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- THE WEEK, Page 17NATIONSee the Sideshow
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- Chief Gates stages a splashy arrest, while the rest of L.A.
- digs out
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- Flanked by 200 other police and FBI agents, including a
- shotgun-toting swat team -- and TV camera crews, to be sure --
- police chief Daryl Gates elatedly joined in the arrest of three
- suspects wanted for the beating of truck driver Reginald Denny
- at the outset of the Los Angeles riots. Leading the 2 a.m. raid
- into South Central with flak jacket and side arm, Gates
- personally collared one of the suspects, Damian Williams, whose
- nickname is "Football," and escorted him into a squad car.
- "Chief Gates, you're going!" Williams told the retiring police
- chief, according to what Gates recounted later. The chief must
- have thought he was in a made-for-TV movie. "Yes, Football," he
- snarled back, "but you're going first!"
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- In the showboating raid, police also captured two other
- alleged members of a black gang called the 8-Trey Crips: Henry
- Watson, 27, known as "Kiki"; and Antoine Miller, 20, known as
- "Twan." A fourth man, Gary Williams, 33, suspected of lifting
- Denny's wallet, turned himself in. The 8-Trey Crips are alleged
- to be the turf lords of the intersection where millions of TV
- viewers -- in a grim mirror image of the videotaped Rodney King
- beating -- saw truck driver Denny stomped into unconsciousness.
- "The department was very, very concerned about our inability to
- reach Mr. Denny," Gates said after the arrests. "We are hopeful
- that this will atone for some of that."
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- The four were among about 2,000 felony suspects detained
- since the riots, many of them identified by means of videotape
- evidence being amassed by the FBI. The federal agency is acting
- as a clearinghouse for an estimated 380 hours of videotape and
- preparing a "master" of the rioting for use by seven other
- law-enforcement agencies. Controversy over the videotapes
- erupted when most TV stations and the Los Angeles Times, among
- other papers, balked at handing over any subpoenaed outtakes or
- other film that had not been aired or published.
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- As local self-help groups struggled to clear the rubble in
- South Central and Peter Ueberroth, chairman of a newly formed
- Rebuild Los Angeles Committee, sought to persuade Japanese as
- well as U.S. companies to re-enter the sadly charred inner city,
- units of the 10,000 U.S. troops that had quelled the riots
- gradually withdrew. Army and Marine Corps regulars pulled out,
- on the proviso that the Marines would maintain a "rapid
- reaction" force capable of returning to the streets on three
- hours' notice. Some National Guard units also started to
- withdraw, leaving 6,000 Guardsmen still on patrol.
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- The sickened city, however, remained touched by submerged
- tension as a court ordered a retrial for L.A.P.D. officer
- Laurence Powell on the leftover charge of excessive force, the
- only count not dismissed by the Simi Valley jury in the Rodney
- King trial. The judge also invited the prosecution and defense
- to present their arguments this week on the possibility of
- returning the trial to Los Angeles.
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