Korean Grocer Who Killed Black Teen Gets Probation
Saying it is not a time for revenge but for healing, a Superior Court judge Friday sentenced a Korean-born grocer convicted of killing a black teen-ager to five years’ probation.
The sentence, which included a fine, community service and suspended jail time, immediately drew angry cries of protest from friends and relatives of Latasha Harlins, the 15-year-old girl killed in a dispute over a bottle of orange juice at a grocery store owned by the family of Soon Ja Du. Several community leaders also expressed shock at the sentence.
Du, who had accused Harlins of trying to shoplift, was convicted Oct. 11 of voluntary manslaughter in the case, which has been blamed for inflaming tensions between the city’s black and Korean-American communities. Du could have been sentenced to as much as 16 years in prison.
“Thank you, God,” Du, 51, said in Korean after she emerged from the packed courtroom, surrounded by relatives who rushed her out of the building. “I think justice was done,” her attorney, Charles E. Lloyd, told reporters.
Supporters of the Harlins’ family were outraged. “It’s a travesty of justice,” said family friend Gina Ray.
Citing Du’s lack of a criminal record, Superior Court Judge Joyce A. Karlin handed Du a suspended 10-year sentence--six years for the killing and four for use of a firearm--and ordered her to perform 400 hours of community service and pay a $500 fine. She also was placed on five years’ probation.
Du shot Latasha in the back of the head after a scuffle involving the $1.79 bottle of juice. The March 16 incident at Du’s Empire Liquor Market in South-Central was captured on videotape by a security camera, and the jarring scenes became the trial’s most dramatic evidence.
Harlins, who witnesses said had stuck the bottle halfway into her backpack and had money in her hand, is seen in the videotape approaching the store counter. On the tape, Du grabs Harlins’ sweater, and Harlins punches Du several times in the face. Then Du hurls a stool at the girl, who sets the juice on the counter and turns to walk away. Du then reaches for a pistol from behind the counter and shoots Latasha.
Karlin, who said she did not believe Du was a threat to society, said she hoped the tragedy would be used to further understanding and tolerance.
“Latasha’s death should be remembered as a catalyst, to force (blacks and Koreans) to confront an intolerable situation and . . . create solutions,” Karlin told a hushed courtroom guarded by extraordinary security.
“This is not a time for rhetoric. It is not a time for revenge. It should be a time of healing.”
But as the judge spoke of healing, angry spectators spilled into the hallway outside the courtroom. While some of Latasha’s friends and relatives sobbed, others shouted, “Murderer!” and, “We’ll take this to the streets!” There were several shoving matches between spectators and television photographers as more than a dozen sheriff’s deputies escorted participants in the trial to elevators.
Ruth Harlins, the dead girl’s grandmother, had asked the court to impose the maximum penalty. Later, she quietly spoke of her deep disappointment. “It was an injustice,” she said. Ruth Harlins’ daughter--Latasha’s mother--was killed in 1985.
As news of the sentence spread through the city, the office of Mayor Tom Bradley and other leaders pleaded for calm.
Calling Harlins a martyr, Ray, the family friend, said she agreed that the girl’s death should serve as a catalyst for better relations between blacks and Korean-Americans.
“I’m not mad at any Korean person--I want that clear,” she said. “I am angry at the justice system. . . . African-Americans don’t get justice in the United States today.”
Leon Jenkins, an attorney for some Harlins family members, said he was “shocked beyond imagination” by the sentence, which he said would make it all the more difficult for a healing process to begin.
Lloyd, Du’s attorney, in pleading for probation for his client, argued she was “full of remorse” and had acted out of fear. The Du store had been robbed dozens of times, and the family, he said, had felt “terrorized” by gangs.
But Deputy Dist. Atty. Roxane Carvajal argued before the sentence was pronounced that Du continued to refuse to accept responsibility for her actions, was more worried about her own plight than the harm caused the Harlins family and had stated that, in the same circumstances, she would not act differently.
“This is an individual who, to this day, still believes she is justified in killing Latasha,” Carvajal said. “The defendant has to be punished. She has to suffer. . . . (Putting Du on probation) is to make Latasha’s life meaningless.”
The judge blamed the killing in part on an alteration in the gun that made it fire more easily. She said she believed Du acted out of fear of being victimized and was remorseful but unable to express the emotion because of cultural differences.
“Did Mrs. Du react inappropriately? Absolutely.” Karlin said. “But was that reaction understandable? I think it was.”
The Du case exacerbated long-simmering tensions between Korean merchants and their black customers. The shooting death of a black man at another Korean-owned store in South-Central Los Angeles led to a summerlong boycott by blacks, and several stores were firebombed.
City Councilman Nate Holden, whose district includes residents from both groups, said he was concerned people would see a double standard being followed by the county’s courts.
“I think we’ve got to come together very quickly,” Holden said. “The wrong signal could be sent out with this sentence. No one should be given the impression that they could take a person’s life and not be held accountable.”
Danny Bakewell, who heads the Brotherhood Crusade and led a boycott of Korean-owned grocery stores, labeled the sentence an “outlandish injustice.” He said he could not predict how the community would express its anger but vowed to “make our voices heard in a way that is forceful and meaningful.”
A rally is scheduled for today at the Bethel AME Church, he said.
State Sen. Diane Watson (D-Los Angeles), a recently announced candidate for the county Board of Supervisors, warned that the “incredible” sentence could have serious repercussions.
“This might be the time bomb that explodes,” she said. “It could really create havoc in the community.”
Jan Sunoo, a member of Los Angeles City Human Relations Commission, said:
“As I see it, there were three victims in this whole situation: Latasha Harlins, Mrs. Du, who had been terrorized by (gangs) . . . and the third is the goodwill between African-Americans and Koreans.”
Lawyers not involved in this case and other legal experts were divided over whether the sentence was unusually lenient. But according to the results of a Times survey of 1,831 Los Angeles County Superior Court sentencings in the summer of 1990, a grant of straight probation for a violent crime is rare.
The random survey found that only two of the 247 defendants sentenced for violent crimes received straight probation with no jail time--and both of those probations were granted in assault cases.
In the one murder and 10 manslaughter cases reviewed, no defendants received straight probation; 10 were sentenced to prison and one to jail.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.