
Rodney King, whose beating by police in 1992 sparked the LA race riots, has been found dead in his swimming pool. He was 47.
Rialto Police Captain Randy Deanda said King was found
"unresponsive" at the bottom of his pool after a call from his fiancee
and was pronounced dead at a local medical centre shortly afterward at
6.11am (11.11pm AEST) on Sunday.
"Preliminarily, there do not appear to be any signs of
foul play," Deanda added, noting that police were conducting a drowning
investigation and that the coroner's office would perform an autopsy.
King became a symbol of racial tensions in America following his
beating by baton-wielding LA police after a high-speed car chase was
caught on camera.
He was severely beaten by four white police officers who
struck him more than 50 times with their wooden batons and used a stun
gun.
Four officers involved went on trial for use of excessive
force but were acquitted on April 29, 1992, triggering days of deadly
rioting in Los Angeles that left more than 50 people dead and caused
about $US1 billion ($1 billion) in damage.
Speaking ahead of the 20th anniversary of the riots, King said racism still has to be challenged.
"There's always gonna be some type of racism. But it's up
to us as individuals in this country to look back and see all the
accomplishments that we have gotten to this far," he told CNN.
Asked about his feelings toward the police officers who
beat him, he said: "I have forgiven (them), because America has forgiven
me for so many things and given me so many chances.
"You get to have a second chance, and I've been given a second
chance," said King, who has had a number of brushes with the law since
1992.
"I have much respect for (the police), much respect ...
some of them went out of their way over the years to try to make it up
to me. Not all of them is bad."
In an earlier CNN interview, King recalled that he had
been drinking despite being on parole after a 1991 robbery conviction
and was headed home from a friend's house when he saw a police car was
following him and panicked, worried he would be sent back to jail.
So he tried to flee by car but tried to park in a public place when he realised police officers were catching up with him.
"I saw all those apartments over there, so I said, 'I'm
gonna stop right there'," he said. "'If it goes down, somebody will see
it'."
King said as the officers beat him, they yelled, "We are
going to kill you, n-----," although police later denied using racial
slurs.
Since the events that catapulted him into the spotlight, King has had several brushes with the law.
He was arrested in 2005 for making threats to kill his
daughter and his daughter's mother after the two women got into an
argument with his then-girlfriend.
He was also arrested in 2003 for allegedly punching a
girlfriend. He had also pleaded guilty to reckless driving after
crashing into a house with his car.
In November 2007, he was treated in hospital after an
incident in which he was shot and wounded in the face, back and upper
torso, in the Los Angeles suburb of San Bernardino.
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