Chicago Conspiracy Trial
One of the most unusual courtroom spectacles in American history, the Chicago Conspiracy Trial collection contains materials from the 1969-70 trial of eight radicals accused of conspiring to incite a riot at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. This collection is primarily comprised of audiovisual materials, containing commentary from defendants and supporters throughout the trial.
Documents
![Chicago Conspiracy Trial - Part 9 [CD]](images/fileicons/webpage.png)
Country Joe McDonald, Stuart Meecham, Ed Sanders, Paul Krassner, Monsignor Rice. This recording was downloaded from http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/Chicago7/audio.html on 2/23/12. Credit is due to the University of Missouri Kansas-City School of law.
National distribution of these tapes as through activist networks in preparation for the TDA ("The Day After") demonstration to be initiated the day following the announcement of the verdicts by Judge Julius Hoffman (February 18, 1970_. Demonstrations broke out in a number of cities on February 19; a police riot led to several dozen arrests at the Westwood office of Bank of America in Lost Angeles. Demonstrators reported that undercover plainclothes officers, without warning, physically attacked specific targeted individuals with blackjacks, brass knuckles and other weapons.