Community Corner

Camera That Captured Rodney King Beating To Be Auctioned

Bidding is expected to start at $225,000 for the Sony video camera behind the video that played such an important part in LA history.

Los Angeles police officer Theodore Briseno defends his actions, in the assault on motorist Rodney King, during court testimony in Simi Valley, California, Friday, April 3, 1992.
Los Angeles police officer Theodore Briseno defends his actions, in the assault on motorist Rodney King, during court testimony in Simi Valley, California, Friday, April 3, 1992. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terill)

LOS ANGELES, CA — The pen may be mightier than the sword, but in today's world, it's the camera that dictates the winds of change. Millions have been taking to the streets to demand justice after video of George Floyd's death under the knee of a police officer shocked the world. It's part of a larger movement embodied by another video: the March 3, 1991 beating of Rodney King by four Los Angeles police officers.

Next week, the Sony video camera that shot the King video will be auctioned, with bidding set to start at $225,000, it was announced Friday. Considered the first viral video, the image of four white officers kicking and bashing the skull of a black man on the ground also outraged millions. And the acquittal of those four officers, would go on to trigger the Los Angeles riots.

The Sony video camera used to record the March 3, 1991, beating of Rodney King by four Los Angeles police officers will be auctioned next Thursday, with bidding set to start at $225,000, it was announced Friday.

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According to Nate D. Sanders Auctions, the camera comes with a notarized letter of authenticity by consignor George Holliday, who used it record the beating from the balcony of his Lake View Terrace apartment. The grainy footage he shot that night is considered the first-ever viral video and made the then-31-year-old plumber a pioneer of citizen journalism.

George Holliday, the man who videotaped the beating by four LAPD officers of black motorist Rodney King, cradles his camera after appearing at a news conference, March 28, 1991. The 1991 King video was "the flashpoint, the coming of age of portable video that everybody's got," said Syracuse University television professor Robert Thompson. "Which, in a very real way, was the beginning of the total change of how information is gathered in America." (AP Photo/Craig Fujii)

George Holliday, the man who videotaped the beating by four LAPD officers of black motorist Rodney King, cradles his camera after appearing at a news conference, March 28, 1991. The 1991 King video was "the flashpoint, the coming of age of portable video that everybody's got," said Syracuse University television professor Robert Thompson. "Which, in a very real way, was the beginning of the total change of how information is gathered in America." (AP Photo/Craig Fujii)"I hope this video camera inspires people to use their power to record events that they find troubling. Don't be afraid to use it," Holliday said in a statement released by the auction house.

Find out what's happening in Los Angelesfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The Sony Video8 Handycam CCD-F77 is identified with the serial number 63299 and includes original accessories of the Sony AC power adapter AC-V16 with the serial number H163476, and the AA battery case EBP-55.

The batteries have been removed to protect the camera, which is no longer functional. The videotape of the beating is not included.

The foam cover of the camera microphone is almost completely deteriorated, which is the condition in which the FBI returned the camera to Holliday circa 2015, according to the auction house, which says the camcorder remains in "very good" condition otherwise.

Holiday recorded the King beating just after midnight, and later that day contacted KTLA, which was the first to air the footage that would be seen around the world.

King, who had been drinking and was on probation for a robbery conviction, was instructed to pull over for speeding on a Los Angeles freeway and eventually stopped his car in front of Holliday's apartment building, where Los Angeles police officers took charge of the traffic stop.

The noise woke Holliday, who came outside and videotaped four white officers repeatedly beating and kicking the Black motorist, who suffered skull fractures, broken bones and teeth, and permanent brain damage, while other officers looked on.

When the four officers were acquitted a year later of excessive use of force by a jury in Ventura County, five days of rioting ensued in Los Angeles, resulting in 54 deaths, some 2,400 injuries, scores of destroyed buildings and other property damage, and more than 12,000 arrests.

Additional information on the camera can be found at https://natedsanders.com/LotDe....

City News Service and Patch Staffer Paige Austin contributed to this report.

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