Like last year's prosecution of Los Angeles police officers who beat Rodney King, the Federal case is constitutional.
He likened this voice tape to the videotape of Los Angeles police officers beating Rodney King.
It was an area especially hard hit by the 1992 riots that followed the acquittal of four white police officers charged with beating Rodney G. King.
It was a private citizen with his own video camera who photographed the Los Angeles police beating Rodney King.
The people who beat Rodney King were public officials.
The remark came after the acquittal of the Los Angeles officers who beat Rodney King.
The video in which police were filmed beating Rodney King, and the public outrage that followed, brought change in police procedures.
He also covered the Los Angeles riots and the federal trials of the four officers charged with beating Rodney King.
There is no more powerful example than the case of the Los Angeles police officers who beat Rodney G. King, a black man, in 1991.
It seems unlikely, but federal prosecutors could file a civil rights suit, as they did against the officers who beat Rodney King, winning two convictions.