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

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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 horrified people worldwide. Lou Cannon, veteran journalist, combines extensive research with interviews from hundreds of survivors, offering the only definitive story behind what happened and why. Official Negligence takes a hard look at the circumstances leading up to the riots. Cannon reveals how the videotape of the brutal beating of Rodney King had been sensationally edited by a local TV station, how political leaders required LAPD officers to carry metal batons despite evidence linking them to the rising toll of serious injury in the community, and how poorly prepared the city was for the violence that erupted.

720 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1998

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About the author

Lou Cannon

25 books7 followers
Louis Simeon Cannon was an American journalist, non-fiction author, and biographer, best known for his books about Ronald Reagan. He was state bureau chief for the San Jose Mercury News in the late 1960s and later senior White House correspondent of the Washington Post during the Ronald Reagan administration.

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Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Ariadna73.
1,726 reviews122 followers
September 26, 2018



My takeaway from this book is that there are not good or bad human characters in any story. There are no guilty or innocent parties. The problem is the system. Humans can be good and human on a one-to-one basis, but when they get together, or form part of a bigger system, then the problems begin.


The issue with this problem is remarkably summarized in the title: "Official Negligence" The problem was not with the white abusive policemen, or the black wrongdoers... it was with the system and the society they belong to. Evidence of this is the exaggerated overreaction to the results of the trials: riots that ended in 51 deaths and hundreds of millions of dollars in damages.


It also brought good things: the LAPD would be more prepared for issues like this, and acts of violence like those riots would forever be a thing of the past.





The first picture of this post is a young Rodney King, trying to do whatever he could to stop the carnage. This violent phenomenon surpased him and everyone else. His extremely worried gaze and his demeanor show the weight of the circumstances. It is a pitty that he is one of those beings that would never be out of trouble. To this days he is still a victim of his own inability to cope with complex personal issues.


The second image are the cover and jacket of the book I read. Some footage of the beating illustrates one small aspect of what this very complete work covers.


Below this lines, the dedicatory and acknowledgements, which I love the way the author wrote them. In this first page the reader can enjoy a fresh style and anticipate the seriousness and thoroughness yet to come.





This is the table of contents of this dense book. It is a long read, but believe me, it is worth every minute invested.





The prologue (depicted below) is another example of the superb writing of this journalist. It catches your attention and makes you not wanting to put down the book until the very end.





Here is a taste of the first words of the book: describing southern California as a paradisiac place where everyone wants to live.





The following images are some of the pictures in the book.

















A few excerpts from the text. Tell me if it is not the best teaser ever tried.








Finally, I could not help but reproduce the epilogue, which gives you perfect closure, following the entire tone of the writing. A masterpiece of research and journalism.


























And after finally, the list of characters of this story. It is always good to read a story with a map, and this list is a perfect tool for orientation.

















In conclusion, I liked this book a lot. The happenings that it depicts are difficult to read sometimes, and other times are sad; but one thing is real: Cannon really wanted to find the truth behind what happened, and he succeeds at providing a very good portrait of what happened before, during and after that obscure moment in the city.


I also have a blog! Link here:


http://lunairereadings.blogspot.com/2018/09/official-negligence-lou-cannon.html
Profile Image for Andrew.
366 reviews12 followers
November 6, 2009
Considering the national obsession with this 5-minute incident of alleged police brutality and the riots that followed the acquittal of the officers involved in it, there is surprisingly little serious writing about it. Lou Cannon's Official Negligence fills the void more than adequately, by making the effort to dig beneath the mountains of bullshit put forth by not only the usual political suspects on both sides of the fence, but by the media as well, and try to get at the truth. What Cannon, a writer for the Washington Post, discovered in his research is that the video that was drilled into the collective consciousness of the American public was a distortion, due to its missing some key footage; and that what went on on the night of March 3, 1991 was more a display of gross incompetence than racist brutality. Essential reading for anyone who is seeking to understand this particular historical event, or the political climate of the 90's in general.
Profile Image for David Corleto-Bales.
1,075 reviews71 followers
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November 27, 2022
Veteran California journalist Lou Cannon methodically and exhaustively reports the background and context of the Rodney King incident and subsequent trial of four Los Angeles police officers for brutality in an objective way. Cannon provides a historical landscape for race relations in L.A., a brief and interesting history of the LAPD, (an army unto itself) and how the chiefs since William Parker in the '50s and '60s shaped the modern police department. He reveals the shortcomings in training, staffing and empathy, but stays objective and refuses to demonize the police completely. He profiles many of the main characters of the era, including Chief Daryl Gates, Tom Bradley the longtime mayor, the four officers and many other main characters in the drama. 30 years later, the same basic problems of policing in the United States remain.
364 reviews6 followers
September 1, 2020
This is a truly even-handed account of the beating, the trials, and the aftermath. Some might read Cannon as conservative, and that might even be fair; I would call him an extremely diligent reporter who has many if not all of the facts at his command and who is completely fair even if he does have a blind spot or two. Highly recommended if you want to understand an event that is at the foundation of the current Black Lives Matter movement.
2 reviews
August 11, 2025
The most thorough and unbiased account of a highly controversial event in our nation's history. It gives a excellent brief history of the LAPD and Los Angeles as a whole and actually delves into the backgrounds of all the people involved in the incident and how they came together on one fateful night. There is so much that has been left out of mainstream historiography of the Rodney King beating and the resulting trial and riots and this book fleshes it all out.
9 reviews1 follower
January 20, 2021
Well written. It allocates blame in a thoughtful and clear way. It does a good job of contextualizing the riots within the history of L.A. and the LAPD.
Profile Image for alana mcgrath.
230 reviews
August 27, 2022
i feel like i learned a lot but this was a borderline-reference book that took me forever to get through and wasn't super correct in today's climate
Profile Image for Jarred Goodall.
295 reviews3 followers
May 22, 2024
Mr. Cannon produces a concise work, which consideres multiple facts and perspectives, before coming to its logical conclusions.
Profile Image for Violet Bell.
109 reviews5 followers
February 5, 2022
This is an epic account of the LA police, the beating of Rodney King and the murder of Latasha Harlins, and the riots/uprising and their aftermath. And in its scope it becomes a story of Los Angeles itself. Like a Russian epic, there is such a vast cast of characters, so many names, that I wished for a Russian style list of characters - it was only when I'd finished the book that I found such a cast of characters was provided at the end. D'oh!

I don't generally research the background of an author before I read a book. In reading this, I detected an ideological slant from the author that was confirmed by observing his other works - such as biographies of Ronald Reagan - that confined a conservative bent. This is in contrast to my own political beliefs, and especially in what I have learned through university studies and my career, in the most successful ways of working with disadvantaged communities. Nonetheless, I found the author to be fair handed, for the most part, in dealing with difficult and sensitive subjects.

The four star rating reflects the intense research which has gone into writing this, if not definitive, then at least exhaustive (and at times exhausting) social history. I can't say it was a pleasure to read - given the subject matter, it could hardly be other than at times frustrating, depressing and aggravating - but I'm glad I read it; I feel better informed.
Profile Image for James Bechtel.
221 reviews5 followers
June 22, 2020
In 2020, and probably into 2021, the legal systems in Minneapolis and Atlanta will be confronted with police officers charged with the murders of George Floyd and Rayshard Brooks. On March 3, 1991, a 26-year-old African American man, Rodney King, was severely beaten and arrested by officers from the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) -an arrest/beating caught, in part, on videotape. Thirteen days later a 14-year-old African American girl, Latasha Harlins, was murdered by a Korean store owner in South Los Angeles - a murder caught, by the store's security camera, on videotape. The videotape evidence in both cases seemed indisputable -beyond any possible doubt. However, in court, the tapes became an ambiguous record open to different interpretations. The four LAPD officers charged in the King case were all found not guilty. A second trial on federal charges led to the conviction of two of the four. The Korean shop owner was found guilty of murder, but at her sentencing, the judge let her go free - not one day in prison. Can you say rage? Uprising? Noted journalist and biographer Lou Cannon's "Official Negligence" (published in 1997) primarily details and analyzes the Rodney King case and the subsequent "riots." UCLA Professor of History Brenda Stevenson brilliantly examines the Latasha Harlins case in "The Contested Murder of Latasha Harlins: Justice, Gender, and the Origins of the LA Riots" published in 2013. It is possible that the King and Harlins cases and their subsequent events might be able to cast some insight on what is to come in Minneapolis and Atlanta. A template, if you will. The anatomy of the King and Harlins trials may prove instructive. Both Cannon and Stevenson offer roadmaps of what to watch for from prosecutors, defense teams, witnesses, the police, judges, juries, politicians, and the media. Two books that are well worth your time and effort. Absolutely 5 stars for Stevenson's book.
436 reviews16 followers
August 26, 2015
I loved this book. Cannon does an outstanding job juggling lots of storylines and turning a mountain of detailed reporting into something readable and thought-provoking.
Profile Image for Erin.
127 reviews13 followers
March 17, 2016
Finally finished! Very long and dense with info, but an excellent narrative around Rodney King, the riots, and other incidents that got way less press but are just as important.
Profile Image for Amanda.
39 reviews
July 1, 2020
I think about this book nearly everyday.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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