Fort Lawton Riot

Fort Lawton Riot

Fort Lawton Riot

Headstone of Pvt. Guglielmo Olivotto at Fort Lawton military cemetery, Seattle
Participants United States Army soldiers and Italian prisoners of war (POW)
Location Fort Lawton, Washington, United States (U.S.)
Date August 14, 1944
Result 1 Italian POW killed,
28 U.S. soldiers convicted and imprisoned

The largest and longest U.S. Army court-martial of World War II took place at Seattle's Fort Lawton. 43 U.S. soldiers, all of them African-American, were charged with rioting; three were also charged with the lynching death of an Italian prisoner of war named Guglielmo Olivotto.[nb 1] A 2005 book, On American Soil, helped to convince the U.S. Army Board for Correction of Military Records that prosecutor Leon Jaworski had committed "egregious error," and that all convictions should be reversed. President George W. Bush signed legislation allowing the Army to disburse back pay to the defendants or their survivors.

Contents

Riot

The night of August 14, 1944, an African American port company at Fort Lawton, Seattle was under orders to ship out to the war zone the next morning. Just after 11 p.m, an intoxicated black soldier and his three companions crossed paths with three Italians, who may have also been drinking. Words were exchanged, the black soldier rushed forward, and with one punch, an Italian knocked the American out cold.

The Italians retreated to adjacent barracks, but the call went out about the confrontation. A number of black soldiers, including Pvt. Samuel Snow, ran after the Italians, wielding boards from a fence that they broke down. The Italians who were in their bunks for the night heard rocks and bricks being thrown against their windows in their dark quarters, assumed they were being attacked and began running, some jumping out of windows. In the melee, both Italians and United States soldiers were injured. Hearing the commotion, and responding to a 'whistle' calling them to defend their fellow soldiers, dozens of black soldiers came out of their barracks. A rumor began that one American was dead. (This was untrue.) Assuming they were being attacked, dozens of black soldiers headed into the Italian area, armed with rocks, fence posts and a couple of knives.[citation needed]

Private Clyde Lomax, a Caucasian member of the Military Police Corps, was responsible for patrolling the area known as the "Colored Area," and was on the scene almost immediately. He loaded the most severely injured American into his jeep, but delayed transporting him to the hospital. Lomax also failed to request back up from fellow military policemen or to notify the chain of command of the severity of the situation.[citation needed]

More than forty minutes passed before a contingent of military policemen arrived. By then, dozens were injured. The most seriously injured, all Italian prisoners-of-war, were transported to hospitals where one Italian spent 16 months recovering from his injuries.[citation needed]

The military policemen restored order, but chose not to take anyone into custody. Later, they claimed it had been too dark to identify any of the participants in the riot. After bringing the injured American to the post's most remote hospital, Lomax disappeared for at least two hours.[citation needed]

At 5:00 the next morning, Lomax, accompanied by a black military policeman, drove his jeep to a distant gully at the base of the fort's Magnolia Bluffs. They discovered the body of Guglielmo Olivotto, hanging from a noose on the obstacle course.[citation needed]

Investigation

By sunset on the day Olivotto's body was discovered, Fort Lawton commanding officer Colonel Harry Branson (1890–1963) had ordered all evidence destroyed. No fingerprints were secured, no footprints saved, no weapons properly catalogued. When Branson tried to ship the black soldiers to San Francisco that same day, he was countermanded after a subordinate reported his attempt to the Pentagon.

The riot and lynching was front page news in Seattle, and became a major story across the United States. The United States Army sent its best young prosecutor, Leon Jaworski (1905–1982) of Houston, to conduct a two-month investigation. (Jaworski would eventually distinguish himself as one of the best-known American lawyers in the 20th century, culminating in his appointment as special prosecutor in the investigation of the Watergate scandal and the winning litigant in United States v. Nixon.)

During weeks of interrogations, Jaworski's investigators offered immunity to several soldiers who would agree to testify. Most refused, including Samuel Snow and Roy Montgomery. Five black soldiers agreed, however, to testify for the prosecution in exchange for immunity. Six decades later, all five were said to have had unrelated grudges against many of the men they accused.

Most Italian prisoners-of-war were unable to identify a single black soldier, citing the darkness and confusion. Two, however, offered confident identifications of dozens of the Americans and those two became Jaworski's main witnesses. Decades later, both were shown to have been identified previously as unreliable security risks by officers of the Military Intelligence Corps.

As reports of the riot and lynching reached the Pentagon, General Elliot Cooke (1891–1961) was sent to Seattle, charged with determining who, if anyone, had failed to prevent the riot and lynching. Cooke did his investigation before Jaworski had arrived. Cooke was not responsible for helping Jaworski with the criminal investigation, but Jaworski was given access to all of Cooke's interrogations and conclusions.

In a classified report to Virgil L. Peterson, the Inspector General, Cooke concluded that the Fort Lawton commander had botched the initial criminal investigation, and recommended Branson's demotion and/or reassignment. He characterized Lomax a "coward", and ordered that he be court-martialed for abandoning his post during the riot and lynching.

Defense

Howard Noyd (2009)

After weeks of investigation, Jaworski decided to charge 43 soldiers, all of them African American, with rioting, a crime with a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. Three of the men — Luther Larkin (1921–1948), Arthur Hurks (1921–1991) and William Jones (1924–1992) — were also charged with first-degree murder, and faced a possible death sentence. It was the largest number of defendants in a single United States Army trial during World War II.

The defendants were provided just two lawyers among them, who were given just ten days to prepare their cases. The lead defense attorney, William Beeks (1906–1988), later became a federal judge. He was assisted by Howard Noyd, a former football player from Iowa.

Without much time, defense lawyers decided to focus most of their energy on trying to keep the soldiers from the gallows.

Trial

The nine-member court-martial, all caucasian officers, convened on November 16, 1944. Trial was held six days a week and all day on Thanksgiving.

On December 8, 1944, Beeks discovered for the first time that Jaworski had gained access to General Cooke's lengthy confidential report. Citing concerns about wartime security, Jaworski repeatedly refused to give the report to the defense, despite a prosecutorial obligation to do so, and the court refused to intervene. Beeks never learned about Cooke's criticism of Branson, Lomax and others, information which would likely have discredited most of Jaworski's main witnesses. Jaworski even called Lomax to testify against the black soldiers.

Verdicts

After five weeks — the longest United States Army court-martial of World War II — the court found 28 of the defendants guilty of rioting, and two — Luther Larkin and William Jones — guilty of manslaughter. Sentences ranged from six months to 25 years at penal labour. All but one defendant were issued dishonorable discharges at the completion of their prison sentences.

Because it was a capital case, an automatic appeal was sent to the U.S. Army's Board of Review. The appeals were rejected without elaboration.

During 1945, at the end of World War II, President Harry Truman was eager to establish a reputation of being helpful to veterans. Because so many servicemen were in jail, he began issuing annual "Christmas clemencies", reducing the sentences of thousands of soldiers, including the Fort Lawton defendants. By 1949, the last Fort Lawton defendant left prison, although it remains a mystery why Luther Larkin and William Jones were released long before the term of their remaining sentences.

Investigative journalism

In 1986, journalist Jack Hamann found Guglielmo Olivotto's headstone in the Fort Lawton cemetery. After months of research, most of it relying on secondary sources, Hamann produced an Emmy Award winning one-hour special program for Seattle's NBC affiliate, KING-TV. The program raised some questions about the prosecution, but did not offer any substantial evidence to refute Jaworski's case.[citation needed]

During 2001, Hamann and his wife, Leslie Hamann, began a four-year effort to locate primary sources, including documents and witnesses. During several weeks of research at the National Archives in College Park, Maryland, the Hamanns came across General Cooke's newly-declassified report. The revelations in that report became the basis for their book, On American Soil: How Justice Became a Casualty of World War II. In 2006, Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc. (IRE) named On American Soil the nation's best investigative book of the year.[citation needed]

U.S. Congress

On July 1, 2005, U.S. Rep Jim McDermott (D-WA) introduced HR 3174, a bill demanding that the United States Army reopen the Fort Lawton case, based on the allegations made by On American Soil. The bill, with dozens of co-sponsors, remained in the House Armed Services Committee until the chairman of that committee, U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-CA) received a letter from constituent Julianna Hamann, mother of author Jack Hamann. After committee staff vetted the book, Rep. McDermott and Rep. Hunter agreed on June 8, 2006, to exercise a Congressional privilege allowing them to insist that the U.S. Army Board for Correction of Military Records (ABCMR) review the convictions.[citation needed]

U.S. Army Board for Correction of Military Records

On October 26, 2007, the ABCMR ruled unanimously that Leon Jaworski had committed "egregious error" in his prosecution of the Fort Lawton case, particularly by refusing to make the Cooke Report available to the defense. The board, calling the trial "fundamentally unfair", overturned the convictions and ordered that defendants be issued retroactive honorable discharges. In addition, the surviving defendants — or the estates of those who have since died — were deemed entitled to "all rights, privileges and property lost as a result of the convictions", including "all due pay and allowances".

$725 check

On November 29, 2007, Samuel Snow received a check for $725. An army spokesman explained that the Board's order was so unusual and sweeping that army regulations contained no provision for payment of interest in such cases. The small checks received by Snow and by the families of other Fort Lawton veterans resulted in stories about the supposed unfairness and inadequacy of the regulations.[1]

On January 23, 2008, Rep. Jim McDermott introduced HR 5130 in the House, authorizing the U.S. Army to pay interest on the Fort Lawton awards. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) introduced companion bill S 2548 in the Senate. The bills were approved by the Armed Services Committees of both houses, and were supported by testimony from Secretary of the Army Pete Geren, who called Snow's small check "a travesty of justice."[citation needed]

Tribute

By the summer of 2008, the army had located two living defendants (Samuel Snow of Florida and Roy Montgomery of Illinois), plus the families of ten others who had since died. King County Executive Ron Sims and Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels organized a tribute to the Fort Lawton defendants and surviving families, featuring a dinner, a parade, a formal military ceremony and a Catholic mass honoring the memory of Guglielmo Olivotto. At the military ceremony, Assistant Army Secretary Ronald James offered a tribute, including an apology and the presentation of belated honorable discharges.

Death of Samuel Snow

During the morning of the Seattle military ceremony, Samuel Snow became ill. Hours later, his family brought his honorable discharge to his hospital bedside, where he held it to his chest and smiled broadly. That same evening, he died of heart failure, with his wife and son at his side.

Snow's death was worldwide news. His funeral in Leesburg, Fla., drew hundreds of mourners; he received a burial with full military honors.

Bill becomes law

On October 14, 2008, President George W. Bush signed the Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2009. The bill included the legislation authorizing the army to add tens of thousands of dollars interest to the Fort Lawton veterans' awards.

See also

  • Port Chicago disaster — 1944 court-martial of 50 African-American Navy men for refusing unsafe munitions loading work following a deadly explosion.
  • Agana race riot — 1944 conflict between African-American sailors and white Marines.
  • George N. Crocker — part of the court-martial resulting from the riot.

Notes

  1. ^ Some resources (including Guglieamo Olivotto at Find a Grave) spell his name Guglieamo Olivotto.

References

Books

  • Hamann, Jack (2007). On American Soil: How Justice Became a Casualty of World War II. Seattle: University of Washington Press. ISBN 0295987057. 
  • Moreo, Dominic W. (2004). Riot at Fort Lawton, 1944. Lincoln, Nebraska: iUniverse. ISBN 0595662544. 

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