Thursday, September 2, 2010

Journalist Ruben Salazar's death re-examined

Journalist Ruben Salazar's death re-examined

http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/story?section=news/local/los_angeles&id=7636051

August 27, 2010
Robert Holguin

EAST LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- After 40 years, questions still remain
about the death of Ruben Salazar, the award-winning columnist for the
Los Angeles Times and KMEX news director. Now there's going to be a
new effort to seek the truth.

Ruben Salazar was killed 40 years ago this week, that much we do know.

What's not clear is exactly how the journalist was killed. While
authorities said that Salazar died in an accidental shooting, others
say he was murdered. And now four decades later, the answer might
finally be coming to light.

It was one of the largest anti-war protests of the Vietnam War era.
On August 29, 1970, an estimated 30,000 demonstrators marched through
East Los Angeles as part of the National Chicano Moratorium Against
the Vietnam War.

As the crowd approached Laguna Park, hundreds of officers in riot
gear clashed with demonstrators. Fires were set and dozens were arrested.

Ruben Salazar was covering the event as news director for KMEX.
Salazar was killed inside the Silver Dollar Cafe. Authorities say the
42-year-old was hit in the head at close range by a tear gas canister
that had been fired by an L.A. County Sheriff's deputy. But others
think Salazar had been targeted.

"Ruben, unfortunately, fell into a plan that I believe was organized
by persons unknown within the sheriff's department, where he stood no
chance," said Raul Ruiz, a professor at California State
University-Northridge.

Ruiz was editor of La Raza newspaper. He took photos on that fateful day.

"It was an extraordinary amount of firepower directed at this little
bar in East L.A.," said Ruiz.

Sheriff's deputies later testified that they were responding to
reports of an armed man entering the Silver Dollar Cafe. But Ruiz and
many others feel that Salazar was silenced due to his status as a
prominent journalist.

"Deputies did wrong at the Silver Dollar, and I believe a crime was
committed," said Ruiz.

And now, 40 years after Salazar's death, the L.A. County Sheriff's
Dept. has agreed to release several boxes of documents and
photographs pertaining to the investigation into Salazar's death,
which had been ruled a tragic accident.

"The sheriff says, 'We have nothing to hide. I want to let the public
know what happened 40 years ago,'" said L.A. County Sheriff's
Spokesman Steve Whitmore.

The documents have been turned over to the County of Los Angeles
Office of Independent Review.

"They are unbiased, and they are going to report as to what is
contained in those boxes without fear, favor or prejudice," said Whitmore.

Ruiz, who considered Salazar a good friend, said he's hoping someone
will reopen a criminal investigation.

"Let a jury decide whether or not it was accidental or justifiable
homicide, or in fact a homicide," said Ruiz. "I, quite frankly,
believe it was a homicide."

In the years after his death, Salazar became a hero in the Chicano
movement, considered by many to a martyr.

In Boyle Heights, playwright Rene Rodriguez is staging his fictional
account of what happened inside the Silver Dollar Cafe on that day.

"All of a sudden they were thrust into history. They didn't even want
to be thrust into history, but it just so happened that that's what
happened," said Rodriguez.

A 40th anniversary commemorative march is scheduled for Saturday at 9
a.m. at Belvedere Park, continuing to what was once the Silver Dollar
Café, ending at what was once Laguna Park, now called Ruben F. Salazar Park.

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