May 17, 2005
UCLA Media Office Press Release
UCLA’s Chicano Studies Research Center, the Charles E. Young Library
Department of Special Collections and the Fowler Museum will hold a
conference to commemorate the 61st anniversary of the release of the
Sleepy Lagoon defendants and to reflect upon the similarities of the
case to contemporary events.
The conference, titled “The Sleepy Lagoon Case, Constitutional
Rights and the Struggle for Democracy,” will take place Friday,
May 20, in the Chicano Studies Research Center, Room 144, Haines Hall,
375 Portola Plaza, and at the Fowler Museum Lenart Auditorium, 308 Charles
E. Young Dr. North; and Saturday, May 21, at the Lenart Auditorium.
Alice Greenfield McGrath, executive secretary of the Sleepy Lagoon Defense
Committee, and Jaime Gonzalez Monroy, a union organizer and a member
of the Sleepy Lagoon Defense Committee in the 1940s, will take part
in the conference. Other panelists including leading scholars who have
studied the history of the Sleepy Lagoon case and those involved with
the infamous trial.
The conference includes panel discussions and a screening of the movie
“Zoot Suit,” which is based on the trial and efforts to
free the defendants. The screening takes place at 5:30 p.m., Friday,
in Lenart Auditorium, and will be followed by a discussion with Greenfield
McGrath and Kinan Valdez, director with El Teatro Campesino.
On Saturday, conference highlights include a panel featuring Greenfield
McGrath, Gonzalez Monroy and Peter Richardson, author of “American
Prophet: The Life and Work of Carey McWilliams.” Panelists will
discuss personal and historical recollections of the Sleepy Lagoon case.
The panel will take place from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Lenart Auditorium.
The Sleepy Lagoon trial took place in 1942, just months after Japanese
Americans were detained and put into internment camps. After a fight
at a party in southeast Los Angeles near a reservoir nicknamed “Sleepy
Lagoon,” José Diaz, a young Mexican national, was found
dead. Local media outlets, most notably the Hearst-owned Herald-Express
and the Los Angeles Times, blamed Diaz’s death on a “crime
wave” led by Mexican American “zoot-suiters” or “pachucos.”
More than 600 youths, most of them Mexican American, were arrested after
Diaz’s death. Many were detained for the clothes that they wore
or their general appearance. Some claimed that such “racial profiling”
was necessary for national security because they believed Mexican American
“zoot-suiters” had established pro-fascist groups in the
United States.
Twenty-two youths were subjected to a mass trial and judged by an all-white
jury. During the trial, the defendants were not allowed to speak or
confer with counsel. The defendants also were not allowed to change
their clothes. Judge Charles G. Fricke repeatedly overruled defense
attorney objections and personally ridiculed them. Blatantly racist
testimony also played a key role in the trial’s outcome.
Three were convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in
prison, nine were convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to
five-to-life, five were convicted of assault and released for time served,
and five were found not guilty and released.
“Charles G. Fricke. Judge Fricke was consistently rude and sarcastic
to the defense attorneys and unfailingly courteous and helpful to the
prosecution,” McGrath Greenfield said. “Throughout the trial,
the all-white jury had access to inflammatory stories in newspapers
and magazines.”
The well-known writer, lawyer and civil rights activist Carey McWilliams
noted the links between World War II, the Japanese American internment
and the anti-Mexican backlash. He wrote, “In Los Angeles, where
fantasy is a way of life, it was a foregone conclusion that Mexicans
would be substituted as the major scapegoat once the Japanese were removed.”
Defense attorneys, including Ben Margolis and Selma Bachelis, immediately
appealed the decision on various grounds, most notably that the defendants
were not allowed to confer or speak with counsel. The appeal process
lasted nearly two years. During the trial, labor activist La Rue McCormick
established an ad-hoc committee to publicize the events surrounding
the case.
After the defendants were sentenced, the organization was reorganized
and became known as the Sleepy Lagoon Defense Committee with McWilliams
as its chair. The committee was a multiracial, local, grass roots coalition
that included Mexican-Americans, whites and blacks. Defendant family
members, Hollywood celebrities, labor officials and radical political
activists, among others, made up the committee. The left, labor, Jewish,
Mexican and African American press covered the trial, the appeal, and
the committee’s activities.
As World War II was winding down, Judge Clement Nye dismissed the charges,
citing “insufficient evidence” against the Sleepy Lagoon
defendants on Oct. 23, 1944.
“With the ‘war on terrorism’ currently unfolding,
one can see clear parallels between what happened 61 years ago and what
is happening now,” said Carlos Haro, assistant director of the
UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center. “Middle Easterners, Sikhs,
Muslim immigrants and other ‘suspect groups’ have been targeted
and harassed. How these events unfold is an open question; however,
one can only hope that social movements like the Sleepy Lagoon Defense
Committee will continue to organize to stem hatred and fear.”
The Charles E. Young Library Department of Special Collections has acquired
the papers of Greenfield McGrath, McWilliams and the Sleepy Lagoon Defense
Committee.
A complete conference schedule
and an online exhibition of the case can be found here.