
In Los Angeles,
California,
police surround a home in Compton where the leaders of the terrorist
group known as the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) are hiding out. The
SLA had kidnapped Patricia Hearst, of the fabulously wealthy Hearst
family publishing empire, months earlier, earning headlines across the
country. Police found the house in Compton when a local mother reported
that her kids had seen a bunch of people playing with an arsenal of
automatic weapons in the living room of the home.

The LAPD's
500-man siege on the Compton home was only the latest event in a short,
but exceedingly bizarre, episode. The SLA was a small group of violent
radicals who quickly made their way to national prominence, far out of
proportion to their actual influence. They began by killing Oakland's
superintendent of schools in late 1973 but really burst into society's
consciousness when they kidnapped Hearst the following February.

Months
later, the SLA released a tape on which Hearst said that she was
changing her name to Tania and joining the SLA. Shortly thereafter, a
surveillance camera in a bank caught Hearst carrying a machine gun
during an SLA robbery. In another incident, SLA member General Teko was
caught trying to shoplift from a sporting goods store, but escaped when
Hearst sprayed the front of the building with machine gun fire.
Although
law enforcement officials began talking about the SLA as if they were a
well-established paramilitary terrorist organization, the SLA had only a
handful of members, most of who were disaffected middle class youths.

On
May 17, Los Angeles police shot an estimated 1,200 rounds of ammunition
into the tiny Compton home as six SLA members shot back. Teargas
containers thrown into the hideout started a fire, but the SLA refused
to surrender. Autopsy results showed that they continued to fire back
even as smoke and flames were searing their lungs; they clearly chose
suicide and martyrdom over jail. Randolph Hearst, Patty's father,
remarked that the massive attack had turned "dingbats into martyrs." The
raid left six SLA members dead, including leader Donald DeFreeze, also
known as Cinque. Patty Hearst was not inside the home at the time. She
was not found until September 1975.

Patty Hearst was put on
trial for armed robbery and convicted, despite her claim that she had
been coerced, through repeated rape, isolation, and brainwashing, into
joining the SLA. Prosecutors believed that she actually orchestrated her
own kidnapping because of her prior involvement with one of the SLA
members. Despite any real proof of this theory, she was convicted and
sent to prison. President Carter commuted Hearst's sentence after she
had served almost two years. Hearst was pardoned by President Clinton in
January 2001.
Taken from:
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/lapd-raid-leaves-six-sla-members-dead [17.05.2012]
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