| Sergeant Stacey Cornell Koon, the supervising officer at the
arrest
of Rodney King, wanted nothing so much as to be known as a good cop who
did his job in a professional manner. Forty-one at the time of
the
King incident, Koon believed then--and continued to believe throughout
his trials--that his actions may well have saved Rodney King's
life.
Looking back at March 3, 1991 many years later, Koon said, "I wouldn't
change what happened one iota."
Koon was a well-respected fourteen-year veteran of the LAPD
with a masters
degree in criminology. In his years on the force, he earned over
ninety commendations and just three reprimands. His courage was
legendary.
While working out of the tough South Central district, Koon once
witnessed
a black transvestite prostitute--who had been brought in for
booking--fall
over from an apparent heart attack. Even though AIDs was rampant
in the area and the prostitute had symptomatic open mouth sores, Koon
dropped
to the floor and administered mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. (The
prostitute did in fact have AIDS).
Fellow black officers considered Koon to be committed to
racial equality.
One black officer on the force said of him, "Stacey is a guy you can
walk
up to and he'll give you the shirt off his back." Koon once
investigated
a police brutality charge brought against a white officer by two black
transients--a charge most officers might have let drop. He even
angered
many officers by ordering the accused officer to stand in a line-up for
identification by the transients. (The officer was later found
guilty
of using excessive force.)
On the night of March 3, 1991, Koon ordered CHP officers to
stand away.
He said later he thought the CHP officers' use of drawn guns was
"a lousy tactic." Instead, he twice tried tasing King. The
ineffectiveness of the Taser convinced Koon that King was "dusted," or
on the drug PCP. When the Taser and swarming King proved
unsuccessful,
Koon, according to one investigator, "looked around and saw a bunch of
rookies--he tunneled in."
Koon may have won the case for the defense in the Simi Valley
trial.
Although Prosecutor Terry White thought Koon to be "an arrogant
sonofabitch,"
he came across as a sincere witness who genuinely believed that the
force
used against King was managed and controlled. One of the most
dramatic
moments of the trial came when his attorney Daryll Mounger asked him
what
he was "thinking at the time you saw Melanie Singer approaching with a
gun in her hand?" Koon fought back tears as he answered: "They
show
you a picture when you are in the Academy [taken] at the morgue, and it
is four [highway patrol] officers in full uniform that are on a slab
and
they are dead, and it is the Newhall shooting."
At the federal trial, Koon revealed none of the emotions that
came through
in Simi Valley--and that might have sealed his fate. To some
observers,
he came across as cool or "cocky."
After his conviction in the federal trial, Koon served over
two years
in federal prison. Shortly before his parole in December of 1995,
an unsuccessful attempt was made on his life.
In recent years, Koon--ineligible as a convicted felon to
serve on a
police force--sought satisfaction in part-time paralegal work and in
being
a "house husband."
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