00:47:13

Latasha Harlins, Karmelo Anthony, and the Question of Black Childhood

In this episode of Murder in the Black, the host reflects on Latasha Harlins’ life, death, and legacy while connecting her story to racial violence, community grief, policing, and justice in America. She also shares her firsthand experience attending the Karmelo Anthony trial and examines how Black youth are viewed in courtrooms, media, and public opinion.

Key Topics

• Latasha Harlins’ life, family, and tragic death
• South Central LA in the 1980s and 1990s
• Eula Mae Love, Rodney King, and LAPD violence
• Black and Korean community tensions in South Central
• The 1992 LA Uprising and its aftermath
• The O.J. Simpson trial and distrust of the LAPD
• Cyrus Carmack-Belton and ongoing racial violence
• The Karmelo Anthony trial and courtroom experience
• Race, accountability, grief, and Black childhoodTimestamps

00:00 - Witnessing the Karmelo Anthony trial
00:23 - Latasha Harlins’ story
03:06 - Latasha’s family and move to LA
05:42 - Crystal Harlins’ death
09:15 - Black grandmothers and survival
11:07 - Latasha’s dreams
13:14 - Black/Korean tensions in South Central
14:19 - Eula Mae Love and LAPD violence
17:15 - Rodney King
21:34 - Latasha’s murder
23:22 - Sentencing and outrage
26:21 - 1992 LA Uprising
29:32 - O.J. Simpson and the LAPD
30:24 - Cyrus Carmack-Belton
31:03 - Karmelo Anthony case
36:04 - Jury composition
37:09 - Verdict impact
42:19 - Race, grief, and accountability
46:01 - James Baldwin reflection

Resources

Latasha Harlins case, Rodney King beating, 1992 LA Uprising, O.J. Simpson trial, Cyrus Carmack-Belton case, Karmelo Anthony case, James Baldwin quote.

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