the riot.[13] An editorial in The Stranger said the incident was racially motivated and that much of the violence was directed at white civilians.[14] Witnesses said gangs of black youth yelled racially charged slurs and sought white victims.[15] Some eyewitnesses said that most of the attackers were black but that race was not a factor in who was victimized. According to the Seattle Weekly, police did not initially see the attacks as solely or even predominately racial violence.[16]
Racial issues overshadowed the sexual assaults that took place. One man was charged with forcibly fondling a woman. A photograph of a partially nude woman being groped by some two dozen men while lying topless and on her back won an award from the National Press Photographer Association despite not being previously published in a newspaper.[17]
In the wake of the riot, Schell announced a moratorium on Mardi Gras celebrations in Seattle.[3] Schell lost to Greg Nickels and Mark Sidran in the city's 2001 mayoral primary elections. King County Executive Ron Sims called the Mardi Gras riot and the protests at the 1999 World Trade Organization meeting "defining issues"[10] in Schell's failed bid for reelection. Nickels made Kime's death a political issue in his campaign, saying the certificate of death would hang in his office should he become mayor. He kept the pledge upon taking the office. As mayor, Nickels retained Gil Kerlikowske as police chief despite criticism of the police department's inaction during the incident.[18]
On the day after the Mardi Gras riot, Seattle experienced the 6.8 Mw Nisqually earthquake, the worst in 37 years. Its scale caused people to refocus their attention on earthquake recovery and away from the violence. Outside the Seattle area, the incidents attracted little media attention and have largely been forgotten. In 2011, local bars reattempted Mardi Gras celebrations in Pioneer Square. Smaller Mardi Gras events had been held but it was the first to consist of a collaboration between multiple establishments.[19] Another group had considered organizing an event but the permitting process was too restrictive.[20]
Investigations and legal proceedings
Kerlikowske originally ordered the police at the scene not to intervene, instead maintaining a perimeter around the growing violence.[8] The City of Seattle acknowledged that the police strategy during the incidents presented a public safety threat, and the City made an almost $2,000,000 settlement with Kime's family. Mayor Paul Schell (who was at asleep at home during the events of Tuesday evening) appointed a three-member task force panel to investigate the cause of the riot.[10] He instructed them not to discuss the lack of police intervention which the public had been concerned about. Initially task force meetings were closed to the public, but protest forced the city to open them to attendance. The Seattle Police Officers' Guild later voted no confidence in the chief, citing the Mardi Gras riot as one of the reasons.[21]
That night, 21 were arrested. Dozens were later questioned by police after being identified through the use of videotape, photographs, and reports from eyewitnesses.[22] Investigations showed that roughly 75% of the over 100 suspects were black. Many of the suspects had criminal records and were believed to be affiliated with gangs.[23]
The man photographed and videotaped wearing brass knuckles and beating people, Aaron Slaughter, was sentenced to three years in prison for assaults on a woman and two men. It ran concurrently with a nine-month sentence he received for rendering criminal assistance during a brawl less than three months later.[24]
A 17-year-old, Jerell Thomas, was found guilty in the death of Kime after jurors saw video footage of Thomas hitting Kime in the head three times. He was also convicted of two counts of second-degree assault for attacking two other men with a skateboard.[11] He originally received a 15-year sentence. His conviction was later overturned by a State's Supreme Court decision finding that assailants could not be found guilty of murder if the intent of the assault was not to take a life. In 2006, Thomas avoided a new trial and plead guilty to second-degree manslaughter. He received a 10-year sentence.[25] In December 2009, Thomas was released from prison early. He soon reoffended.[26]
References
- Johnson, Gene (2001-02-28). "Two severely injured in Seattle Mardi Gras disorders in Pioneer Square". The Daily Record. Associated Press. p. A10.
- Diaz, John (2001-08-01). "Mardi Gras 2001 After Action Report (memorandum)" (PDF). Seattle Police Department. Retrieved 2015-01-23.
- Kamb, Lewis (2001-03-01). "'No more Fat Tuesday,' mayor declares". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
- "Riot police break up Seattle Mardi Gras". The Register-Guard. 2001-03-25. p. C3.
- "No Mardi Gras in Austin". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. 2001-02-27. p. 6B.
- "National News Briefs; Mardi Gras Violence Reported in 3 Cities". The New York Times. 2001-03-01. Retrieved 2015-01-15.
- Kamb, Lewis; Tracy Johnson (2001-03-10). "Many sexual assaults at Mardi Gras". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Archived from the original on 2001-03-12.
- "Mardi Gras police transcripts -- part 3". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. 2001-05-27. Retrieved 2009-06-28.
- Ith, Ian; Bartley, Nancy (2001-03-02). "Man Killed at Mardi Gras was trying to help woman". Seattle Times. Retrieved 2010-12-21.
- Brunner, Jim; David Postman (2001-09-19). "Events, bad timing undo Schell". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
- Elizabeth, Murtaugh (2001-11-07). "Teen found guilty in Mardi Gras death". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
- Moody, Fred (2004). Seattle and the Demons of Ambition: From Boom to Bust in the Number One City of the Future. St. Martin's Griffin. p. 273. ISBN 978-0-312-33400-0.
- Bartley, Nancy (2001-07-24). "Man charged in Gorge violence; bail to be revoked on his Mardi Gras charges". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2009-06-28.
- Feit, Josh (2001-03-22). "Blackout". The Stranger. Retrieved 2009-06-28.
- Jamieson Jr, Robert (2001-03-08). "On riots, race and a look at reality". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
- Parish, Geov (2001-03-07). "Race riot?". Seattle Weekly. Retrieved 2011-07-01.
- Davila, Florangela; Ostrom, Carol M. (2002-03-31). "Mardi Gras news photo that wasn't published wins prize". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
- Young, Bob (2005-11-03). "Nickels' promises". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2010-05-21.
- "First Big Mardi Gras Celebration To Be Held In Pioneer Square Since Fatal Riots". KIRO News. 2011-07-03. Archived from the original on 2011-04-16. Retrieved 2011-07-01.
- "Mardi Gras comes back to Pioneer Square". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. 2011-03-05. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
- "Seattle Police Guild Votes No Confidence in Chief". The Seattle Times. The Seattle Times Company. 2008-03-28. Archived from the original on 2014-10-18. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
- Kamb, Lewis (2001-05-27). "Transcripts show extent of police inaction". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
- Kamb, Lewis (2001-03-16). "Three-fourths of Fat Tuesday crime suspects are black, police say". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
- Bartley, Nancy (2001-12-01). "Mardi Gras assailant gets 3-year sentence". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
- Singer, Natalie (2006-02-28). "Mardi Gras killer is sentenced again". The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on March 31, 2006. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
- "Seattle's Mardi Gras killer re-offends after release". King Broadcasting Company. 2011-02-26. Retrieved 2015-01-14.