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Encyclopedia > Bernard Goetz

Bernhard Hugo Goetz, the subway vigilante (born 1947), became a symbol of New Yorkers' frustrations with high crime rates after he shot four youths on an express subway train in the Bronx.

Contents

The incident

On the afternoon of December 22, 1984, four African-American youths, Barry Allen, Troy Canty, James Ramseur, and Darrell Cabey boarded the train on a mission to rob video game machines in Manhattan. Minutes later, Goetz entered the same train. He sat down across from the four youths. A few minutes later, two of the youths asked Goetz for five dollars. Goetz, pretending not to hear them, asked them to repeat themselves. Canty responded, "Give me five dollars."


Goetz responded by standing, drawing a revolver from his coat, and speed-shooting multiple times hitting all four. The last shot left Cabey paralyzed and permanently brain damaged. Goetz left the subway, rented a car, and drove to Vermont. He almost died in Vermont when he got lost in the woods where he went to bury the gun. He turned himself in to New York City police nine days later.


Public reaction

The "subway vigilante," as Goetz was labeled by New York tabloids, became front page news and stayed there for weeks, partly due to the passions it unleashed in New York and other urban populations. Some viewed Goetz as a hero for standing up to his attackers and defending himself in an environment where the police were increasingly viewed as unable to effectively combat crime. Others viewed Goetz's action as a violent and criminal over-reaction to the events. Since Goetz was white and the four youths were black, others focused on the racial aspects of the incident and the public reaction that followed. Goetz had once said at a community meeting that the only way to solve the crime problem in his neighborhood would be to get rid of "the niggers and spics" living there.[1] (http://www.newyorkmetro.com/nymetro/news/anniversary/35th/n_8601/)


Criminal trial

The Goetz trial was a significant news event. Goetz confessed to the shooting. Although the law stated that vigilantism was not a valid defense, the jury acquitted Goetz of the shooting but found him guilty of illegal weapons possession. He was sentenced to eight months. Race proved to be a minor issue. One of the witnesses, an African-American woman named Andrea Reid, testified that those "punks" got "what they deserve." James Ramseur's mother even said she wasn't sorry about what happened to her son.


Civil trial

Darrell Cabey filed a civil suit against Goetz in 1985. In 1996, a jury found that Goetz had acted recklessly and deliberately inflicted emotional distress on Cabey. The jury awarded Cabey $43 million. Goetz subsequently filed bankruptcy.


At the civil trial Jimmy Breslin, newspaper columnist, testified that Cabey had told him that he and the others had intended to rob Bernhard Goetz because "he looked like easy bait."


All of the youths have committed serious crimes since the original incident, except for Cabey, who remains paralyzed in a wheelchair. James Ramseur was later convicted of beating and robbing a pregnant nineteen year-old.


Goetz on Larry King

Twenty years after the incident, Goetz appeared on Larry King Live. He believes that his actions precipitated the drop in crime experienced in New York City in the 1990's. He is now an outspoken vegetarian and advocate of vegetarian alternatives in school lunches.


External links

  • The Legitimacy of Vigilanteism (http://www.saf.org/LawReviews/Cohen1.html)
  • Civil Complaint against Goetz (http://www.lectlaw.com/files/cas91.htm)
  • Subway Gunman: A Juror's Account of the Bernhard Goetz Trial (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0945167083/qid=1102206628/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_xs_ap_i1_xgl14/002-8315993-1943255?v=glance&s=books&n=507846)



  Results from FactBites:
 
Bernhard Goetz - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2894 words)
Goetz claimed at the moment of the incident that he experienced severe distortion of his visual depth of field, one of many known significant physiological effects of epinephrine (adrenaline), a fight-or-flight hormone released by the adrenal medulla.
Goetz later described in a 2005 media interview on the Opie and Anthony radio show that the volume was in part due to the fact that the shots he fired that afternoon "cleaned the barrel" of the small-frame.38 revolver he used.
Goetz's confession of shooting Cabey twice, first in the left side and later in the stomach, and Goetz's use of the phrase "You don't look too bad; here's another" was made public by the DA prior to the second grand jury.
Court TV Verdicts: Cabey v. Goetz (544 words)
That was the central issue in the civil lawsuit filed against Goetz by Darrell Cabey, one of the victims in the attack.
Goetz, who did not testify during the trial, was acquitted of attempted murder charges.
Goetz's defense was just as simple: He fired in self-defense when approached by four muggers who tried to shake him down for $5.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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