"[Crowd Talking, Indistinct]" "As president of the board of supervisors... it's my duty to make this announcement." "Both Mayor Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk... have been shot and killed." " [Man] No!" "Jesus Christ!" " [Woman Screams]" " The..." " [People Shouting]" " [Man #2] Hold it!" " [Man #3] Hold it!" " Shh!" " [Man #4] Quiet!" "[Man #5] Quiet, everybody!" "The suspect is Supervisor Dan White." "[Man Narrating] On November 27, 1978..." "San Francisco's Mayor George Moscone... and Supervisor Harvey Milk... were assassinated in City Hall." "Harvey Milk had served only 11 months on San Francisco's Board of Supervisors... but he had already come to represent something far greater than his office." "A year before he was gunned down..." "Harvey Milk tape-recorded a will." "[Man on Tape] This is to be played only in the event... of my death by assassination." "I fully realize that... a person who stands for what I stand for... an activist, gay activist... becomes the target or the potential target... for somebody who is insecure, terrified, afraid... or very disturbed themselves." "Knowing that I could be assassinated at any moment or any time..." "I feel it's important that some people know my thoughts." "I stood for more than just a candidate." "I have never considered myself a candidate." "I have always considered myself... part of a movement, part of a candidacy." "I wish I had time to explain everything I did." "Almost everything was done in the eyes of the gay movement." "I met Harvey like most people met Harvey, I think... in his camera store." "Um, I'd been living in the city about a year and a half, I guess, and... maybe not even that long..." "and went into the camera store... someone recommended it..." "to have my film developed... and was greeted by this raving maniac." "He was screaming and..." "I don't even know what the issue was... but he was screaming and shouting at someone in the camera store... and I..." "I was a little intimidated, you know." "I thought, "This guy is a little too weird for me."" "When I really got to know him was in '75." "I had a miscarriage... and I was astounded that... that I'd had... '75 or '76 I had a miscarriage, and I was astounded." "I mean, it's a... it's a devastating physical experience... as well as a mental experience." "And I was home from the hospital, and, uh..." "Harvey had heard that this had happened." "And lo and behold, there was a knock at the door... and I went sort of like floating to the door... 'cause I wasn't feeling well at all... and he was standing on my doorstep... with a dozen roses... and he said, "Can I get you anything?" "Do you have enough food in the house?" "Do you have milk?" "Do you have food?" "I'll do your grocery shopping."" "And I knew him by name, as he knew me... but I didn't know him well enough to have him do my grocery shopping." "But that's the kind of concern he was." "You know, you could relate to Harvey on many levels." "One level was his sense of humor, which I liked, you know." "And you know, making fun of things that sometimes were very heavy... which was how I was brought up." "But also I didn't feel like an outsider with Harvey." "I felt like someone of worth, you know... and, uh, some respect..." "the teacher thing." "And if I was in fact feminine, or if I was in fact, you know... didn't always speak in a certain syntax, or if I said, you know..." ""Fuck that asshole over there." "He's really a jerk"..." "Harvey didn't go, "You know, this is not a good gay image."" "So that meant a lot..." "the human factor." "[Narrator] At first, Harvey Bernard Milk... showed few signs he would make history." "Born May 22, 1930... the second son of middle-class Jewish parents... he grew up in Woodmere, Long Island." "The little kid with the big ears became, in high school... an ordinary student, a practical joker, and a regular guy." "Or so his friends thought." "After college he joined the navy." "Then he began a career as a stock analyst on Wall Street." "What was not on the resume... was his homosexuality... which Harvey Milk had known about since he was 14." "In the 1960s, Harvey Milk took a step off course." "He befriended avant-garde theater people... then worked his way into a producing job on Broadway." "By the beginning of the '70s..." "Harvey Milk had marched in antiwar demonstrations... burned his BankAmericard in protest... and emigrated to San Francisco." "He and lover Scott Smith settled down... and opened a camera store on Castro Street... in a quiet old neighborhood soon to become known as "the Castro."" "Harvey Milk threw himself into neighborhood politics." "When he dubbed himself "the Mayor of Castro Street," the idea stuck." "In 1973 he tried to make it official... by running for the board of supervisors, San Francisco's city council." "To many, Harvey Milk seemed more like a joke than a candidate." "Well, first time I heard of Harvey... was uh... one of these, uh..." "conventions at the Labor Council... and, uh, we're voting on who we're going to support." "And our union..." "We get together with other union delegates... and talk over who we're gonna support, and, uh... we supported a guy that I didn't know at that time:" "Harvey Milk." "And, uh, we're talkin' with the people, and, uh... somebody said, "He's..." "He's gay."" "And I thought, "Holy Christ!" "How are we gonna go back to our union... and go back to where we work and tell guys that we supported a fruit?"" "And I thought, "My God, this is..." "What's labor comin' to?" you know?" "And then we found out that, uh... he got Coors Beer out of all of the gay bars in San Francisco." "And this Coors Beer boycott... which labor's been trying to do throughout the United States... especially in San Francisco, a labor town... uh, really hadn't been too successful." "You know, I met Harvey for the first time..." "I mean, I had read about him and had heard a lot about him... but that was the first time I really met him." "And it was a rather strange meeting, because..." "Harvey was talking about all these visionary things... about, you know, the oneness of man, and, um... thinking about all the great things that needed to be done... not only in San Francisco, but throughout the country." "And I said to myself..." ""Gee, this man is never going to make it."" "[Narrator] Between 1973 and 1976..." "Harvey Milk ran for political office... and lost three times." "But in each race he garnered more and more votes... enough to establish himself as a broker for his neighborhood... and the growing gay community." "In 1975, neighborhood activists like Harvey Milk... found a strong supporter in their new mayor, George Moscone." "Moscone had campaigned on the conviction... that a city is enriched by more than downtown development." "[Moscone on Microphone] ...to make our city work once again." "As the new mayor, Moscone showed respect... for his city's many neighborhoods, cultures, and peoples." "My late father was a guard at San Quentin... and who I was visiting one day and who showed to me... and then explained the function of the, the death chamber." "And it just seemed inconceivable to me, though I was pretty young at the time... that in this society that I had been trained to believe... was the most effective and efficient of all societies... that the only way we could deal with violent crime... would be to do the ultimate ourselves... and that's to governmentally sanction the taking of another person's life." "[Narrator] Moscone and his allies, including Harvey Milk... set about designing a plan... for neighborhood people to run the city they lived in." "The plan, called "district elections"... would allow candidates for supervisor, such as Harvey Milk... to run from districts rather than the city at large." "They had this crazy idea that they're gonna change the form of government... the way we elect our, uh, officials in this town." "There was one meeting, it was supposed to be... behind this guy Harvey Milk's camera store." "And so I went to the meeting, and I kinda thought..." ""What the hell am I doin' here with all these fruits and kooks?"" "Behind the camera store..." "a little crummy camera store." "It was nothing like Brooks." "It was a little crummy camera store, and in the back was this little crummy room... with a bunch of worn-out old sofas and chairs... and a bunch of people in jeans and Levi's, and, uh..." "Harvey Milk was there, and, uh, he's not..." "He doesn't dress in a distinguished manner." "He's, uh..." "Just looks like any working' stiff." "But the way he handled the people there..." "Some of the people get kind of emotional... and, uh... outrageous... and he would control 'em and calm 'em down... and get the thinkin' going a certain way, and, uh..." "It was very, very impressive." "[Narrator] The voters of San Francisco decided... to give the district elections plan a try." "In the Castro, a new kind of politics was taking shape." "[Disco]" "More and more men and women were arriving in San Francisco every day... to take up the gay life." "The Castro was booming." "Each summer, Harvey Milk helped organize the Castro Street Fair... where the neighborhood celebrated its very existence." "[Man Singing] When we're out there dancing on the floor, darlin'" "And I feel like I need some more" "And I feel your body close to mine" "And I know, my love it's about that time" "Make me feel mighty real" "Make me feel mighty real" "You make me feel" "Mighty real" "You make me feel" "Mighty real" "When we get home, darling and it's nice and dark" "And the music's spinning" "[Narrator] Harvey Milk realized that the Castro... was ready to elect its own representative to city hall." "In 1977, Milk launched his fourth political campaign... this time for the board of supervisors... from the newly created District 5." "Oh, you make me feel" "Mighty real" "You make me feel" "There's just too many candidates, the vote is split all over the place... and there's too many things happening nobody knows about." "[Woman] There are at least seven candidates with a shot at capturing... the heart of the city, District No. 5." "The liberal vote is split between three main candidates and many lesser ones." "One main is Terence Hallinan... an attorney with endorsements from Democrats and labor." "Hallinan splits the liberal vote with two gays:" "lawyer Rick Stokes... and Castro Street businessman Harvey Milk." "I think when it comes to a matter of who came first, that's fairly easily provable." "I don't think anyone ever heard of Harvey Milk until he ran for office in 1973." "Any single neighborhood issue or city issue for the last five years... you found Harvey Milk taking a stand..." "one way or the other, but taking a stand." "[Woman] Every candidate claims to know of polls... showing him the winner or running strong... but the one candidate who seems to run best of all has very low visibility." "That's the one named "undecided."" "In San Francisco, Linda Schacht for Channel 5 Eyewitness News." "When he decided to run for supervisor, he did call me... and I went in to meet with him... and we just hit it off instantly." "That very first day, he asked me if I would run his campaign." "I was 23." "Here's this punk kid who knows nothing about campaigns... except that I loved them." "What he offered me was an opportunity." "He had no money." "But he was a very difficult person to work with." "He did have temper fits... where he would just be like a little kid sometimes... for no good reason except that he was probably exhausted." "Getting involved in that campaign was so special... especially after the number of campaigns that I had been through... with the Democratic Party... and the normal type of politicians and the normal kind of campaigns." "That campaign was anything but normal!" "One day I was in there in the campaign headquarters... and I'm looking around at this motley group of people." "It was a lot of fun, but give me a break!" "And I said to Harvey, I said, "Well, who's that?"" "And there's this desk over in the corner." "It's really dark." "I don't think there's a plug back in that corner." "There's a telephone." "I remember seeing the lights on the telephone... was like the brightest thing in that corner." "And he says, "She's really good." "Her name is Anne Kronenberg." "She's really good."" "And I'm looking at her and thinking, "Oh, my Lord!" "Your image!"" "Here he's trying to run, you know, in a very big district." "He'd run in our neighborhood, and anything goes in our neighborhood." "But when you get out, you know, you kind of have to kind of blend in." "And I looked at Anne, and here she was, you know... like a big dyke, with the motorcycle clothes on." "And then there's John with his three-piece suit... and there's little Mike..." "Michael Wong... who Harvey always called his lotus blossom... and a couple of old ladies that would be in there too, bless their hearts." "And then people silk-screening on the side... and you could smell the ink and, you know, all this hubbub." "And he's trying to run a business in the front." "Everything happened in this long, dingy camera store... everything from "save the whales" to "get elected."" "[Kronenberg] We had volunteers... in all different shapes and sizes... from Medora Payne-size... up to 70-year-old women who wanted to be doing something." "Maybe they couldn't be walking precincts, but they wanted to do something for Harvey." "It was a nice mix of people." "He never stopped, and he did most of everything himself... which meant, you know, every day he was out on the street... to hit the morning rush hour and the afternoon rush hour." "He'd walk precincts." "He'd go to shops, you know, door-to-door." "[Narrator] At the age of 47, on his fourth try for public office..." "Harvey Milk was elected to San Francisco's Board of Supervisors." "When Harvey got back to the campaign headquarters that night... people went crazy." "He rode up on his..." "Not his motorcycle, my motorcycle." "They all got off the bikes then... and Harvey was just encircled with people." "I mean, the feeling there was just one of such total joy." "And it was more than just, you know, a candidate winning." "It was the fact that all of these lesbians and gay men throughout San Francisco... who had felt like they'd had no voice before... now had someone who represented them." "[Ammiano] You just feel so good for Milk... but feeling good for Milk, you were feeling good for yourself." "You know, this was elation." "Just absolute elation." "[Kronenberg] Harvey never ever drank... but that night the champagne was flowing freely... and he picked up one bottle and poured it all over himself." "It was incredible." "[Man] We can hear it." "We can't really see too much... but it looks and sounds to you and to me like New Year's Eve... on Market Street, a place called Alfie's." "And the reason for all this merriment... and gaiety, if you'll pardon the pun... is the man standing to my right... the first gay supervisor elected in San Francisco." "His name is Harvey Milk." "First of all, congratulations... and I've never seen anything like this, Harvey." "Oh, it's all over the city tonight." "What does this mean, your election, your activity now... on the board of supervisors in San Francisco?" "Does that mean, as many straights are concerned... that maybe the gays are taking over San Francisco?" "Are you going to be a supervisor for all the people?" "I have to be." "That's what I was elected for." "I have to be there to open up for the dialogue... for the sensitivities of all people, with all their problems." "The problems that affect this city affect all of us." "[Kronenberg] It was really a "monumentous" occasion." "You know, he had been waiting at that point for four years for that victory... and I think it was very sweet for all of us." "Thank you, San Francisco." "[Woman] All right!" "I first met Harvey Milk when I was sent to do a story... on this guy out in the Castro who had a camera store... who was running for supervisor... and he was getting a lot of attention... so I had to go out there and do an interview with him." "And I thought, "Oh, brother." "A guy who owns a camera store?" "What could he know about politics or anything?"" "I knew he was going to be a dud." "But I got out there, and he was full of life." "He was a great speaker." "And I was impressed on the spot, and it made a good story." "It's as if he knew. "You came here with an attitude that I was just... a homosexual with a camera store, and I'll show you!"" "And I thought he did, you know." "He was much more impressive than just that kind of image." "This will be the first time in many years that we've seen... so many relatively new faces on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors." "And this is probably because it's the first time in a long time... that supervisors have been elected by district instead of citywide." "Harvey Milk, a homosexual... the first avowed women's rights advocate, Carol Ruth Silver... the first Chinese-American, attorney Gordon Lau... the first black woman, Ella Hill Hutch... and Dan White, a city fireman who gave up his job to take his seat." "After the formal swearing-in ceremony, the board elected..." "Dianne Feinstein to be its new president." "In a 6-to-5 vote, Feinstein beat out Gordon Lau." "But then we got the first taste of the new politics." "Someone suggested the board vote again to make it unanimous for Feinstein... but newcomers Milk and Silver refused." "They stuck to their votes for Lau, to cheers from their supporters." "And just about everyone at City Hall today was agreeing on one thing:" "They may be a lot of things, but they probably won't be dull." "[Der] It was interesting to see that Harvey... did not vote for Dianne Feinstein to be president... and it really shocked many of us in the audience, because..." "We said, "Wow!" "Here was this gay supervisor... who really didn't have to do it... and maybe even might be committing political suicide... and yet he was standing up for what he believed... and making a very strong statement."" "And it was clear what Harvey Milk represented on that board." "He represented change." "He was different." "He was different from the conservative majority on the board of supervisors." "[Narrator] Lost in the hubbub... over the rise of California's first publicly gay official... was the election of Dan White... another kind of neighborhood populist." "[Man] Dan White has worked and lived virtually all his 31 years... in this southeastern section of San Francisco." "The neighborhood problems are the city's problems." "You see, the transportation, the crime... the education, the taxes... these are problems that we're all gonna have to, uh, solve." "Hello, Anne." "Come on out here and..." " Come out and say hello!" " [Woman] No, I don't want to..." "[Man] Dan White comes across as the kind of son almost any mother would be proud of." "[Women Cheering, Applauding]" "Anne was one of my big, big supporters here." "A lot of the ladies here are getting their hair done." "[Man] Clean-cut, respectful to his elders... and seemingly possessed of small-town values." "When was the last time you heard a San Francisco politician... talk about setting up neighborhood athletic teams?" "[White] And then, when we get the best team... we will challenge, say, Harvey Milk's district to a game of softball... where they have champs out there." "In a sense you could say it's old-fashioned... but it's old-fashioned values that built this country." "To me, this is what society's all about." "If you see someone in trouble, you go to help 'em out." "[Man] Dan White says nobody's gonna ignore his corner of the city anymore." "[Narrator] Dan White and Harvey Milk... became symbols of the new district election system." "Dan White, a fireman and native San Franciscan..." "Harvey Milk, a small businessman and a gay immigrant." "Milk's victory sparked euphoria among his supporters... and a sense of something new arriving at City Hall." "He wanted to meet Carter, and he thought that was very important." "And I think he even brought a photographer along... even though Carter didn't want to be photographed with a gay person." "And Ruth Carter Stapleton was... you know, the evangel... evangelical sister... was carrying on a mission on gays." "She told Harvey that she could convert him... and that, even though he was Jewish, if he gave himself to Jesus Christ... that his homosexuality would disappear or something." "And he made a couple of very wry comments... and one of them was that..." "I think they shook hands, and he said, "I'm surprised you shook my hand."" "And she said, "Why?"" "And he said, "Because you never know where my hand's been."" "Isn't that awful?" "Well, she just looked at him." "She was just starstruck." "I mean, what could she say?" "Before Harvey was elected, I can remember... looking at City Hall and feeling like that was not my place." "I didn't belong there." "I wasn't welcome there." "I didn't feel comfortable there." "And the people on the board of supervisors... were names you read about in the newspaper... not people you would expect to see in the grocery store... or much less have a conversation with on a personal or a human level." "And Harvey was really a part of changing all that." "[Man] We're interviewing Harvey Milk." "What's it like being a so-called in-person... as opposed to having been an out-person for years?" " Being one of them?" " Yes." "Um... incredible." "The, uh, establishment... the white power establishment, non-gay, very wealthy establishment... have to deal with me." "It's an incredible position." " [Sniffles] Excuse me." "Cut!" " Careful." "I have a slight cold." " Take two." "Wanna repeat that, please?" " Okay, sure." "Go." "In San Francisco, as in anyplace else... you have the blacks and browns fighting... and you have the Filipinos not talking to the Asians... and they all hate the gays, and so forth." "And that has existed, and we've had..." "We over the years have fought for the crumb." "But I think because of the election, district elections... and this particular board, and myself, uh... we're overcoming a lot of those problems." "There's tremendous harmony developing." "It's not perfect, by any means." "On the citywide level, I think it's vital... that the minorities... the traditional, ethnic minorities... and the gays and the feminists link together." "And possibly the rank-and-file union... not the union leaders, the rank-and-file... link together to form a very solid, strong coalition... so that we can influence the total direction of the city." "[Narrator] As supervisor, Harvey Milk had the political skills... to advance the issues that neighborhood people cared about:" "rent control, limiting high-rise development... public transportation, and the rights of senior citizens." "And the biggest crime in this city is the fact... that there's some government elected officials... who don't care about senior citizens." "And I got news for them:" "They're gonna grow old to be a senior citizen themselves or drop dead." "Maybe I like Harvey because almost everything..." "Anytime he'd make a speech about anything, I agreed with him." "So then I thought he was a great man... because I agreed with what he talked about." "But you could hear where he was coming from." "He was coming from people positions." "If it had to do with parks... or it had to do with schools, or it had to do with police protection... anything that affected the little people." "He wasn't only for gay rights." "He was for gay rights because that was... that is a minority." "But there's other minorities." "There's handicapped people." "There's senior citizens." "And so, uh, there's more and more." "You start listening to him and getting involved with him... 'cause, gee, this is the kind of guy that is gonna talk about you." "Harvey said that if anyone solved... the dog shit problem in this city... that they could be elected mayor." "And so he started, in the first month of being in City Hall... to come up with some kind of ordinance to take care of dog shit." "And he knew that the pooper-scooper ordinance... along with a few other things, would really give him good press." "He was a master at figuring out... what would get him covered in the newspaper." "And so the day of his press conference for the pooper-scooper ordinance... he went out early and planted some shit on the lawn... so that after his press conference he knew... just where he was gonna stand that he would step in it." "[Man] Supervisor Milk took to the grassy lawn... at Duboce Park this afternoon to publicize the new law." "Under the ordinance, dog lovers who don't clean up can be fined." "I think what needs to happen is what happened in New York:" "that people use their own ingenuity, their own ideas, their own concepts." "Some people are using their pie tins... some people are using The Wall Street Journal... and other people are using doggie-doo's and shovels." "[Man] Milk put his foot down to emphasize that the city... intends to enforce, and you guessed it..." "In Supervisor Milk's words, "This really is the bottom line."" "Harvey Milk's stand on which voting machine... the city should purchase was a critical role." "At that time, George Moscone favored Votomatic... and Harvey really was quite vocal." "And he said the city should go with Votomatic... because non-English-speaking citizens... particularly those who are elderly, who have experienced discrimination... can exercise their right to vote in the most accessible manner." "He locked heads with Quentin Kopp... and Dianne Feinstein over the issue." "And I was tremendously impressed... because Harvey never once called us and said..." ""Is this the right machine for the Chinese community?"" "He knew that it was the right machine... and he didn't have to call any one of us and say..." ""Gee, I want to remind you folks that I'm doing you this great favor... and I want you to be indebted to me."" "[Narrator] The issue closest to Harvey Milk's heart... was a gay rights bill for San Francisco." "With the gay rights ordinance in San Francisco, the main focus is... is to prevent the people who are already employed who are gay... who, if they want to come out and break down the stereotypes... prevents them from being fired." "For example, you will see in this Gay Day parade... a group of at least 30 gay doctors." "That is the tip of the iceberg." "In the Bay Area, there are hundreds and hundreds of gay doctors... most of who are closeted because of fear of loss of jobs." "In San Francisco, they can "come out"... and not have to worry about their jobs." "And that's the main focus of our ordinance." "[Man] Supervisor White says people are getting angry... and he believes that anger could lead to a backlash... that will wipe out all of the gains the gays have made thus far." "You can have someone that's a transvestite... a man that for his sexual, um, kicks or orientation, whatever you want to call it... loves to dress up as a woman." "If he is a qualified teacher, he can go into any school... or he can go into any business, and they can't refuse him." "[Narrator] Ten supervisors voted for the gay rights bill." "Dan White cast the only dissenting vote." "Mayor Moscone enthusiastically signed the bill into law." "We got lots of hate mail... and it started out that the hate mail really upset me." "Again, I just was not prepared for that at all." "I mean, people saying awful, awful things." "Just nasty, disgusting things." "And it was Gay Freedom Day... and I was driving the car in the parade, and Harvey was in it." "I was terrified." "I was afraid someone was going to take a shot at him." "And Harvey said, "It could happen any day, at any place, at any time... and I'm just not going to worry about it."" " [Band Playing] - [Crowd Cheering, Applauding]" "Right on!" "[Milk] The statement that the Gay Day parade is..." ""No more." "No more will we be harassed." "No more will we stay in our closet."" "The people from all over the state and all over the country... for them to see 100,000... to 400,000 gay people and friends... marching through the downtown area... this is our city too..." "they will go back to Des Moines, Iowa... to Richmond, Minnesota, to Santa Cruz." "They will go back and say, "My God... 300,000 gay people and their friends marching!" "You know, I almost think I saw my son there."" "Come on out!" "Just come on out." "What did you see that you felt was obscene?" "Well, I see naked men walking around, naked women walking around... which, uh, doesn't bother me... as far as my personal standards of nudity or what... but it's not proper." "Many people do not approve of outward displays of sexuality... be it heterosexuality or homosexuality." "And this is a point I stand firm on." "And I think the gay community themselves... would find hard to refute the statements I'm making now." "And this is a problem." "We wouldn't allow it for any other parade in San Francisco... and it should not be allowed for the gay parade." "They want to bring their sin out of the closet... and parade it on the street... and be called respectable, decent, natural people." "It's not decent... it's not respectable, and it's not natural." "And by the way, God doesn't make people that way." "Don't blame God for that." "Who wants the children?" "I'll tell you who wants your children." " The homosexual crowd wants them." " [Man] That's right." "[Narrator] In 1977 and '78... gay rights measures were being repealed across the United States." "In California, lawmaker John Briggs took a further step." "Every homosexual, every lesbian..." "Briggs mounted a campaign... for Proposition 6, a statewide measure... to deny homosexuals their jobs in public schools." "Now, what Proposition 6 is really all about... is the right of parents to determine... who will be teaching their children." "We don't allow people who believe in practicing bestiality... to teach our children." "We don't let prostitutes teach our children." "And the reason we don't is because it's illegal to be a prostitute." "But it's not illegal to be a homosexual in California." "[Narrator] Proposition 6 brought the issue of homosexuality... into the homes of millions of Californians... and it thrust Harvey Milk into a statewide spotlight." "There are already laws on the books to protect our children." "Everybody from Superintendent of Schools Wilson Riles... to Jerry Brown to newspaper editors across the state agree... that indeed we have the laws to protect our children." "I was born of heterosexual parents, I was taught... by heterosexual teachers... in a fiercely heterosexual society... with television ads and newspaper ads..." "fiercely heterosexual." "A society that puts down homosexuality." "And why am I homosexual if I'm affected by role models?" "I should have been a heterosexual." "And no offense meant... but if teachers are going to affect you as role models... there'd be a lot of nuns running around the streets today." "[People Laughing, Applauding]" "Harvey knew that he had to have... or that the gay community had to have... some kind of a repository for money... so that groups that were fighting the Briggs Initiative would have the... you know, could get funds to do the things that they had to do." "And I ended being his cochair... of the United Fund to Fight the Briggs Initiative." "And that began our association, which over those months... when Proposition 6 came into being, became a real close association." "And I got to know him on a level that I had never anticipated." "[Woman] Nobody took Harvey Milk very seriously... when he first ran for the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1973... but last year Milk won election to the board of supervisors... where he's the first openly gay city official in the United States." "And representing the Bay Area Committee Against the Briggs Initiative... is Sally Gearheart... a lesbian, a former high school teacher... and now a speech professor at San Francisco State University." "[Gearhart] I remember that just before that debate... we had had a lot of talk, Harvey and I, about how we would dress... and we had agreed that the image to project was sort of "Mama and Papa U.S.A.":" "as neat and conservative as we possibly could." "So a half hour before we start to leave for the television station..." "Harvey calls me and says..." ""I've lost my earrings, dear!" "Whatever shall I do?"" "Right?" "And I freak out, thinking, "Oh, my soul!"" "You yourself say that the heterosexual is the child molester." "And if in your statements here, and all these newspapers, and tonight... that child molestation is not an issue, if it is not an issue... why do you put out literature that hammers it home?" "Why do you play on that myth and fear?" "Same thing with V.D., Harvey." "We put out publications about V.D..." " so you can avoid it." " This is campaign literature." "Yes." "We're trying to keep people from falling into that trap." "We're trying to prevent it by pointing it out." "And I don't make the statement that 95% of all the heterosexuals commit..." " What percent is it?" " I don't know." "You tell me." "The state says 90-95%." "I've never seen that in writing." "I don't make those statements... you do." " You even say here..." " We are not talking about child molestation." "The fact is, at least 95% of the people are heterosexual." "If we took heterosexuals out and homosexuals out, you know what?" "We'd have no teachers." "No child molestation." "So you're saying that the percentage of population... is equal to the percentage of child molestation." "Then there's no difference." " No, I'm not saying that at all." " That's what you just said." "No, I was saying we cannot prevent child molestation... so let's cut our odds down and take out... the homosexual group and keep in the heterosexual group." "[Gearhart] Why take out the homosexual group when it's more, you know..." "Overwhelmingly it is true, that it's the heterosexual men..." "I might add, who are the child molesters." "I believe that's a myth." "I've never seen..." "Oh, Senator!" "The FBI, the National Council on Family Relations... the Santa Clara County Child Sexual Abuse Treatment Center, and on and on and on..." "Sometimes I think what we were faced with in Proposition 6... was not so much a conflict of values... as two sets of fears." "The incredible fears that the gay community had, all of us... that here we were, being stomped on... by what was turning out to be the Moral Majority." "I mean, our very lives were being, you know, threatened... the ways that we live, what our lifestyle is... and our reaction was extreme, and it should have been extreme." "But then when you get into the other person's shoes... you figure that there was a lot of fear on the part of the fundamentalists as well." "I mean, when you've lived your entire life... believing in a certain social structure... believing in certain sex roles... believing in the ways that men and women should relate to each other... believing in the family... you know, believing in what God... what you believe God says should be the way... human beings should relate within the family structure... and all of a sudden, there are these "perverts" out here... saying there are ways to live that are different from that... and that furthermore it's great and beautiful and true and good... then you're threatened." "And the very fabric of what this nation is supposed to be made up of... in the eyes of the fundamentalists, was actually being attacked... or is actually being attacked, by gay people." "[Man] You know about Prop 6?" "[Narrator] In August, four months before the election... opinion polls predicted that the majority of California citizens... would vote for John Briggs' Proposition 6..." " and against the rights of gay teachers." " [Woman] What do you think about it?" "We had lost repeatedly." "Every time that gay rights had been up for a vote... we had lost, around the country, usually by huge margins." "Almost everyone thought we were going to lose, and lose badly." "I don't remember anyone being optimistic." "We were so pessimistic... or at least I was, and a lot of other people were... that we thought we might even lose San Francisco." "[Woman] The bulk of Briggs' support lies in Southern California... so his appearance here was more symbolic than functional." "He called San Francisco the "moral garbage dump of the nation."" "If they're gonna lead such an open life of homosexuality... that they want a 21-gun salute every time somebody goes by them... those people are gonna be in danger of being removed from their job." "People are very emotional." "They don't want to listen." "Look what happened in Germany." "Anita Bryant already says that Jews and Moslems are going to hell." "You know she's got a shopping list." "John Briggs said this morning that Dade County, Oklahoma... and St. Paul, Minnesota, were only preliminary battles." "He called his California campaign against homosexual teachers..." ""the main event."" "At San Francisco City Hall, Linda Schacht, Channel 5 Eyewitness News." "[Ammiano] This was such a personal issue for me." "This is something I did every day." "And of course, the gay teacher issue is very volatile." "To sit down with somebody who's a parent... and maybe not particularly vitriolic against people... but to really say, "This is a myth." "I've been teaching here a long time." "I'm not interested in getting in his pants."" "You know, people didn't want to hear it." "I mean, how do you win people over to your side... on something that's so ingrained and so emotional?" "I mean, their children!" "So even though he was a buffoon, and even though he was ludicrous... he was also... at least the people who advised him... were brilliant... because they picked on this particular issue: children!" "Um, it would be hard for me... if we're talking about schools, to go along with you." "I..." "Any other adult thing that you do... the decorator, the hairdresser, whom I love, whom I have..." "I'd take him on every vacation if I had." "I don't care what he does." "[Ammiano] You went to people's houses and talked to them." "And you didn't have to have a lot of money to do some of the things." "You went to shopping centers." "Because a lot of it was face-to-face." "This was a very brave thing." " [Woman] How are you?" " [Man] May I ask you something?" "We're volunteers working against Proposition 6, the Briggs Initiative." "Do you know about the Briggs Initiative?" "What is No. 6?" "Smoking?" "No, that's No. 5." "No. 6 would force local school districts... to fire any teacher that was gay... or who believed that gay people have rights like other people." "And we're concerned that that would be a real attack... on human rights for everybody." "How do you feel about the initiative, on what you do know?" "Well, we don't have any definite opinion on this." "No comment." " Could I leave some literature with you..." " Sure." "So you could learn a little bit more about it?" " Are you registered voters?" " Yes, I have registered already." "Whoops!" "Sorry." "I believe this is kind of personal matter." "[Man] It sure is, but, uh..." "Yeah, it's something that we feel real strongly about." "You know, a lot of my friends are gay teachers... and they'll lose their jobs over this, so I really wish you'd..." " That is bad." " give some thought to it... because a lot of people will really be affected very badly by it." "[Woman] It's also something where once you set up one kind of thing... to discriminate against one group of people... lots of times it makes it easier to discriminate... against other groups of people next time around." " Right." " [Man] Well, give it some thought." " [Wife] Okay." " I agree with you." "If, by their silence and their doing nothing, Briggs should win..." "I think a lot of people are gonna realize they have to make an ultimate decision." "The decision is to go back in their closet real good... slam the door tight..." "which some will do... or burst down those closet doors once and for all... and stand up and start to fight." "Because if we learn from history that the struggle goes on... eventually we will win." "And all the president has to do is..." "or the governor... is to turn the pages of history a little faster." " [Crowd Cheering]" " Join me in this message!" "Jimmy Carter, listen to us." "You want to lead?" "You want to be the world's leader on human rights?" "Well, damn it, lead!" " There are 15..." " [Whistling, Cheering]" "There are 15 million lesbians and gay men... waiting to hear your voice!" "[Cheering Continues]" "[Narrator] The grassroots No-on-6 campaign was proving effective." "One month before the election, the polls predicted a close vote." "Many people had come to believe... the Briggs Initiative would violate constitutional rights." "A surprising array of political figures... including former governor Ronald Reagan... and Supervisor Dan White... went on record against the proposition." "[Woman] President Carter spent less than an hour... at this downtown Sacramento rally." "As the president left the podium..." "Jerry Brown whispered to him briefly... and he came back for one more word of advice for voters." "Ford and Reagan have already come out against it, so I think it's perfectly safe." "Also, I want to ask everybody to vote against Proposition 6." "[Crowd Cheering]" "[Narrator] On November 7, 1978..." "Proposition 6 was defeated by a resounding 59% to 41 %." " [Band Playing]" " On election night..." "Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk... joined the jubilant celebration in the Castro." "Harvey Milk was at the height... of his political power." "Oh!" "That was one of the most..." "That was one of the most exciting nights in my life." "I don't think there's any doubt about it." "It must have been... for most lesbians and gay men, at least in the state of California." "Because it wasn't plain... even up until the evening of the vote... that we were gonna win..." "it wasn't plain at all." "And then here was Harvey." "And who had been the man who had carried the banner for gay people, you know?" "Who had been the man who had fought all along... in his politics on the board of supervisors... but particularly during the 6 campaign?" "It had been Harvey." "He had been the symbol for all of us." "He had been the image." "And he mounted that platform... and I thought the place was gonna collapse." " [Cheering]" " I've never heard such cheering in my life." "[Milk on Microphone] To the gay community all over this state... my message to you is... so far a lot of people joined us and rejected Proposition 6... and now we owe them something." "We owe them to continue the education campaign that took place." "We must destroy the myths, once and for all shatter them." "We must continue to speak out... and most importantly... most importantly, every gay person... must come out." "[Crowd Cheering]" "As difficult as it is... you must tell your immediate family." "You must tell your relatives." "You must tell your friends, if indeed they are your friends." "You must tell your neighbors." "You must tell the people you work with." "You must tell the people in the stores you shop in." "You..." "[Crowd Whistling, Cheering]" "And once they realize that we are indeed their children... and we are indeed everywhere... every myth, every lie, every innuendo..." " will be destroyed once and for all." " [Cheering]" "And once... once you do... you will feel so much better." "[Cheering Continues]" "...can't stand for anymore." "I'm angry." "[Narrator] Four days after the Briggs Initiative lost..." "Dan White engineered his own defeat." "Surprising everyone, he resigned from the board of supervisors." "In the last year, Dan White had left a secure job as a fireman... been elected a city supervisor for little pay... launched a risky new business... and become a father for the first time." "Dan White had entered City Hall an idealist." "Unlike his flourishing counterpart, Harvey Milk... he was often frustrated by the job." "White had never learned to operate in City Hall's atmosphere... of back scratching and compromise." "If there's members that don't want to cooperate..." "White's resignation left Mayor Moscone... with the task of finding a replacement." "[Man] Mr. Mayor, what's happened since Dan White has resigned?" "I understand you're getting a lot of phone calls?" "The phone calls and cards and letters have been coming..." "I will tell you, as Dean Martin used to say." "I was lobbied from just about the evening that Dan White resigned... all through the weekend, and the phones have been ringing off the hook today." "This is Supervisorial District 8, Dan White's former district." "As you know, most people were very surprised when Dan quit last Friday." "No one seemed to know." "He didn't tell any of his fellow supervisors... nor did he tell any of his political supporters." "Obviously, you know, if the time I spent to become elected... the time I spent down at the board, the hours, the many hours I've spent..." "I don't want to see wasted." "But for now, I can only deal with my family's responsibilities." "[Man] Many don't agree with Dan White." "They say he gave up all of his political chits... when he resigned so quickly without making any arrangements... for someone whom he liked and supported to take over this district." "In Supervisor District 8, I'm David Fowler..." "Channel 5 Eyewitness News." "Well, now it starts all over again, because this morning... former supervisor Dan White says... he wants to be called supervisor one more time." "I didn't run for election to resign ten months later." "I worked awfully hard." "My wife and my supporters worked awfully hard... so that I would be elected." "And it was a major decision, as you can all understand, on Friday... that I had to come..." "to arrive at." "But since that time, people unknown to me... plus my family and friends, uh... have come to me and stated that they want me to stay in office... that they supported me to stay in office." "[Narrator] Mayor Moscone learned from the city attorney... that Dan White could not take back his resignation." "It was up to the mayor to decide... who would get the District 8 seat." "Harvey Milk lobbied hard against reappointing Dan White." "Harvey's story was that the mayor was thinking of reappointing Dan... and that Harvey went in and said, "How can you possibly do that?" "Dan is the sixth vote on the board we need."" "And certainly Harvey was courageous in that stance... because no one else was doin' it." "And there were other supervisors on the board who felt just as strongly... but they weren't going to get involved in that." "I mean, what if Dan got reappointed, you know?" "Think of the animosity." "[Man] Moscone started to get word from his coalition... of neighborhood groups and ethnic voters." "Most of the problems of the people here tonight... were that they were not consulted..." "they might have helped... and the fact that they weren't even given the dignity... of his concern bothered them." "So that's obviously not the best way to go." "I think a 10-month supervisor can be excused for political naïveté." "I'm simply saying it may not have been the best way to go." "But the issue is bigger than his style." "The issue is what's fair, right, and just for the people of District 8." "[Man] White was at City Hall with his group of backers:" "some citizens, firemen... and a delegation representing large real estate firms." "I'm overwhelmed at your support, that you would take time out... to come down here on a Friday at this time... to show not only me but the people of my district... and the people of San Francisco... that you approve of the way I'm conducting myself." "[Narrator] But then Dan White and the shambles of his political career... were upstaged by chaos of an entirely different order." "The city learned of the murder-suicide... of some 900 people... most of them San Franciscans." "In Jonestown, Guyana." "On Monday, November 27..." "Mayor Moscone planned to announce District 8's new supervisor." "It was not going to be Dan White." "Good evening." "To outsiders and even to some San Franciscans... it must appear the city has gone a little insane." "Just as everyone is beginning to come to grips... with the mindless murder-suicide of over 900 members... of the San Francisco-based People's Temple... word screams out over the radio, the television, the newspapers... that another tragedy is upon us." "[Sirens Blaring]" "[Man on Police Radio] Code 3, room 200." "I'm in the mayor's office." "[Man #2 on Police Radio] One moment." "We're trying to ascertain what's happening." "Room 237, please." "Get another ambulance over here, will ya?" "[Chatter on Police Radio]" "[Man #3] Where are the victims going?" "[Man #4] I don't know if they're going anywhere." "Harvey Milk and the Mayor are supposed to be D.O.A." "[Feinstein] As president of the board, I-I'm, I'm..." "As president of the board of supervisors... it's my duty to make this announcement." "Both Mayor Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk... have been shot and killed." " [Man] No!" "Jesus Christ!" " [Woman Screams]" " The..." " [People Shouting]" " [Man #2] Hold it!" " [Man #3] Hold it!" " Shh!" " [Man #4] Quiet!" "[Man #5] Quiet, everybody!" "The suspect is Supervisor Dan White." "[Woman] Is he in custody?" "He's not..." "He's not at this time." "Thank you very much." "[Man on Police Radio] Attention all units:" "suspect named Dan White." "White male adult, 32 years... six feet, 185 pounds... wearing a three-piece brown suit." "Considered armed and dangerous." "Attention all units:" "Former supervisor Dan White is now in custody." "Repeating:" "Former supervisor Dan White is now in custody." "Clear." "[Man] Dan, why'd you do it?" "[Woman] Dan, why?" "Why?" "Okay, that's it." "Enough." "That's it." "[Narrator] At approximately 10:45 a.m... realizing he was not going to be reappointed..." "Dan White went directly to the mayor's office unannounced." "There was a brief argument." "Dan White pulled out a gun and shot George Moscone." "The mayor fell... and White fired two more bullets into his head." "White then reloaded his gun." "He walked to the other side of City Hall... and into Harvey Milk's office." "Five shots rang out." "According to the coroner's report..." "Harvey Milk was rising, both hands out in front of him... when the first shot hit." "He fell." "White fired three more times." "He leaned over and, from above... put the gun nearly against Harvey Milk's head... and fired a last time." "The day that Harvey was killed..." "I was flying up to Seattle to visit my folks... and it's really..." "I think it was the first time I had seen them since our talk about coming out." "I, um... got on the plane at 11:15 in San Francisco." "Harvey was killed at 11:10, but I had no idea." "And so I screamed, and I came back up Van Ness Avenue... and I remember thinking, "People are going about their business in an ordinary way." "How dare they go about their business in an ordinary way!" "Don't you realize the course of history's been changed?"" "We had a black-and-white television, and we turned it on in the office and, um..." "I think it was just too painful, you know?" "I mean, it was clear that both of them were dead, brutally assassinated." "And I..." "You know, I..." "I walked out of the office." "I had the radio on... and the guy came on, and he said it with such a certitude." "Sometimes you hear things on the news, and they're not gonna be true." "He just said it, and I knew it was true." "In fact, I..." "It's interesting." "Later I thought..." ""I've always kind of thought this might happen"... and never dwelled on it, and here it was happening." "He was saying, "Harvey Milk and George Moscone... were shot and killed by Dan White."" "And I just screamed, "No!" It just kinda came out." "People looked, but I had a feeling people knew why I was screaming." "So I drove down to City Hall." "I wasn't going to sit here and go crazy." "And I had to park far away... so I walked past this entrance that I ordinarily... would not walk past... and they were bringing out the bodies then." "You know, it's kind of..." "I mean, you can think somebody's dead, but I mean, there..." "And I knew it was Milk because I knew how tall he was." "And they hadn't covered part of his feet or something, and I..." "You know, you trip out on different things, and you think..." ""God, what a big foot, Harvey." "I never realized you had such a big foot."" "And so then I went around to City Hall in the front... and there these..." "a lot of media people." "And the thing that struck me the most was..." "I don't know." "I guess, again, this expressive southern Italian background I have." "I thought people would be going "Ahh!" but instead it was quiet." "It was silent." "We got back, and my roommate picked us up at the airport, and he said..." ""There's gonna be a candlelight march." "Do you want to go to it?"" "And we said, "Of course."" "So he said, "Well, by now it's probably reached City Hall."" "So we drove directly from the airport to City Hall... and there were maybe 75 people there." "And I remember thinking, "My God, is this all that anybody cared?" you know." "And somebody said, "No, the march hasn't gotten here yet."" "So we then walked over to Market Street... which is two or three blocks away, and looked down it." "Market Street runs in a straight line out to the Castro area." "And as we turned the corner... there were people... as wide as this wide street, as far as you could see." "[Kronenberg] Thousands and thousands of people... and that feeling of such loss." "Having lost someone who was so important... and some thing." "Harvey stood for something more than just him." "[Elliott] The combination of Harvey being killed... and going down with all those people..." "I don't know if you call it "expressing your grief" or what it was... but being with all those people, and... it's nighttime in San Francisco, and a bunch of strangers around you... and you feel as safe as you do in your own home." "And there was this black man on the corner of... whatever..." "Noe there... and he kept shouting, "Where is your anger?" "Where is your anger?" "Where is your anger?"" "And, you know, I didn't know where it was." "I think that all of us at that time... were in such a, a, a state of shock, you know, that..." "I don't know if it was numbed or we were anesthetized." "Certainly I was angry... but it seemed appropriate to do this... peaceful, kind of internalized thing... out of some kind of respect for the enormity of what happened." "It was one of the most eloquent expressions... of a community's response to violence that I've ever seen." "I think we as lesbians and gay men... and all of the straight people who were marching with us that night... and there were thousands..." "I think we said it." "I think we sent a message to the nation that night... about what our immediate response was." "Not violence... but a certain respect for Harvey... and a deep... a deep regret and feeling of tragedy about it... because Moscone had been our friend as well." "[Hartmann] And then going down to City Hall... that tremendous expanse of people." "And I turned to John and I said, "Harvey would have loved this!"" "When we kind of tried to get close to the stage... and I saw friends up there and I thought..." ""Oh, I just can't go face anybody."" "I started to cry, and everyone started to cry." "It was just so touching." "I'm gonna start to cry now." "But there's a statue down there, and everyone put candles..." "You know, several people, right that following week... came out of the closet because they had been there... and they had seen, you know, all of the people... and they had felt that they had been living a lie." "Sorry, better stop." "I don't know if I can..." "They really felt so moved that they came out to people... and said, "Did you know that I'm gay?"" "And, um, I was so touched by it... because that's what Harvey had stood for... and it took his death for them to realize that..." "They just came out." "No one would fire them from their jobs, because it's against the law... and they could still live a life... and yet that part of our society that's very closed could open." "[Narrator] On Thursday, November 30..." "George Moscone's funeral was held at St. Mary's Cathedral." "On Saturday, December 2..." "Harvey Milk's ashes were scattered into the Pacific by his friends." "[Man] Today we went looking for clues to why White would kill the mayor... who refused to reappoint him to his post... and a supervisor who opposed him politically." "We didn't find any." "For many years, the Whites lived on London Street... in the southeast sector of San Francisco... which White served during his few months on the board... and where he was raised." "Among their neighbors on London Street were the Cooks." "I don't know." "I don't know." "He, he..." "He must have went off the deep end, because he was just a nice guy." "[Man] Did he ever show any signs of cracking up?" "No, nothing." "He was all-American boy, as far as I was concerned." "I never did see him really argue with anybody." "I think he was a very family-oriented man." "Catholic." "He went to church all the time." "He was very devoted to the job." "And I don't think he had any grudge towards anybody." "I don't think anybody disliked him, that I knew of." "[Narrator] Five months after the assassinations..." "Dan White went on trial." "Couldn't see how the trial would last more than... more than a day." "Such a cut-and-dried thing." "You know, there was..." "You'd follow the newspapers, but no big deal." "He was automatically gonna be guilty... and go to San Quentin the rest of his life, you know." "Anybody knew that." "As the trial and the jury selection started..." "I sort of developed this sense of doom... that justice was not going to prevail... because the jury selection process... excluded gay people... minority residents, and anyone who may have had... a political point of view that would be different from Dan White." "And I don't want to knock the jury system... because I do believe in the jury system... but once you knock all these people out... what does that leave you with?" "We had turned this over to be taken care of... to a system that was actually in many ways responsible for these assassinations." "So there's this little feeling in your stomach when you get afraid and you think..." ""What am I gonna do, you know, personally?" "What are we gonna do?" "He's in the hands of the cops."" "[Narrator] The prosecution argued a simple motive: revenge." "Detailing the facts of the crime... the state spent three days proving that Dan White committed the murders." "White's own lawyers had already admitted this in their opening statement." "To prove its case... the prosecution played a tape of Dan White's confession... but the tactic backfired." "Some of the jurors wept in sympathy for White." "[White on Tape] I've been under an awful lot of pressure lately." "Financial pressure that affected my job situation." "Family pressure." "Not being able to have the time with my family. [Voice Breaking]" "The mayor never called me." "He told me he was gonna call me before he made any decision." "He never did that." "It was only on my..." "my own initiative... when I went down today to speak with him." "I was troubled." "[Sniffles]" "The, the pressure, my..." "The family again." "[Crying] My, my son's out to a babysitter." "My wife's gotta work long hours." "You know, I just was going to the mayor to see... if he was gonna reappoint me... just all the time knowing' he was gonna go out and lie to the press... and tell 'em, you know, that I wasn't a good supervisor... and that people didn't want me and..." "And then that was it." "Then I..." "I just shot him." "And then it struck me about what Harvey had tried to do... and I said, "Well, I'll go talk to him."" "I said, "At least maybe he'll be honest with me."" "And he was all smiles and stuff when I went in." "He knew I wasn't going to be reappointed and, uh... he just kind of smirked at me... as if to say, "Too bad."" "And then..." "[Sniffles]" "And then I just got all flushed and hot... and I shot him." "Now, if Dan White wants to save himself from the death penalty... he's going to have to prove that he didn't plan to kill anyone that day." "Prosecutors say he did premeditate the murders... because on that day he put his gun on... and he put a bunch of extra bullets into his pocket." "Then he got into City Hall here by climbing in this window... knowing he couldn't get his gun past the metal detector in the main entrance." "Prosecutors say this shows he was planning to do something suspicious." "White's lawyer claims it's common for people... to try to get into City Hall this way... that Dan White was only carrying a gun to protect himself... and that other supervisors, including Feinstein... have carried guns for protection." "But if he was only trying to protect himself that day... why did he put all those extra bullets into his pocket?" "It will be interesting to see how the defense tries to explain that." "[Man] You told the jury that... although he had the gun with him, the .38... he had no intention of shooting anyone at City Hall, correct?" "That's correct." "And that other supervisors carried weapons with permits." "Is that correct?" "Well, I didn't mention "with permits"... but I did say that other supervisors and perhaps other City Hall personnel... do carry firearms presently and have carried them in the past, yeah." "Do you know if the other people who do carry weapons... also carry ten extra rounds in their pocket?" "I think ex-police officers... and certainly police officers, on or off duty... carry extra ammunition, yes." "And that is also why you say he reloaded after shooting Mayor Moscone." "That is what I said, yes." "Now, clarify that though... because of his experience as an ex-police officer." "Yes, I think it was more instinctive than anything else." "[Narrator] White was portrayed as an idealist... disgusted with the corruption of politics... a man who felt the city was deteriorating... as a decent place for San Franciscans to live." "Defense attorney Doug Schmidt told the jury..." ""Good people, fine people with fine backgrounds... simply don't kill people in cold blood." "It just doesn't happen."" "A key witness for the defense was Dan White's wife, Mary Ann." "I knew the types of pressure... that Danny was under." " I felt the pressure myself, and..." " [Baby Gurgling]" "I think when this occurred, I felt more for Danny... than I did for myself or anyone else." "I really did." "I just felt so much that I wanted to do something for him." "[Woman] Do you foresee a point in the future... where your life can return to some degree of normalcy?" "Oh, yes." "I firmly believe that there's... something for us good that will come out of this." "[Narrator] White's lawyers introduced the testimony of five psychiatrists... to prove that he acted while in a state of severe depression... induced in part by consuming too much junk food." "His attorneys argued he had killed Moscone and Milk in the heat of the moment... and that under the law... the charges against him should be reduced... from murder to manslaughter." "The trial concluded in just eleven days." "You do expect surprises... and to be ready and open-minded for surprises... the shocking fact that he did this... and you might also have the shocking fact... that there was some extenuating circumstances... or some reason why he was innocent." "So you're ready for that kind of possibility, but I thought he might get the chair." "I remember rushing out of the courtroom... and the news was on line, waiting for the verdict." "I remember thinking to myself, "Try to look like you're not so shocked."" "Jeannine Yeoman's right here." "What is it?" "Yes, the jury has found Dan White guilty of voluntary manslaughter... in the killings of both George Moscone and Harvey Milk." "That's a verdict that carries two, three, or four years on each of those counts." "He also could receive two years each... for using a gun in the commission of the crime." "[Man] And once again to repeat... that is the verdicts that White's attorney, Doug Schmidt, had asked the jury to return." "[Man #2] Dan White could now receive anywhere from four to 12 years in prison... with a possibility of parole after..." "[Man #1] We have received word that a demonstration has been called... for 8:00 this evening in front of City Hall... to protest the Dan White verdict." "I was really outraged, and I... was going to go down to City Hall... and I didn't go to City Hall... because I had to run home to take care of our kids." "But I had this strong sense." "I said, "Someone has to say something."" "That's our justice system." "He got away with it." "Eight years." "If you kill a public official..." "Especially if I did." "What would I get?" "I'm an old lady." "I won't be here very much longer." "And I would not like to be here and see him walking the streets." " You don't want him to get out?" " No." "After killing two men, no." "It was a challenge to your own personal value system." "You know, politically correct..." ""I'm against capital punishment." "I mean, my goodness."" "And then all of a sudden, all you want is blood revenge." "Certain people who were considered leaders... certain men and women of the gay community who were saying..." ""Now, now, calm down." "Justice will be served."" "I went, "Oh, come on!" "Stop it!" "Stop it!"" ""City Hall, City Hall, City Hall!" It was like a beat, a rhythm." "And going down Market Street, disrupting traffic." "[Crowd Chanting] We want justice!" "We want justice!" " [Whistles Blowing]" " We want justice!" "He got away with murder!" "He got away with murder!" "We want justice!" "We want justice!" "Remember Harvey Milk!" "Remember Harvey Milk!" "Dan White's a pig!" "Dan White's a pig!" "Dan White's a pig!" "The people united will never be defeated!" "The people united..." "[Man on Police Radio] ...almost an uncontrollable situation." "Find out if you've got any more squads." "Send me more help." "[Crowd Chanting] No more violence!" "No more violence!" "No more violence!" "[Chanting Continues]" "[Man] By about 11:20, things had gone from good to bad... to good and to very bad." "There's a narrow perimeter of shaky policemen... on my left over here in front of City Hall." "Behind them, and sometimes in the midst of them, are the demonstrators." "Every once in a while, a demonstrator, a protestor, will come out of the crowd... throw a piece of burning material into a police car, and start it on fire." "[Sirens Wailing]" " [Whistles Blowing] - [Protesters Shouting]" "[Yelling, Indistinct]" "You'll get a brick in your head!" "You'll never know what hit you!" "If you look right away, you can see it coming and get out of the way." "[Rhythmic Grunts]" "What we have tonight is a... a mob out of control, and I think it's a tragedy." "I think it's gonna set, uh, back... the, uh, fight for human rights a great deal." "And I must tell you that if persons are arrested... for the crimes that have been committed tonight... my office is gonna prosecute them to the fullest extent of the law." "If you remember, the violence that started all this... was Dan White's violence." "I feel that the jury was violent this afternoon... by treating Dan White in a way that nobody's ever gonna believe... they would have treated a black person or a gay person... or someone who did not fit Dan's type image." "They were saying that the spirit of Dan White... with all of its pettiness, all of its meanness... and all of its violence right below the surface is okay... and in so doing were very violently attacking... the memory of George Moscone and Harvey Milk." "We are reacting with anger because we are angry." "[No Audible Dialogue]" "People were outraged because it was property." "You know, this great institution of the free world..." "We dared!" "You can replace a goddamned glass door." "You can replace a chandelier, right?" "You can replace a police car." "But you can't replace Harvey." "Feeling the rage and the, the, the... the extreme emotions... that seemed to be coming from all of those folks..." "I was right with 'em." "I was right with 'em in saying I... you know..." ""There is no justice here today... and anything that we do is absolutely fine."" "And then I thought..." ""You know, that's not it." "That's not the way."" "And something of a bit of a cooler head came upon me." "I guess I thought about Harvey... who had said many times that he didn't want violence... to follow in the footsteps of anything that happened to him." "What the verdict did... to our sensitivity was to say..." ""You know, it's not important to be civil in American society." "And it's not important to honor other people's right... as long as you are white... and you uphold certain white, middle-class values... because you're gonna get away with murder." "You're gonna be condoned."" "I think if it had just been Moscone that got killed..." "I think he would have been guilty of murder... and been in San Quentin the rest of his life." "But sad to say, I think there's a lot of people in this world... that still think if you kill a gay... you're doin' a service to society." "I think I'd have felt that way too... if I hadn't been associated with Harvey and the gay community." "I probably would have felt the same way." "'Cause up till that time, I thought that a guy that was gay was just..." "He's not, uh..." "You know, he's not us." "And I remember when I used to hear about... the cops would go into gay bars years ago and rough up the gays... and I thought, "What's wrong with that?"" "You know?" ""That's, that's okay."" "And I think the majority of people felt that way... and I think a lot of people still feel the same way." "And it's a shame." "[Narrator] Dan White was released from prison on January 7, 1984." "He served 5 1/2 years... and received no psychiatric treatment in prison." "[Milk] Somewheres in Des Moines or San Antonio... there's a young gay person... who all of a sudden realizes that she or he is gay... knows that if their parents find out... they'll be tossed out of the house." "The classmates would taunt the child... and the Anita Bryants and John Briggs are doing their bit on TV." "And that child had several options:" "staying in the closet, suicide... and then one day that child might open up a paper and it says..." ""Homosexual elected in San Francisco"... and there are two new options." "One option is to go to California..." "[Crowd Laughing, Applauding] ...or stay in San Antonio and fight." "Two days after I was elected, I got a phone call... and the voice was quite young." "It was from Altoona, Pennsylvania." "And the person said, "Thanks."" "And you've got to elect gay people... so that that young child, and the thousands upon thousands... like that child... know that there's hope for a better world... there's hope for a better tomorrow." "Without hope, not only gays, but those blacks... and the Asians... and the disabled, the seniors..." "the "us's."" "The "us's." Without hope, the "us's" give up." "I know that you cannot live on hope alone... but without it life is not worth living." "And you, and you, and you... have gotta give 'em hope." "Thank you very much."