
George Holliday, a plumber who gained local and national fame 30 years ago when he used his video camera to tape the infamous Los Angeles police beating of motorist and former Altadena resident Rodney King in Lake View Terrace, has died from COVID-19, it was reported today.
Citing a friend and business partner, TMZ reported that Holliday, 61, died Sunday at a Simi Valley hospital, where he had been since mid-August. He was not vaccinated, and was on a ventilator in recent days, the website reported.
On March 3, 1991, Holliday stood on the balcony of his apartment and used his Sony Video8 Handycam to record four white Los Angeles police officers using batons, Tasers and feet to subdue a Black man later identified as King, whose name quickly became globally synonymous with police brutality.
King, a former John Muir High School and was an unemployed construction worker at the time of the incident, had been drinking and was on probation for a robbery conviction when he was stopped by police near Lake View Terrace, along the Foothill 210 Freeway.
King was instructed to pull over for speeding. He eventually stopped his car in front of Holliday’s apartment building, where LAPD officers took charge of the traffic stop that degenerated into a violent confrontation as officers trying to subdue King pounded on him repeatedly, as others looked on.
King was left with skull fractures, broken bones and teeth, and permanent brain damage.
The commotion outside his window awoke Holliday, who recorded the beating just after midnight and contacted KTLA 5 later that day. The station became the first to air the footage that would be seen across the globe, becoming what would today be considered a viral video.
The video led to upheaval within the LAPD, sparking calls for the ouster of then-Chief Daryl Gates and prompting the appointment of the Christopher Commission to examine the inner workings of the LAPD and allegations of excessive force and institutional racism.
When the four officers involved in the King beating were acquitted a year later of excessive use of force by a jury in Simi Valley, five days of rioting ensued in Los Angeles, resulting in 54 deaths and more than 2,400 injuries, scores of destroyed buildings and other property damage, and more than 12,000 arrests. The acquitted police officers were later convicted of violating Rodney King’s civil rights in a federal court trial.
King died in Rialto on June 17, 2012 of what was described as an accidental drowning. He was 47. Before his death, he authored “The Riot Within: My Journey from Rebellion to Redemption.”
The grainy footage Holliday shot that night made the then-31-year-old plumber a pioneer of citizen journalism. The Sony video camera used to record the episode went up for auction last July, with bidding starting at $225,000, but it was unclear if it was ever sold.
Holliday told The New York Times last year that he was still working as a plumber, never profiting from the video, which was still in the possession of federal authorities.
He told the newspaper he had purchased the video camera about a month before the King beating, and he grabbed it instinctively when he and his wife were awakened by the police ruckus outside his window.
“You know how it is when you have a new piece of technology,” he told the paper. “You film anything and everything.”