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The Zebra Murders
The Zebra Murders: A Season of Killing, Racial Madness, and Civil Rights | Prentice Earl Sanders, Bennett Cohen
8 posts | 3 read | 18 to read
Traces the 1973 San Francisco murder spree of four African-American youths who struggled to incite a race war by killing fifteen white people, a case that was investigated by African-American homicide detectives Prentice Earl Sanders and Rotea Gilford, who at the same time were embroiled in a volatile suit against the SFPD for racial discrimination. 30,000 first printing.
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BookishMarginalia
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#CurrentlyListening to this mix of sociology and crime narrative exploring racially-charged murders in 1970s San Francisco during the time of Patty Hearst. Truly a fascinating read, especially about the structural racism in the SFPD.

123 likes6 stack adds
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WanderingBookaneer
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I finished #LitsyAtoZ this morning and started my last book for #ModernMrsDarcy .

sprainedbrain Wow! You are my challenge hero. 6y
Shadowfat That's impressive! 6y
Gissy 👏👏👏👏📚📚📚💪👍 6y
124 likes3 comments
review
WanderingBookaneer
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Pickpick

This book recounts San Francisco‘s crescendo of panic due to what the police named the Zebra murders, racially motivated murders that began in October 1973 and ended in April of the following year. The four people convicted of the crimes called themselves the “Death Angels.” ⬇️

WanderingBookaneer However, saying that this book is solely about the murders would be a great injustice. The murders are just the frame to talk about the institutional racism in the SFPD at the time and the men whose hard work and tenacity broke down barriers and allowed others to rise through the ranks. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (edited) 6y
104 likes3 stack adds1 comment
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WanderingBookaneer
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Last one for #LitsyAtoZ ! 🎉🎉🎉

98 likes7 stack adds
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ptkpepe98
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This is what I didn't learn in US history, but heard only after years of working to gain understanding of why there existed such a chasm of mistrust. My friend (she is African American) tells me that until we can openly speak about the truth and acknowledge the realities, we cannot begin to heal. That is why I am personally trying to learn and ask all I can, to try.

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ptkpepe98
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These two officers took on the system...SFPD, controlled by Irish whites, and yet were also targets of black militants. Brave men...Prentice Earl Sanders and Rotea Gilford. They changed the system from within, which seems the hardest way.

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ptkpepe98
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Remember, this is "liberal" California, San Francisco. Granted, it is the mid 1960s, but still...

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ptkpepe98

#reademandeatathon

This is teaching me so much about the period immediately following 1964's Civil Rights Act. The south has long been viewed from without as racist, and there is no doubt of that, but racism extended from coast to coast. And still does. Having grown up outside of such a mindset, as a military brat, I still don't "get it," but can only hope to attempt to understand why different is threatening.

MayJasper Yes. I would love to know the answer. And why is this perceived threat passed from generation to generation? 7y
Suet624 It's unfathomable to me. 7y
ptkpepe98 @MayJasper - we know racism, sexism, heck, any ism is a learned behavior, so what I don't understand is why people are comfortable renewing them generation after generation. Why is hate easier than like, much less, love? That's what confuses me. 7y
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MayJasper Yes me too. 7y
ptkpepe98 @Suet624 - me, either. Despite understanding the psychology of it, I just don't understand the choice to tune out all the contrary evidence that such people must have to ignore on an hourly basis. I might be wrong, but I do believe it is a choice. 7y
Suet624 I agree with you. 7y
13 likes6 comments