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Remembering Latasha Harlins, whose death helped setoff unrest in Los Angeles

A MARTINEZ, HOST:

Time now for StoryCorps. Thirty years ago today, four police officers were acquitted in the beating of Rodney King. It sparked five days of riots across Los Angeles. But there was another case, not as widely known, that helped set off the unrest. The same month that King was beaten, 15-year-old Latasha Harlins was shot and killed by a store clerk in South Central Los Angeles.

Here's her grandmother, Ruth, who the kids call Madea (ph), remembering the day she sent Latasha to the store.

RUTH HARLINS: I had said, get some orange juice. But when she got there, the lady said she had seen her put something in her backpack. And she had the money in her hand to pay the lady. But when she turned around to leave, the lady shot her in the head, and she died.

MARTINEZ: Latasha's brother Vester and her sister Christina were 10 and 8 when she died. They came to StoryCorps to remember her.

CHRISTINA ROGERS: Latasha was so popular. I felt as though she was a celebrity because everyone knew her.

VESTER ACOFF: One of the favorite memories we had was when we used to be in the living room dancing and lip-syncing over music like a talent show.

ROGERS: And we would have, like, spelling bees. We would sit down, and our grandmother Madea would give us spelling words. And we knew Latasha would get them all right. She was just that smart.

ACOFF: You know, she was a caretaker. She cooked. She made sure we did our chores, did our homework. She made sure other people had before she had.

ROGERS: I remember we were at the park, and that's where the ice cream truck used to come. And a little girl didn't have enough money. And I remember Latasha buying that little girl an ice cream.

ACOFF: Yeah.

ROGERS: Walk me through the day Latasha died.

ACOFF: That morning, Madea - she asked me to go to the store. And I had a basketball game. So after that, I'm at the free-throw line, and our cousin T ran into the gym screaming. Tasha died. Tasha died. I ran out the back of the gym, ran home.

ROGERS: She was killed. The hardest part about losing Latasha was not having that older protective sister that I had. She was just always a motivating factor in my life. I just knew that I was blessed to have an older sibling that looked after me, that loved me. And I want people to know that Latasha was an honor roll student. She wanted to be a lawyer. She wanted to buy our grandmother a big old house. She had dreams in life.

MARTINEZ: That's Christina Rogers and Vester Acoff remembering their sister Latasha Harlins. Latasha's killer was convicted of manslaughter but served no jail time. This conversation will be archived at the Library of Congress. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Kamilah Kashanie
Kamilah Kashanie (she/her) is the host of the StoryCorps Podcast. Kashanie's love for radio is rooted in her desire to understand more about what makes us who we are. As a storyteller, she's committed to starting conversations to make lasting changes in underserved communities, and to craft narratives that help give voice to individuals who would not otherwise have a platform to tell their stories. She's also a graduate of the Transom Audio Storytelling Workshop and the host of Feeling My Flo, a reported podcast about menstruation from PRX and Lantigua-Williams & Co.