Twenty-five years ago this month, students came out on the Kent State
campus and scores of others to protest the bombing of Cambodia-- a
decision of President Nixon's that appeared to expand the Vietnam War.
Some rocks were thrown, some windows were broken, and an attempt was
made to burn the ROTC building. Governor James Rhodes sent in the
National Guard.
The units that responded were ill-trained and came right from riot
duty elsewhere; they hadn't had much sleep. The first day, there was
some brutality; the Guard bayonetted two men, one a disabled veteran,
who had cursed or yelled at them from cars. The following day, May
4th, the Guard, commanded with an amazing lack of military judgment,
marched down a hill, to a field in the middle of angry demonstrators,
then back up again. Seconds before they would have passed around the
corner of a large building, and out of sight of the crowd, many of the
Guardsmen wheeled and fired directly into the students, hitting
thirteen, killing four of them, pulling the trigger over and over, for
thirteen seconds. (Count out loud--one Mississippi, two Mississippi,
to see how long this is.) Guardsmen--none of whom were later punished,
civilly, administratively, or criminally--admitted firing at specific
unarmed targets; one man shot a demonstrator who was giving him the
finger. The closest student shot was fully sixty feet away; all but
one were more than 100 feet away; all but two were more than 200 feet
away. One of the dead was 255 feet away; the rest were 300 to 400 feet
away. The most distant student shot was more than 700 feet from the
Guardsmen.
Some rocks had been thrown, and some tear gas canisters fired by the
Guard had been hurled back, but (though some of the Guardsmen
certainly must know the truth) no-one has ever been able to establish
why the Guard fired when they were seconds away from safety around the
corner of the building. None had been injured worse than a minor
bruise, no demonstrators were armed, there was simply nothing
threatening them that justified an armed and murderous response. In
addition to the demonstrators, none of whom was closer than sixty
feet, the campus was full of onlookers and students on their way to
class; two of the four dead fell in this category. Most Guardsmen
later testified that they turned and fired because everyone else was.
There was an attempt to blame a mysterious sniper, of whom no trace
was ever found; there was no evidence, on the ground, on still
photographs or a film, of a shot fired by anyone but the Guardsmen.
One officer is seen in many of the photographs, out in front, pointing
a pistol; one possibility is that he fired first, causing the others,
ahead of him, to turn and fire. Or (as some witnesses testified) he or
another officer may have given an order to fire. It is indisputable
that the Guardsmen were not in any immediate physical danger when they
fired; the crowd was not pursuing them; they were seconds away from
being out of sight of the demonstration.
There was also an undercover FBI informant, Terry Norman, carrying a
gun on the field that day. Though he later turned his gun into the
police, who announced it had not been fired, later ballistic tests by
the FBI showed that it had been fired since it was last cleaned-- but
by then it was too late to determine whether it had been fired before
or on May 4th.
It would be too charitable to say that the investigation was botched;
there was no investigation. Even the New York City police, who are
themselves prone to brutality and corruption, do a better job. Every
time an officer discharges his weapon, it is taken from him, and there
is an investigation. Here--to the fatal detriment of the federal
criminal trial which followed--it was never conclusively established
which Guardsmen had fired, or which of them had shot the wounded and
the dead. Since all were wearing gas masks, it is impossible to
identify them in pictures (many had also removed or covered their name
tags, a classic ploy of law enforcement officers about to commit
brutality in the '60's and '70's), and though many confessed to having
fired their weapons, none admitted to being in the first row and
therefore, among the first to fire. The ballistic evidence could have
helped here, but none was taken.
One rumor has it that the Guardsmen were told the same night that they
would never be prosecuted by the state of Ohio. And they never were.
The Nixon administration stalled for years, announcing
"investigations" that led nowhere; White House tapes subsequently
released show that Nixon thought demonstrators were bums, asked the
Secret Service to go beat them up, and apparently felt that the Kent
State victims had it coming. As did most of the country; William
Gordon calls the killings "the most popular murders ever committed in
the United States."
The history of the next few years is very sad. A federal prosecution
was finally brought, but the presiding judge is said to have signalled
his preference for the defendants, guiding their attorney's conduct of
the case to help them avoid legal errors. He dismissed all charges at
the close of the prosecution's case, avoiding the need for a defense
and taking the case away from the jury. Among his reasons: a failure
to prove specific intent to deprive the victims of their civil rights;
due to the lack of any investigation, it was almost impossible at this
late date to show which Guardsmen shot which victim.
In the New York City police force, which is far from perfect, officers
who have killed or injured someone under questionable circumstances
are often dismissed from the force even though there is not enough
evidence for a criminal conviction; the standard of proof is not the
same for an administrative action as for a criminal case. You don't
want an unstable, sadistic person on the force, even though there may
not be enough evidence for a criminal conviction. But the
Guardsmen--even the one who confessed to shooting an unarmed
demonstrator giving him the finger--were not deemed unfit to serve the
State, even though they had fired indiscriminately into a crowd
containing many passsersby and students on their way to classes.
A civil suit brought by the wounded students and the parents of the
dead ones deteriorated among infighting by the plaintiffs' lawyers.
Unable to agree on a single theory of the case, they contradicted each
other. The jury returned a verdict for the defendants.
This verdict was overturned on appeal--the main ground was that the
judge did not take seriously enough the attempted coercion of a juror
who was assaulted by a stranger demanding an unspecified verdict--and
a retrial was scheduled. On the eve of it, the exhausted plaintiffs
settled with the state for $675,000.00, which was divided 13 ways.
Half of it went to Dean Kahler, the most seriously wounded survivor,
and only $15,000 apiece went to the families of each of the slain
students, a pathetically small verdict in a day when lives are
accounted to be worth in the many millions of dollars. The state
issued a statement of "regret" which stopped short of an apology for
the events of May 4th, nine years before.
I write this just a week after the Kansas city bombing that appears to
have taken 200 lives (the rescuers are still searching the wreckage)
and the theme today is the same as 25 years ago. Hate was in the air
then, as it is today. Admittedly, the First Amendment protects hate
speech, whether it comes from the most marginal extremist or the
highest public official. Demonizing someone else for their beliefs or
their race, or even calling for their immediate assassination, is
legal in America today and was twenty-five years ago. But the fact
that something is legal to do does not make it right to do, or relieve
the speaker of any moral responsibility for the consequences.
President Nixon created a public atmosphere in which students who
opposed the war were fair game for those who supported the government.
In the week following Kent State, construction workers rioted on Wall
Street, attacking antiwar demonstrators and sending many to the
hospital, some permanently crippled. It was reported at the time that,
a day or two after the deaths, President Nixon called the parents of
the only slain student known to be a bystander--he was a member of
ROTC--to express condolences. The phone never rang in the other
parents' houses. The message couldn't have been clearer: they had it
coming.
I was fifteen that year, raised in a very comfortable middle class
environment and very naive. Kent State was my political education.
What I discovered that week, and that year, was that America in those
times was perfectly willing to harass, beat and kill its own children
if they disagreed with government policy. The step from being a member
of the protected American mainstream to being a marginalized outsider,
not entitled to the protection of law enforcement and fair prey to any
violent, flag-waving bully who happened to pass, was to stand up and
say you did not believe the Vietnam war was right.
I am not sure that anyone too young to remember those times can really
appreciate what it was like. We know today the extent to which the FBI
was involved in dirty tricks, illegal wiretapping and burglaries
against even moderate antiwar organizations. Prior to Kent State, I
had joined an organization called Student Mobilization Against the
War. One day, their offices were burglarized and their membership
lists stolen. We had no doubt at the time that it was the government,
and we were right.
I led demonstrations that week outside my high school protesting the
Kent State killings and, afterwards, the principal summoned me and my
father to his office and threatened to have me expelled as a
trouble-maker. My father--I am very proud of him, as he was not an
ideological man and his opposition to the war was very muted--replied
that if I was expelled, he would fight it "all the way to the Supreme
Court." I had done nothing else than exercise my First Amendment right
of protest. We heard nothing more about expulsion, but a close friend
of mine, who didn't have an assertive parent to stand up for him, was
thrown out of school.
That week, people came out of the woodwork--wearing black leather,
chains wrapped around their fists, waving American flags--people we
had never before seen in our neighborhoods. These patriots set up a
counterdemonstration across the street from ours. For hours, a rumor
was rampant that they would attack us and that the police would not
intervene--exactly what had happened on Wall Street a day or so
before. Their cursing and chain-rattling became uglier until finally
they summoned their courage and charged. Someone shouted "Link arms!"
and five or six teenagers, me among them, joined to interpose our
bodies between the attackers and demonstrators. The Brooklyn police,
unlike those on Wall Street, or the National Guard in Kent days
earlier, did not seek or condone the killing of children. They ran in
and forced the attackers back. I was fifteen then and am forty now,
but I have never had a finer moment in my life. It was the only moment
in my life that I came close to living up to Gandhi's statement that
"we must be the change we wish to see in the world."
Here are the names of those who died at Kent State, so that they may
not be forgotten: