JL To give so others may live Record Of Arreata January 28.1888 Arrested, Montgomery, Alabama, on charge of traveling thirty miles an hour in twenty-five mile zone. Released on recognizance bond. January 28.1988 Fined $10 in Montgomery police court on not-guilly plea on tra ffic charge. February 21.1988 Indicted with other leading figures o f Montgomery Bus Boycott on charge of being party to a conspiracy to hinder and prevent operation of a business without "just or legal cause.” February 23. 1968 Booked at Montgomery jail on indictment and released on $JOO bond. March 22.1968 Convicted after four-day trial in Montgomery Circuit Court on February 21 indictment. Fine of $500 suspended pending appeal which was not per­ fected with allotted time by King’s attorneys. King paid Fine Finally under complicated arrangement under which charges against other boycott leaders and a group of white segregationists were dropped. September 3,1968 Arrested on charge o f loitering (later changed to failure to obey an o f­ ficer) in vicinity of Montgomery Recorder’s Court. Released on $100 bond. September 4,1968 Convicted after nol-guilty plea on charge of failure to obey an officer. Fourteen dollars fine paid almost immediately—over King's objections—by Montgomery Police Commissioner Clyde C. Sellers. Martin Luther King wee erreeted on September 3. 1968 for "loitering on the court­ house steps" in M ontgom ery white trying to get into the trial of hie colleague. Ralph Abernathy. February 17.1980 Arrested in A tlanta on Alabama warrant following his indictment by Montgomery County Grand Jury on two counts of perjury in connection with the filing of 1956 and 1958 state income tax returns Released on $2,000 bond. April 8. 1981 ure to obey police officer, obstructing sidewalk and disorderly conduct. Received $25 fine and suspended six-month sentence on original traffic case (see September 23. I960) in DeKalb County court. August 10.1982 May. 1980 December 16.1981 Convicted, Albany Recorder’s Court, and placed on sixty-day probation for July 27 vigil. Released from jail. Arrested. DeKalb County, Georgia, on charge of driving without valid Georgia driver's license. Released on bond. Arrested in Albany, Georgia, demonstration on charge o f obstructing sidewalk and parading without permit. April 12.1963 May 28.1990 December 18. 1961 Arrested in Birmingham, Alabama on charges of parading without a per­ mit and contempt of court. Acquitted by jury of twelve white men in Montgomery Circuit Court of charges of falsely swearing to information on I956 slate income tax return. Second count of indictment (see Febryary 17, I960) was later dropped Released on bail in truce that later collapsed. April 20.1963 July 10. 1962 Released from Birmingham jail on $300 cash bond. Paid $25 fine and received twelve month probated sentence after guilty plea in DeKalb County court on May, I960, traffic violation. Convicted in Albany, (Ga.) Recorder's Court of violating street and side­ walk ordinance by leading parade without permit on December 16, 1961. Received sentence of $178 or forty-five days in jail. Entered jail to serve forty-five day term. Arrested in St. Augustine, Florida, sit-in on charge o f violating state’s anti-trespass law. October 19,1980 July 12. 1982 June 13.1964 September 23.1980 Arrested in Atlanta, Georgia, sit-in; jailed on charge of violating state's anti-trespass law. Released against his will after $178 fine was paid by mystery man. July 17. 1962 Released on $300 bond. February 2.1966 Arrested in Albany city hall "prayer vigil” and tailed on charges of fail­ October 22.1980 June 11.1964 Arrested in Selma. Alabama. Served five days in jail. Sit-in charges dropped; all demonstrators except King released King was ordered held on charge o f violating probated sentence in traffic case (see September 23, I960). October 26.1980 Transferred from Fulton County jail to DeKalb County jail in Decatur, an Atlanta suburb. October 26. 1980 Sentenced to four months in jail by DeKalb County judge who ruled that his participation in sit-in violated terms of his probated traffic sentence October 28.1980 Transferred to Reidsville State Prison. “ One who breaks an unjust law must do it openly, lovingly . . . I submit that an individual who breaks a law that conscience tells him is unjust, and w illingly accepts the penalty by staying in ja il to arouse the conscience o f the c o m m u n ity over its injustice, is in reality expressing the very highest respect for law . October 27.1980 — M.L.K. Released from Reidsville State Prison on $2,000 appeal bond. March 7.1981 Georgia Court of Appeals remanded traffic case to DeKalb County on grounds that original sentence should not have exceeded six months. "The black revolution is much more than a struggle for the rights of Negroes. It is forcing America to face all its interrelated flaws—racism, poverty, militarism, materialism. It is exposing evils that are deeply rooted in the whole structure of our society. It reveals systemic rather than superficial flaws and suggests that radical reconstruction of society itself is the real issue to be faced." -19 6 8 Coast Janitorial Service 714 N. Alberta 288-5138 I V» * :’> ’£3BHH88HH