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Moscone–Milk assassinations

On November 27, 1978, George Moscone, the mayor of San Francisco, and Harvey Milk, a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, were shot and killed inside City Hall by former Supervisor Dan White. On the morning of that day, Moscone intended to announce that the Supervisor position from which White had previously resigned would be given to someone else. White, angered, entered City Hall before the scheduled announcement and first shot Moscone in the Mayor's office, then Milk in White's former office space, before escaping the building. Board of Supervisors President Dianne Feinstein first announced Moscone and Milk's deaths to the media, and because of Moscone's death, succeeded him as acting mayor.

Moscone–Milk assassinations
Part of violence against LGBT people in the United States
San Francisco Chronicle's front page for November 28, 1978
City Hall
Moscone–Milk assassinations (San Francisco)
LocationCity Hall, San Francisco, California, U.S.
Coordinates37°46′45″N 122°25′10″W / 37.77917°N 122.41944°W / 37.77917; -122.41944
DateNovember 27, 1978; 45 years ago (1978-11-27)
10:45 a.m. – 10:55 a.m. (PST)
TargetGeorge Moscone, Harvey Milk
Attack type
Assassination, spree shooting
Weapons.38-caliber Smith & Wesson Model 36 Chief's Special[1]
VictimsGeorge Moscone and Harvey Milk (both killed)
PerpetratorDan White
VerdictGuilty on the lesser offenses of voluntary manslaughter
ConvictionsVoluntary manslaughter (2 counts)
ChargesFirst-degree murder with special circumstances (2 counts)
Sentence7 years and 8 months in prison (paroled after 5 years)

White was charged with first-degree murder with circumstances that made him eligible for the death penalty. However, on May 21, 1979, White was convicted of the lesser crime of voluntary manslaughter and was sentenced to seven years' imprisonment, which resulted in the White Night riots and the abolition of the diminished capacity criminal defense in California. The trial also led to the urban legend of the "Twinkie defense", as many media reports had incorrectly described the defense as having attributed White's diminished capacity to the effects of sugar-laden junk food.[2][3] White committed suicide in 1985, a year and a half after his release from prison.

Feinstein was elected by the Board of Supervisors to become the first female mayor of San Francisco on December 4, 1978, a title she would hold for the next ten years. She eventually became a United States Senator for California until her death in 2023.

Preceding events edit

In the mid-1970s, San Francisco and the surrounding Bay Area bore witness to a series of anti-government bombings largely attributed to the New World Liberation Front, a leftist militant group.[4][5] Members of the city government, including the mayor, had received bombs in the mail or were subjected to bomb threats, as was City Hall itself.[6] On February 9, 1977, a tighter security regime began at City Hall to protect the mayor and members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, including locking most entrances, and providing security guards and metal detectors at public entrances,[6] measures which had remained through 1978.[7]

Prior to entering city politics, Dan White had been a member of both the San Francisco Police Department (SFPD) and the San Francisco Fire Department (SFFD). He and Harvey Milk were each elected to the Board of Supervisors in the November 1977 elections, which introduced district-based seats. The election ushered in "a range of legislators perhaps unmatched in San Francisco history in their diversity", including its first Chinese American (Gordon Lau), first unwed mother (Carol Ruth Silver), first black woman (Ella Hill Hutch), first homosexual (Harvey Milk) and first former firefighter (Dan White).[8] All supervisors were sworn in on January 9, 1978, with Dianne Feinstein as the president of the board.[9][8] The city charter prohibited anyone from retaining two city jobs simultaneously, so White resigned from his higher paying job with the SFFD.[10] During 1978, White would try to supplement his salary as a Supervisor, totaling $9,600 per year, with a food concession stand on Pier 39.[11]

With regard to business development issues, the eleven-member Board was split roughly 6–5 in favor of pro-growth advocates including White, over those who advocated the more neighborhood-oriented approach favored by Mayor George Moscone, who was also elected in 1977. Debate among the board members was sometimes acrimonious and saw White verbally sparring with other supervisors, including Milk and Carol Ruth Silver. Further tension arose when Milk voted in favor of placing a group home within White's district. Subsequently, White would cast the only vote in opposition to San Francisco's landmark gay rights ordinance, passed by the Board on April 3, 1978[12] and signed by Moscone soon after.

White's resignation edit

A city charter amendment to raise the salaries of Supervisors was proposed in the summer of 1978, and a committee White was on stopped the amendment from going forward, in the context of the then-recent passage of California Proposition 13 in June.[11] The low salary of the Supervisor position took its toll on White, and he tendered his resignation to Moscone on November 10. White stated that he could not support his family on only the $9,600-per-year Supervisor salary and that being forced to work two jobs was preventing him from adequately serving his constituents.[11] White's resignation quickly renewed a call to amend the city charter to raise Supervisor salaries, this time proposed in White's name by Silver.[11] His resignation would leave an open seat on the Board of Supervisors, a vacancy which would be filled by appointment by Moscone. This alarmed some of the city's business interests and White's constituents, as it indicated the mayor would tip the balance of power on the Board and appoint a liberal representative for the more conservative district.

On November 15, five days after resigning, White asked Moscone to return his letter of resignation (a letter that had already been accepted and filed by the Board) and expressed his intent to continue serving as a Supervisor after receiving loans from family and receiving encouragement from constituents.[13] Moscone returned the letter, but on November 16, City Attorney George Agnost ruled that White had in fact resigned and was no longer on the Board, pending legal review, and whether White could be appointed back to the position from which he had just resigned was also an open question.[13] Moscone stated that if "legal problems" in the finality of White's resignation arose, he would appoint White back to the seat,[14] but in any case, some of the more liberal city leaders, most notably Milk and Silver, lobbied Moscone not to reappoint him.[2] On November 17, Moscone stated that White's resignation was final and gave no indication that he was guaranteed to be re-appointed.[15]

On November 18, news broke of the mass deaths of members of the Peoples Temple in Jonestown. Prior to the group's move to Guyana, the Temple had been based in San Francisco, so most of the dead were recent Bay Area residents, as was Leo Ryan, the United States Congressman who was murdered in the incident. The city was plunged into mourning, and the issue of White's vacant Board of Supervisors seat was pushed aside for several days.[16] On November 21, Moscone confirmed that the city's legal position on White was that he had resigned, and further, that filling White's vacancy was a week away. He again made no guarantee of re-appointing White unless he was legally obligated to.[17] White appeared to interpret Moscone's statements to mean that he would be re-appointed to his former position.

Assassinations edit

Rather than re-appoint White, Moscone decided to appoint Don Horanzy, a more liberal federal housing official, to White's former position on the Board. He scheduled a press conference to make this announcement on November 27, at 11:30 a.m.; advance copy had been sent to newspapers with late editions so they could begin preparing their stories.[18]

White arranged for a former aide to drive him to City Hall on the morning Moscone was to make his announcement.[19] He was carrying a five-round .38-caliber Smith & Wesson Model 36 Chief's Special loaded with hollow-point bullets,[1] his service revolver from his work as a police officer, and ten extra rounds of ammunition in his coat pocket. White knocked on a basement lab window,[note 1] and told a building engineer inside that he had misplaced his keys.[20] White climbed into the window at about 10:25 a.m.,[21] thereby avoiding metal detectors and guards at public entrances.[22]

George Moscone edit

White proceeded to Moscone's office, where the mayor was conferring with California Assemblyman Willie Brown.[23] White requested a meeting with Moscone and was permitted to see him after the meeting with Brown ended.

As White entered Moscone's outer office, Brown exited through another door. Moscone met White in the outer office, where White requested again to be re-appointed to his former seat. Moscone refused, and their conversation turned into a heated argument over Horanzy's pending appointment.[24] Wishing to avoid a public scene, Moscone suggested they retreat to a private lounge adjacent to his office. Witnesses later reported that they heard Moscone and White arguing, later followed by the gunshots that sounded like a car backfiring.[25]

At approximately 10:45 a.m., as Moscone lit a cigarette and proceeded to pour two drinks, White pulled out his revolver. He then fired at the mayor's shoulder and chest, tearing his lung. After Moscone fell to the floor, White approached him, pointed his gun 6 inches (150 mm) from the mayor's head, and fired two additional bullets into Moscone's ear lobes, killing him instantly.[21] While standing over Moscone's body, White reloaded his revolver.

Harvey Milk edit

 
Supervisor Harvey Milk

Immediately following Moscone's murder, White left the mayor's office and hurried toward the shared office of the Board of Supervisors, at the other end of City Hall, where each supervisor had an enclosed cubicle and desk.[26] Dianne Feinstein, who was then president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, saw White run past her office door and called after him. White responded with, "I have something to do first."[21]

White intercepted Milk as he was speaking to a radio reporter and acquaintance in the Supervisors' office.[22] White interrupted the conversation with a knock and asked Milk to step inside his former office for a moment. Milk agreed to join him.[22] Once the door was closed, White positioned himself between the doorway and Milk, and after a brief conversation,[19] opened fire on Milk at 10:55 a.m.. The first bullet hit Milk's right wrist as he tried to protect himself. White continued firing rapidly, hitting Milk twice more in the chest, then fired a fourth bullet at Milk's head, killing him, followed by a fifth shot into his skull at close range.[21]

White fled the scene before Feinstein entered the office and found Milk's body. She felt Milk's neck for a pulse, her finger entering a bullet wound.[27] Rumors about what had happened began to circulate, but were not confirmed until about 11:20 a.m.[28] At that time, Feinstein addressed assembled media which had expected the announcement of Horanzy's appointment. Feinstein, shaking so badly that she required support from the police chief while speaking, instead announced to shocked reporters that Moscone and Milk had both been murdered.[28][29][30][31]

White left City Hall unchallenged. He took the keys of his former aide's car from her desk and drove to a diner, where he called his wife from a payphone; they met at a nearby church.[19] Approximately thirty minutes after leaving City Hall, White turned himself in at the SFPD's Northern Station precinct, at which he had previously served as a police officer, to Frank Falzon and another detective, both former co-workers.[22] In a police interrogation room that afternoon, White confessed to shooting Moscone and Milk, but denied premeditation.[32] Part of the taped confession became public in 2014.[33][19]

Aftermath of the shootings edit

An impromptu candlelight march consisting of tens of thousands started in the Castro District and ended at the steps of City Hall. Joan Baez led "Amazing Grace", and the San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus sang a solemn hymn by Felix Mendelssohn. Upon learning of the assassinations, singer/songwriter Holly Near composed "Singing for Our Lives", also known as "Song for Harvey Milk".[citation needed]

Moscone and Milk both lay in state at City Hall. Moscone's funeral at St Mary's Cathedral was attended by 4,500 people. He was buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma. Milk was cremated and his ashes were spread across the Pacific Ocean. Feinstein, as president of the Board of Supervisors, acceded to the mayor's office, becoming the first woman to serve in that office.

The coroner who worked on Moscone and Milk's bodies later concluded that the wrist and chest bullet wounds were not fatal, and that both victims probably would have survived with proper medical attention. However, the head wounds brought instant death without question, particularly because White fired at very close range.[21]

New mayor and supervisors edit

White's resignation, and all subsequent events including the shootings, caused positional changes inside San Francisco's city government. At the top two levels, these were:

  • Mayor of San Francisco: George Moscone, killed in office November 27, 1978, was immediately succeeded by Board of Supervisors President Dianne Feinstein as acting mayor, until elected as mayor in a vote of 6-2 among remaining active supervisors (excluding herself) on December 4. Feinstein would serve out the remainder of Moscone's term, then be elected to her first full term as mayor in November 1979.
  • Board of Supervisors President: When Feinstein succeeded to mayor on December 4, a new president of the board of supervisors needed to be elected. This would be District 2 Supervisor John Molinari, elected by the Board on January 2, 1979.
  • Board of Supervisors, District 8: Dan White resigned November 10, 1978. White was replaced by Don Horanzy, Moscone's original choice for District 8, when appointed by Mayor Feinstein on December 7.
  • Board of Supervisors, District 5: Harvey Milk, killed in office November 27, 1978. Harry Britt was appointed to District 5 Supervisor by Mayor Feinstein on January 8, 1979.
  • Board of Supervisors, District 2: Dianne Feinstein, who succeeded to mayor on December 4, left a vacancy in her own former supervisor district position. Feinstein appointed Louise Renne to district 2 on December 18.

Trial and aftermath edit

 
Cover of The San Francisco Examiner on November 28, 1978

White was charged with first-degree murder with two special circumstances, both of which had been passed into law through California Proposition 7 only three weeks before the assassinations.[20] Specifically, the victim(s) were elected officials of a local government of California and the killing was intentionally carried out in retaliation for or to prevent the performance of the victim(s) official duties; and, more than one murder was committed.[20] Murder with special circumstances meant that, if convicted, White could have faced the death penalty.[20]

White's defense team claimed that he suffered from depression at the time of the shootings, evidenced by many changes in his behavior, including changes in his diet. Inaccurate media reports said his defense had presented junk food consumption as the cause of his mental state, rather than a symptom of it, leading to the derisive term "Twinkie defense"; this became a persistent myth, despite the fact that neither defense lawyer had argued junk food caused White to commit the shootings[contradictory] and had only mentioned Twinkies in passing. Rather, the defense argued that White's depression led to a state of mental diminished capacity, leaving him unable to have formed the premeditation necessary to commit first-degree murder. The jury accepted these arguments, and White was convicted of the lesser crime of voluntary manslaughter.[34] He was sentenced to seven years' imprisonment.

The verdict proved to be highly controversial, and many felt that the punishment so poorly matched the deed and circumstances that most San Franciscans believed White essentially got away with murder.[35] In particular, many in the local gay community were outraged by the verdict and the resulting reduced prison sentence. Since Milk had been homosexual, many felt that homophobia had been a motivating factor in the jury's decision. This groundswell of anger sparked the city's White Night riots immediately after the verdict was announced.[34] The verdict also ultimately led to changes by the legislature in 1981 and statewide voters in 1982 that ended California's diminished-capacity defense and substituted a somewhat different and slightly more limited "diminished actuality" defense.[36]

White never made a direct statement of remorse, and only one relayed as hearsay was given by a prison duty nurse who attended to White in 1983.[37] He was paroled in 1984 and served this parole in the Los Angeles area, away from San Francisco. Frank Falzon, the detective who took White's statement after the assassinations, said in 1998 that he met with White in 1984 and that White had admitted that not only was his killing of Moscone and Milk premeditated, but he had actually planned to kill Silver and Brown as well. Falzon quoted White as having said, "I was on a mission. I wanted four of them. Carol Ruth Silver, she was the biggest snake ... and Willie Brown, he was masterminding the whole thing."[38][39] After serving his parole, White moved back to the San Francisco area in early 1985, and committed suicide there that October.[40]

In the late 1990s, Falzon showed a KTVU reporter some of the evidence that still existed in police custody, including the clothing White had worn, a tape of his police interrogation, liquor bottles and glasses from the site of Moscone's shooting, and White's original resignation letter to Moscone.[41] The revolver used in the murders was for a time assumed missing from police evidence storage.[1] An SFPD clerk later confirmed that he had destroyed it "in 1983 or thereabouts" while witnessed by his supervisor,[42] and under a 1982 court order to do so.[43] Its parts were melted down in a foundry that produced manhole covers.[42][43]

Cultural depictions edit

Journalist Randy Shilts wrote a biography of Milk in 1982, The Mayor of Castro Street, which discussed the assassinations, trial and riots in detail.[21] The 1984 documentary film The Times of Harvey Milk won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.[44]

Execution of Justice, a play by Emily Mann, chronicles the events leading to the assassinations.[45] The play opened on Broadway in March 1986 and in 1999, it was adapted to film for cable network Showtime, with Tim Daly portraying White.[46]

The Moscone–Milk assassinations and the trial of Dan White were lampooned by the Dead Kennedys with their re-written version of "I Fought the Law" which appeared in their 1987 compilation album Give Me Convenience or Give Me Death. The photo on the front cover of their 1980 album Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables, which shows several police cars on fire, was taken during the White Night riots of May 21, 1979.[47]

The assassinations were the basis for a scene in the 1987 science fiction movie RoboCop in which a deranged former municipal official holds the mayor and others hostage and demands his job back.[48]

In 2003, the story of Milk's assassination and of the White Night Riot was featured in an exhibition created by the GLBT Historical Society, a San Francisco museum, archives and research center to which the estate of Scott Smith donated Milk's personal belongings that were preserved after his death. "Saint Harvey: The Life and Afterlife of a Modern Gay Martyr" was shown in the main gallery in the Society's former Mission Street location. The centerpiece was a section displaying the suit Milk was wearing at the time of his death.[49] The suit is currently on display in the Society's permanent museum space in the Castro.[50]

In 2008 the film Milk depicted the assassinations as part of a biographical story about the life of gay rights activist and politician Harvey Milk. The movie was a critical and commercial success, with Victor Garber portraying Moscone, Sean Penn playing Milk and Josh Brolin playing White. Penn won an Oscar for his performance and Brolin was nominated.[51]

In January 2012, the Berkeley Repertory Theater premiered Ghost Light, a play exploring the effect of Moscone's assassination on his son Jonathan, who was 14 at the time of his father's death. The production was directed by Jonathan Moscone himself and written by Tony Taccone.[52]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ At the time of the assassinations, the window White entered City Hall by was a basement window. After a 1995 seismic renovation, this floor became the first floor of City Hall, thus windows on that level are now first floor windows.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Weiss, Mike (December 8, 2002). "A CASE OF THE MISSING GUN / When famous murder weapons walk out of police evidence rooms, where do they go? We follow the disappearance of Dan White's gun". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved November 25, 2014.
  2. ^ a b Pogash, Carol (November 23, 2003). "Myth of the 'Twinkie defense': The verdict in the Dan White case wasn't based on his ingestion of junk food". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved August 10, 2007.
  3. ^ "The Twinkie Defense". Snopes. October 30, 1999. Retrieved December 5, 2013.
  4. ^ Cone, Russ; Muller, Baron (February 7, 1977). "City Hall goes under tightest police guard". The San Francisco Examiner. p. 1. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  5. ^ "New World Liberation Front (NWLF)". www.globalsecurity.org. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  6. ^ a b Cone, Russ; Muller, Baron (February 7, 1977). "City Hall swarms with vigilant police". The San Francisco Examiner. p. 18. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  7. ^ "White Believed He was Double-Crossed". Petaluma Argus-Courier. November 28, 1978. p. 1. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  8. ^ a b Cone, Russex Russ; Hatfield, Larry D. (January 9, 1978). "Supervisors: A different kind of board sets up shop here". The San Francisco Examiner. p. 18. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  9. ^ Cone, Russex Russ; Hatfield, Larry D. (January 9, 1978). "Supervisors sworn in: Feinstein board president". The San Francisco Examiner. p. 1. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  10. ^ Geluardi, John (January 30, 2008). "Dan White's Motive More About Betrayal Than Homophobia – By – SF Weekly". SF Weekly. Retrieved January 25, 2017.
  11. ^ a b c d Cone, Russ (November 14, 1978). "Increase in city supervisors' pay is proposed again". The San Francisco Examiner. p. 4. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  12. ^ "SF Gay Rights Ordinance Awaiting Mayor's Okay". Santa Cruz Sentinel. April 5, 1978. p. 47. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  13. ^ a b Cone, Russ (November 16, 1978). "White wants job back – city attorney not so sure". The San Francisco Examiner. p. 4. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  14. ^ "Supe who quit takes it back". Oakland Tribune. November 16, 1978. p. 3. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  15. ^ Cone, Russ; Hollis, Robert (November 17, 1978). "Moscone advised he can't cancel White's board resignation". The San Francisco Examiner. p. 4. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  16. ^ Rapaport, Richard (November 16, 2003). "Jonestown and City Hall slayings eerily linked in time and memory / Both events continue to haunt city a quarter century later". SFGate. Retrieved January 25, 2017.
  17. ^ Cone, Russ (November 21, 1978). "Mayor tells White: decision a week off". The San Francisco Examiner. p. 7. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  18. ^ "Wordless fear – and then screams". The San Francisco Examiner. November 27, 1978. p. 18. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  19. ^ a b c d Dan White's audio confession after killing Harvey Milk & George Moscone, November 27, 1978, retrieved June 12, 2022
  20. ^ a b c d "No bail as D.A. cites new law". The San Francisco Examiner. November 28, 1978. p. 1. Retrieved June 12, 2022.
  21. ^ a b c d e f Randy Shilts (1982). The Mayor of Castro Street. Internet Archive. St. Martin's Press. pp. 266, 268, 269, 282. ISBN 978-0-312-01900-6.
  22. ^ a b c d "Murders at City Hall: retracing the killer's steps". The San Francisco Examiner. November 28, 1978. p. 18. Retrieved June 12, 2022.
  23. ^ Brown, Willie (November 18, 2008). "Brown remembers close call on tragic day". SFGate. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
  24. ^ "Suspect Sought Job". The New York Times. Wallace Turner, Special to The New York Times. November 28, 1978. p. 1. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 25, 2022.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  25. ^ Getlin, Josh (November 23, 2008). "Remembering George Moscone". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  26. ^ City Hall Historian Retraces Steps In Moscone-Milk Assassinations, 8:43, retrieved June 12, 2022
  27. ^ Bruck, Connie (June 15, 2015). "Dianne Feinstein vs. the C.I.A." The New Yorker. Retrieved October 22, 2017.
  28. ^ a b Finefrock, James A. (November 27, 1978). "Aide: White 'a wild man'". The San Francisco Examiner. p. 1. Retrieved June 12, 2022.
  29. ^ Futz, Bob (1978). O'Neil, Michael (ed.). "Assasination [sic] of Harvey Milk and George Moscone - 1978 Year in Review - Audio - UPI.com". UPI. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  30. ^ Epstein, Rob (September 20, 1985), "The Times of Harvey Milk", Documentary trailer (Documentary, Biography, History), Black Sand Productions, Pacific Arts, UCLA Film and Television Archive, retrieved June 13, 2022
  31. ^ Dianne Feinstein Announces Harvey Milk's Death, retrieved June 12, 2022
  32. ^ Kohler, Will (November 27, 2019). "In Memoriam: November 27, 1978: Harvey Milk Assassinated In San Francisco". Back2Stonewall. Retrieved June 26, 2020.
  33. ^ Holmes, Juwan J. (May 25, 2021). "New unearthed audio shows Dan White confessing to murdering Harvey Milk". LGBTQ Nation. Retrieved June 12, 2022.
  34. ^ a b Pogash, Carol (November 23, 2003). "Myth of the 'Twinkie defense'". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved November 25, 2020.
  35. ^ Dan White's Motive More About Betrayal Than Homophobia August 5, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. By John Geluardi. San Francisco Weekly. Published January 29, 2008.
  36. ^ Weinstock, MD, Robert; Leong, MD, Gregory B.; Silva, MD, J. Arturo (September 1, 1996). "California's Diminished Capacity Defense: Evolution and Transformation" (PDF). The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law. 24 (3): 347–366. PMID 8889134. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
  37. ^ Gorney, Cynthia; parts, Second of two (January 4, 1984). "The Legacy of Dan White". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved November 25, 2020.
  38. ^ Weiss, Mike (September 18, 1998). "Willie Brown also on Dan White's hit list, report says". The Sacramento Bee. p. 5. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  39. ^ Weiss, Mike. (October 1998). "Dan White's Last Confession", San Francisco Magazine
  40. ^ Lindsey, Robert (October 22, 1985). "DAN WHITE, KILLER OF SAN FRANCISCO MAYOR, A SUICIDE". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 2, 2017.
  41. ^ KTVU coverage of the assassinations of George Moscone and Harvey Milk, 1:31, retrieved June 12, 2022
  42. ^ a b Weiss, Mike (January 24, 2003). "Ex-clerk says he destroyed White's gun / Weapon used in assassinations was considered missing". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved November 25, 2014.
  43. ^ a b KTVU coverage of the assassinations of George Moscone and Harvey Milk, 2:12, retrieved June 12, 2022
  44. ^ Murray, Noel (October 5, 2020). "The Times Of Harvey Milk documented the early days of a still-raging culture war". AV Club. Retrieved November 25, 2020.
  45. ^ ""Execution of Justice" Closes". The New York Times. March 25, 1986. Retrieved November 25, 2020.
  46. ^ Oxman, Steven (November 24, 1999). "Execution of Justice". Variety. Retrieved November 25, 2020.
  47. ^ Lefebvre, Sam (November 26, 2018). "How San Francisco Punk Reacted to Harvey Milk and George Moscone's Deaths". KQED. Retrieved November 25, 2020.
  48. ^ Booker, M. Keith (2006). Alternate Americas: Science Fiction Film and American Culture. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 205. ISBN 0-275-98395-1.
  49. ^ Delgado, Ray (June 6, 2003). "Museum opens downtown with look at 'Saint Harvey'; exhibitions explore history of slain supervisor, rainbow flag". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved July 9, 2011.
  50. ^ Sokol, Robert (October 2, 2020). "Castro museum reopens its door to LGBTQ history". San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved November 25, 2020.
  51. ^ Gorman, Steve. "'Milk' screenwriter straddles two clashing worlds". Reuters. Retrieved November 25, 2020.[dead link]
  52. ^ Hurwitt, Robert (January 13, 2012). "'Ghost Light' review: Moscone haunted by events". San Francisco Gate. Retrieved November 25, 2020.

Further reading edit

  • "Nation: Another Day of Death". Time. December 11, 1978. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  • White, Dan; Falzon, Frank (November 27, 1978), Dan White's audio confession after killing Harvey Milk & George Moscone, retrieved June 25, 2022
  • Weiss, Mike (1984). Double play : the San Francisco City Hall killings. Internet Archive. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley Pub. Co. ISBN 978-0-201-09595-1.
  • Weiss, Mike (2010). Double Play: The Hidden Passions Behind the Double Assassination of George Moscone and Harvey Milk, Vince Emery Productions. ISBN 978-0-9825650-5-6.
  • Milk, Harvey (2012). Emery, Vince (ed.). The Harvey Milk interviews : in his own words. Internet Archive. San Francisco, Calif. : Vince Emery Productions. ISBN 978-0-9725898-8-8.

moscone, milk, assassinations, november, 1978, george, moscone, mayor, francisco, harvey, milk, member, francisco, board, supervisors, were, shot, killed, inside, city, hall, former, supervisor, white, morning, that, moscone, intended, announce, that, supervis. On November 27 1978 George Moscone the mayor of San Francisco and Harvey Milk a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors were shot and killed inside City Hall by former Supervisor Dan White On the morning of that day Moscone intended to announce that the Supervisor position from which White had previously resigned would be given to someone else White angered entered City Hall before the scheduled announcement and first shot Moscone in the Mayor s office then Milk in White s former office space before escaping the building Board of Supervisors President Dianne Feinstein first announced Moscone and Milk s deaths to the media and because of Moscone s death succeeded him as acting mayor Moscone Milk assassinationsPart of violence against LGBT people in the United StatesSan Francisco Chronicle s front page for November 28 1978City HallMoscone Milk assassinations San Francisco LocationCity Hall San Francisco California U S Coordinates37 46 45 N 122 25 10 W 37 77917 N 122 41944 W 37 77917 122 41944DateNovember 27 1978 45 years ago 1978 11 27 10 45 a m 10 55 a m PST TargetGeorge Moscone Harvey MilkAttack typeAssassination spree shootingWeapons 38 caliber Smith amp Wesson Model 36 Chief s Special 1 VictimsGeorge Moscone and Harvey Milk both killed PerpetratorDan WhiteVerdictGuilty on the lesser offenses of voluntary manslaughterConvictionsVoluntary manslaughter 2 counts ChargesFirst degree murder with special circumstances 2 counts Sentence7 years and 8 months in prison paroled after 5 years White was charged with first degree murder with circumstances that made him eligible for the death penalty However on May 21 1979 White was convicted of the lesser crime of voluntary manslaughter and was sentenced to seven years imprisonment which resulted in the White Night riots and the abolition of the diminished capacity criminal defense in California The trial also led to the urban legend of the Twinkie defense as many media reports had incorrectly described the defense as having attributed White s diminished capacity to the effects of sugar laden junk food 2 3 White committed suicide in 1985 a year and a half after his release from prison Feinstein was elected by the Board of Supervisors to become the first female mayor of San Francisco on December 4 1978 a title she would hold for the next ten years She eventually became a United States Senator for California until her death in 2023 Contents 1 Preceding events 1 1 White s resignation 2 Assassinations 2 1 George Moscone 2 2 Harvey Milk 3 Aftermath of the shootings 3 1 New mayor and supervisors 4 Trial and aftermath 5 Cultural depictions 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further readingPreceding events editIn the mid 1970s San Francisco and the surrounding Bay Area bore witness to a series of anti government bombings largely attributed to the New World Liberation Front a leftist militant group 4 5 Members of the city government including the mayor had received bombs in the mail or were subjected to bomb threats as was City Hall itself 6 On February 9 1977 a tighter security regime began at City Hall to protect the mayor and members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors including locking most entrances and providing security guards and metal detectors at public entrances 6 measures which had remained through 1978 7 Prior to entering city politics Dan White had been a member of both the San Francisco Police Department SFPD and the San Francisco Fire Department SFFD He and Harvey Milk were each elected to the Board of Supervisors in the November 1977 elections which introduced district based seats The election ushered in a range of legislators perhaps unmatched in San Francisco history in their diversity including its first Chinese American Gordon Lau first unwed mother Carol Ruth Silver first black woman Ella Hill Hutch first homosexual Harvey Milk and first former firefighter Dan White 8 All supervisors were sworn in on January 9 1978 with Dianne Feinstein as the president of the board 9 8 The city charter prohibited anyone from retaining two city jobs simultaneously so White resigned from his higher paying job with the SFFD 10 During 1978 White would try to supplement his salary as a Supervisor totaling 9 600 per year with a food concession stand on Pier 39 11 With regard to business development issues the eleven member Board was split roughly 6 5 in favor of pro growth advocates including White over those who advocated the more neighborhood oriented approach favored by Mayor George Moscone who was also elected in 1977 Debate among the board members was sometimes acrimonious and saw White verbally sparring with other supervisors including Milk and Carol Ruth Silver Further tension arose when Milk voted in favor of placing a group home within White s district Subsequently White would cast the only vote in opposition to San Francisco s landmark gay rights ordinance passed by the Board on April 3 1978 12 and signed by Moscone soon after White s resignation edit A city charter amendment to raise the salaries of Supervisors was proposed in the summer of 1978 and a committee White was on stopped the amendment from going forward in the context of the then recent passage of California Proposition 13 in June 11 The low salary of the Supervisor position took its toll on White and he tendered his resignation to Moscone on November 10 White stated that he could not support his family on only the 9 600 per year Supervisor salary and that being forced to work two jobs was preventing him from adequately serving his constituents 11 White s resignation quickly renewed a call to amend the city charter to raise Supervisor salaries this time proposed in White s name by Silver 11 His resignation would leave an open seat on the Board of Supervisors a vacancy which would be filled by appointment by Moscone This alarmed some of the city s business interests and White s constituents as it indicated the mayor would tip the balance of power on the Board and appoint a liberal representative for the more conservative district On November 15 five days after resigning White asked Moscone to return his letter of resignation a letter that had already been accepted and filed by the Board and expressed his intent to continue serving as a Supervisor after receiving loans from family and receiving encouragement from constituents 13 Moscone returned the letter but on November 16 City Attorney George Agnost ruled that White had in fact resigned and was no longer on the Board pending legal review and whether White could be appointed back to the position from which he had just resigned was also an open question 13 Moscone stated that if legal problems in the finality of White s resignation arose he would appoint White back to the seat 14 but in any case some of the more liberal city leaders most notably Milk and Silver lobbied Moscone not to reappoint him 2 On November 17 Moscone stated that White s resignation was final and gave no indication that he was guaranteed to be re appointed 15 On November 18 news broke of the mass deaths of members of the Peoples Temple in Jonestown Prior to the group s move to Guyana the Temple had been based in San Francisco so most of the dead were recent Bay Area residents as was Leo Ryan the United States Congressman who was murdered in the incident The city was plunged into mourning and the issue of White s vacant Board of Supervisors seat was pushed aside for several days 16 On November 21 Moscone confirmed that the city s legal position on White was that he had resigned and further that filling White s vacancy was a week away He again made no guarantee of re appointing White unless he was legally obligated to 17 White appeared to interpret Moscone s statements to mean that he would be re appointed to his former position Assassinations editRather than re appoint White Moscone decided to appoint Don Horanzy a more liberal federal housing official to White s former position on the Board He scheduled a press conference to make this announcement on November 27 at 11 30 a m advance copy had been sent to newspapers with late editions so they could begin preparing their stories 18 White arranged for a former aide to drive him to City Hall on the morning Moscone was to make his announcement 19 He was carrying a five round 38 caliber Smith amp Wesson Model 36 Chief s Special loaded with hollow point bullets 1 his service revolver from his work as a police officer and ten extra rounds of ammunition in his coat pocket White knocked on a basement lab window note 1 and told a building engineer inside that he had misplaced his keys 20 White climbed into the window at about 10 25 a m 21 thereby avoiding metal detectors and guards at public entrances 22 George Moscone edit White proceeded to Moscone s office where the mayor was conferring with California Assemblyman Willie Brown 23 White requested a meeting with Moscone and was permitted to see him after the meeting with Brown ended As White entered Moscone s outer office Brown exited through another door Moscone met White in the outer office where White requested again to be re appointed to his former seat Moscone refused and their conversation turned into a heated argument over Horanzy s pending appointment 24 Wishing to avoid a public scene Moscone suggested they retreat to a private lounge adjacent to his office Witnesses later reported that they heard Moscone and White arguing later followed by the gunshots that sounded like a car backfiring 25 At approximately 10 45 a m as Moscone lit a cigarette and proceeded to pour two drinks White pulled out his revolver He then fired at the mayor s shoulder and chest tearing his lung After Moscone fell to the floor White approached him pointed his gun 6 inches 150 mm from the mayor s head and fired two additional bullets into Moscone s ear lobes killing him instantly 21 While standing over Moscone s body White reloaded his revolver Harvey Milk edit nbsp Supervisor Harvey MilkImmediately following Moscone s murder White left the mayor s office and hurried toward the shared office of the Board of Supervisors at the other end of City Hall where each supervisor had an enclosed cubicle and desk 26 Dianne Feinstein who was then president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors saw White run past her office door and called after him White responded with I have something to do first 21 White intercepted Milk as he was speaking to a radio reporter and acquaintance in the Supervisors office 22 White interrupted the conversation with a knock and asked Milk to step inside his former office for a moment Milk agreed to join him 22 Once the door was closed White positioned himself between the doorway and Milk and after a brief conversation 19 opened fire on Milk at 10 55 a m The first bullet hit Milk s right wrist as he tried to protect himself White continued firing rapidly hitting Milk twice more in the chest then fired a fourth bullet at Milk s head killing him followed by a fifth shot into his skull at close range 21 White fled the scene before Feinstein entered the office and found Milk s body She felt Milk s neck for a pulse her finger entering a bullet wound 27 Rumors about what had happened began to circulate but were not confirmed until about 11 20 a m 28 At that time Feinstein addressed assembled media which had expected the announcement of Horanzy s appointment Feinstein shaking so badly that she required support from the police chief while speaking instead announced to shocked reporters that Moscone and Milk had both been murdered 28 29 30 31 White left City Hall unchallenged He took the keys of his former aide s car from her desk and drove to a diner where he called his wife from a payphone they met at a nearby church 19 Approximately thirty minutes after leaving City Hall White turned himself in at the SFPD s Northern Station precinct at which he had previously served as a police officer to Frank Falzon and another detective both former co workers 22 In a police interrogation room that afternoon White confessed to shooting Moscone and Milk but denied premeditation 32 Part of the taped confession became public in 2014 33 19 Aftermath of the shootings editAn impromptu candlelight march consisting of tens of thousands started in the Castro District and ended at the steps of City Hall Joan Baez led Amazing Grace and the San Francisco Gay Men s Chorus sang a solemn hymn by Felix Mendelssohn Upon learning of the assassinations singer songwriter Holly Near composed Singing for Our Lives also known as Song for Harvey Milk citation needed Moscone and Milk both lay in state at City Hall Moscone s funeral at St Mary s Cathedral was attended by 4 500 people He was buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma Milk was cremated and his ashes were spread across the Pacific Ocean Feinstein as president of the Board of Supervisors acceded to the mayor s office becoming the first woman to serve in that office The coroner who worked on Moscone and Milk s bodies later concluded that the wrist and chest bullet wounds were not fatal and that both victims probably would have survived with proper medical attention However the head wounds brought instant death without question particularly because White fired at very close range 21 New mayor and supervisors edit White s resignation and all subsequent events including the shootings caused positional changes inside San Francisco s city government At the top two levels these were Mayor of San Francisco George Moscone killed in office November 27 1978 was immediately succeeded by Board of Supervisors President Dianne Feinstein as acting mayor until elected as mayor in a vote of 6 2 among remaining active supervisors excluding herself on December 4 Feinstein would serve out the remainder of Moscone s term then be elected to her first full term as mayor in November 1979 Board of Supervisors President When Feinstein succeeded to mayor on December 4 a new president of the board of supervisors needed to be elected This would be District 2 Supervisor John Molinari elected by the Board on January 2 1979 Board of Supervisors District 8 Dan White resigned November 10 1978 White was replaced by Don Horanzy Moscone s original choice for District 8 when appointed by Mayor Feinstein on December 7 Board of Supervisors District 5 Harvey Milk killed in office November 27 1978 Harry Britt was appointed to District 5 Supervisor by Mayor Feinstein on January 8 1979 Board of Supervisors District 2 Dianne Feinstein who succeeded to mayor on December 4 left a vacancy in her own former supervisor district position Feinstein appointed Louise Renne to district 2 on December 18 Trial and aftermath editFurther information Twinkie defense and White Night riots nbsp Cover of The San Francisco Examiner on November 28 1978White was charged with first degree murder with two special circumstances both of which had been passed into law through California Proposition 7 only three weeks before the assassinations 20 Specifically the victim s were elected officials of a local government of California and the killing was intentionally carried out in retaliation for or to prevent the performance of the victim s official duties and more than one murder was committed 20 Murder with special circumstances meant that if convicted White could have faced the death penalty 20 White s defense team claimed that he suffered from depression at the time of the shootings evidenced by many changes in his behavior including changes in his diet Inaccurate media reports said his defense had presented junk food consumption as the cause of his mental state rather than a symptom of it leading to the derisive term Twinkie defense this became a persistent myth despite the fact that neither defense lawyer had argued junk food caused White to commit the shootings contradictory and had only mentioned Twinkies in passing Rather the defense argued that White s depression led to a state of mental diminished capacity leaving him unable to have formed the premeditation necessary to commit first degree murder The jury accepted these arguments and White was convicted of the lesser crime of voluntary manslaughter 34 He was sentenced to seven years imprisonment The verdict proved to be highly controversial and many felt that the punishment so poorly matched the deed and circumstances that most San Franciscans believed White essentially got away with murder 35 In particular many in the local gay community were outraged by the verdict and the resulting reduced prison sentence Since Milk had been homosexual many felt that homophobia had been a motivating factor in the jury s decision This groundswell of anger sparked the city s White Night riots immediately after the verdict was announced 34 The verdict also ultimately led to changes by the legislature in 1981 and statewide voters in 1982 that ended California s diminished capacity defense and substituted a somewhat different and slightly more limited diminished actuality defense 36 White never made a direct statement of remorse and only one relayed as hearsay was given by a prison duty nurse who attended to White in 1983 37 He was paroled in 1984 and served this parole in the Los Angeles area away from San Francisco Frank Falzon the detective who took White s statement after the assassinations said in 1998 that he met with White in 1984 and that White had admitted that not only was his killing of Moscone and Milk premeditated but he had actually planned to kill Silver and Brown as well Falzon quoted White as having said I was on a mission I wanted four of them Carol Ruth Silver she was the biggest snake and Willie Brown he was masterminding the whole thing 38 39 After serving his parole White moved back to the San Francisco area in early 1985 and committed suicide there that October 40 In the late 1990s Falzon showed a KTVU reporter some of the evidence that still existed in police custody including the clothing White had worn a tape of his police interrogation liquor bottles and glasses from the site of Moscone s shooting and White s original resignation letter to Moscone 41 The revolver used in the murders was for a time assumed missing from police evidence storage 1 An SFPD clerk later confirmed that he had destroyed it in 1983 or thereabouts while witnessed by his supervisor 42 and under a 1982 court order to do so 43 Its parts were melted down in a foundry that produced manhole covers 42 43 Cultural depictions editJournalist Randy Shilts wrote a biography of Milk in 1982 The Mayor of Castro Street which discussed the assassinations trial and riots in detail 21 The 1984 documentary film The Times of Harvey Milk won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature 44 Execution of Justice a play by Emily Mann chronicles the events leading to the assassinations 45 The play opened on Broadway in March 1986 and in 1999 it was adapted to film for cable network Showtime with Tim Daly portraying White 46 The Moscone Milk assassinations and the trial of Dan White were lampooned by the Dead Kennedys with their re written version of I Fought the Law which appeared in their 1987 compilation album Give Me Convenience or Give Me Death The photo on the front cover of their 1980 album Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables which shows several police cars on fire was taken during the White Night riots of May 21 1979 47 The assassinations were the basis for a scene in the 1987 science fiction movie RoboCop in which a deranged former municipal official holds the mayor and others hostage and demands his job back 48 In 2003 the story of Milk s assassination and of the White Night Riot was featured in an exhibition created by the GLBT Historical Society a San Francisco museum archives and research center to which the estate of Scott Smith donated Milk s personal belongings that were preserved after his death Saint Harvey The Life and Afterlife of a Modern Gay Martyr was shown in the main gallery in the Society s former Mission Street location The centerpiece was a section displaying the suit Milk was wearing at the time of his death 49 The suit is currently on display in the Society s permanent museum space in the Castro 50 In 2008 the film Milk depicted the assassinations as part of a biographical story about the life of gay rights activist and politician Harvey Milk The movie was a critical and commercial success with Victor Garber portraying Moscone Sean Penn playing Milk and Josh Brolin playing White Penn won an Oscar for his performance and Brolin was nominated 51 In January 2012 the Berkeley Repertory Theater premiered Ghost Light a play exploring the effect of Moscone s assassination on his son Jonathan who was 14 at the time of his father s death The production was directed by Jonathan Moscone himself and written by Tony Taccone 52 See also edit nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp LGBT portalList of assassinated American politicians List of homicides in CaliforniaNotes edit At the time of the assassinations the window White entered City Hall by was a basement window After a 1995 seismic renovation this floor became the first floor of City Hall thus windows on that level are now first floor windows References edit a b c Weiss Mike December 8 2002 A CASE OF THE MISSING GUN When famous murder weapons walk out of police evidence rooms where do they go We follow the disappearance of Dan White s gun San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved November 25 2014 a b Pogash Carol November 23 2003 Myth of the Twinkie defense The verdict in the Dan White case wasn t based on his ingestion of junk food San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved August 10 2007 The Twinkie Defense Snopes October 30 1999 Retrieved December 5 2013 Cone Russ Muller Baron February 7 1977 City Hall goes under tightest police guard The San Francisco Examiner p 1 Retrieved June 11 2022 New World Liberation Front NWLF www globalsecurity org Retrieved June 11 2022 a b Cone Russ Muller Baron February 7 1977 City Hall swarms with vigilant police The San Francisco Examiner p 18 Retrieved June 11 2022 White Believed He was Double Crossed Petaluma Argus Courier November 28 1978 p 1 Retrieved June 11 2022 a b Cone Russex Russ Hatfield Larry D January 9 1978 Supervisors A different kind of board sets up shop here The San Francisco Examiner p 18 Retrieved June 11 2022 Cone Russex Russ Hatfield Larry D January 9 1978 Supervisors sworn in Feinstein board president The San Francisco Examiner p 1 Retrieved June 11 2022 Geluardi John January 30 2008 Dan White s Motive More About Betrayal Than Homophobia By SF Weekly SF Weekly Retrieved January 25 2017 a b c d Cone Russ November 14 1978 Increase in city supervisors pay is proposed again The San Francisco Examiner p 4 Retrieved June 11 2022 SF Gay Rights Ordinance Awaiting Mayor s Okay Santa Cruz Sentinel April 5 1978 p 47 Retrieved June 11 2022 a b Cone Russ November 16 1978 White wants job back city attorney not so sure The San Francisco Examiner p 4 Retrieved June 11 2022 Supe who quit takes it back Oakland Tribune November 16 1978 p 3 Retrieved June 11 2022 Cone Russ Hollis Robert November 17 1978 Moscone advised he can t cancel White s board resignation The San Francisco Examiner p 4 Retrieved June 11 2022 Rapaport Richard November 16 2003 Jonestown and City Hall slayings eerily linked in time and memory Both events continue to haunt city a quarter century later SFGate Retrieved January 25 2017 Cone Russ November 21 1978 Mayor tells White decision a week off The San Francisco Examiner p 7 Retrieved June 11 2022 Wordless fear and then screams The San Francisco Examiner November 27 1978 p 18 Retrieved June 11 2022 a b c d Dan White s audio confession after killing Harvey Milk amp George Moscone November 27 1978 retrieved June 12 2022 a b c d No bail as D A cites new law The San Francisco Examiner November 28 1978 p 1 Retrieved June 12 2022 a b c d e f Randy Shilts 1982 The Mayor of Castro Street Internet Archive St Martin s Press pp 266 268 269 282 ISBN 978 0 312 01900 6 a b c d Murders at City Hall retracing the killer s steps The San Francisco Examiner November 28 1978 p 18 Retrieved June 12 2022 Brown Willie November 18 2008 Brown remembers close call on tragic day SFGate Retrieved September 26 2019 Suspect Sought Job The New York Times Wallace Turner Special to The New York Times November 28 1978 p 1 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 25 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint others link Getlin Josh November 23 2008 Remembering George Moscone Los Angeles Times Retrieved November 27 2020 City Hall Historian Retraces Steps In Moscone Milk Assassinations 8 43 retrieved June 12 2022 Bruck Connie June 15 2015 Dianne Feinstein vs the C I A The New Yorker Retrieved October 22 2017 a b Finefrock James A November 27 1978 Aide White a wild man The San Francisco Examiner p 1 Retrieved June 12 2022 Futz Bob 1978 O Neil Michael ed Assasination sic of Harvey Milk and George Moscone 1978 Year in Review Audio UPI com UPI Retrieved June 13 2022 Epstein Rob September 20 1985 The Times of Harvey Milk Documentary trailer Documentary Biography History Black Sand Productions Pacific Arts UCLA Film and Television Archive retrieved June 13 2022 Dianne Feinstein Announces Harvey Milk s Death retrieved June 12 2022 Kohler Will November 27 2019 In Memoriam November 27 1978 Harvey Milk Assassinated In San Francisco Back2Stonewall Retrieved June 26 2020 Holmes Juwan J May 25 2021 New unearthed audio shows Dan White confessing to murdering Harvey Milk LGBTQ Nation Retrieved June 12 2022 a b Pogash Carol November 23 2003 Myth of the Twinkie defense San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved November 25 2020 Dan White s Motive More About Betrayal Than Homophobia Archived August 5 2012 at the Wayback Machine By John Geluardi San Francisco Weekly Published January 29 2008 Weinstock MD Robert Leong MD Gregory B Silva MD J Arturo September 1 1996 California s Diminished Capacity Defense Evolution and Transformation PDF The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law 24 3 347 366 PMID 8889134 Retrieved September 26 2019 Gorney Cynthia parts Second of two January 4 1984 The Legacy of Dan White The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved November 25 2020 Weiss Mike September 18 1998 Willie Brown also on Dan White s hit list report says The Sacramento Bee p 5 Retrieved June 13 2022 Weiss Mike October 1998 Dan White s Last Confession San Francisco Magazine Lindsey Robert October 22 1985 DAN WHITE KILLER OF SAN FRANCISCO MAYOR A SUICIDE The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 2 2017 KTVU coverage of the assassinations of George Moscone and Harvey Milk 1 31 retrieved June 12 2022 a b Weiss Mike January 24 2003 Ex clerk says he destroyed White s gun Weapon used in assassinations was considered missing San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved November 25 2014 a b KTVU coverage of the assassinations of George Moscone and Harvey Milk 2 12 retrieved June 12 2022 Murray Noel October 5 2020 The Times Of Harvey Milk documented the early days of a still raging culture war AV Club Retrieved November 25 2020 Execution of Justice Closes The New York Times March 25 1986 Retrieved November 25 2020 Oxman Steven November 24 1999 Execution of Justice Variety Retrieved November 25 2020 Lefebvre Sam November 26 2018 How San Francisco Punk Reacted to Harvey Milk and George Moscone s Deaths KQED Retrieved November 25 2020 Booker M Keith 2006 Alternate Americas Science Fiction Film and American Culture Greenwood Publishing Group p 205 ISBN 0 275 98395 1 Delgado Ray June 6 2003 Museum opens downtown with look at Saint Harvey exhibitions explore history of slain supervisor rainbow flag San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved July 9 2011 Sokol Robert October 2 2020 Castro museum reopens its door to LGBTQ history San Francisco Examiner Retrieved November 25 2020 Gorman Steve Milk screenwriter straddles two clashing worlds Reuters Retrieved November 25 2020 dead link Hurwitt Robert January 13 2012 Ghost Light review Moscone haunted by events San Francisco Gate Retrieved November 25 2020 Further reading edit Nation Another Day of Death Time December 11 1978 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved June 25 2022 White Dan Falzon Frank November 27 1978 Dan White s audio confession after killing Harvey Milk amp George Moscone retrieved June 25 2022 Weiss Mike 1984 Double play the San Francisco City Hall killings Internet Archive Reading Mass Addison Wesley Pub Co ISBN 978 0 201 09595 1 Weiss Mike 2010 Double Play The Hidden Passions Behind the Double Assassination of George Moscone and Harvey Milk Vince Emery Productions ISBN 978 0 9825650 5 6 Milk Harvey 2012 Emery Vince ed The Harvey Milk interviews in his own words Internet Archive San Francisco Calif Vince Emery Productions ISBN 978 0 9725898 8 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moscone Milk assassinations amp oldid 1199074513, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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