Death of Michael Stewart
Death of Michael Stewart | |
---|---|
Location | First Avenue station, New York City Subway |
Date | September 15, 1983 2:50 a.m. |
Target | Michael Stewart |
Attack type | Alleged police brutality |
Weapons | John Kostick Anthony Piscola Henry Boerner Henry Hassler James Barry Susan Techky |
Deaths | 1 |
Victims | Michael Stewart |
Perpetrators | New York City Transit Police officers |
Motive | Alleged excessive force during arrest. Disputed accounts exist regarding Stewart's behavior. |
Inquiry | Grand jury investigations internal police investigations |
Coroner | Dr. Elliot M. Gross (disputed findings) |
Verdict | Not guilty |
Convictions | None |
Charges | Criminally negligent homicide, assault, perjury |
Litigation | Civil lawsuit settled for $1.7 million |
Judge | Justice George F. Roberts |
Case sparked debate about police brutality and racial bias. |
Michael Jerome Stewart (May 9, 1958
Word of the arrest came out on September 15, 1983, as the Committee Against Racially Motivated Police Violence was holding a news conference to publicize a United States Congress hearing into complaints of police abuse. Stewart had been arrested earlier that day. He died at age 25, on September 28, after 13 days in a coma. The cause of death was listed as cardiac arrest.
Arrest and death
On September 15, 1983, aspiring artist and model Michael Stewart left the Pyramid Club in Manhattan's Lower East Side[3]
after 2 a.m.
While being taken to the station, Kostick said, Stewart became "very violent" in the van. Stewart struggled with the officers and ran to the street. He was beaten unconscious. He was hogtied, bound at the ankles and tethered hands-to-feet by an elastic strap.[5] During the struggle, Stewart's wails could be heard by 27 Parsons School of Design students from their dorm windows. A Parsons student, Rebecca Reiss, heard Stewart say "Oh my God, someone help me", and "What did I do? What did I do?"[5] Rob Zombie, also a Parsons student at the time, recounted the incident in 2019 during an appearance on the September 16 episode of The Joe Rogan Experience podcast (#1353). He stated that he and the other witnesses that night were subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury prior to the trial.[6] Stewart was booked at the Union Square District 4 transit police headquarters for resisting arrest and unlawful possession of marijuana. The transit police supervisors deemed Stewart emotionally disturbed. Stewart was placed back into the van and transported to Bellevue Hospital to undergo psychiatric observation.[5] Stewart arrived at Bellevue at 3:22 a.m. He was handcuffed, his legs were bound, and he was comatose with a blood alcohol content of 0.22, more than double the 0.10 threshold needed to arrest someone for drunk driving.[7] Stewart was dating Suzanne Mallouk at the time, and she went with his family to see him at the hospital.[8] According to Mallouk's account, Stewart had bruises and cuts on his body. She said the doctors confirmed he was brain dead and had hemorrhaged in a way that suggested he had either been choked or strangled.[8] Stewart died on September 28, 1983, thirteen days after his arrest.[9]
Aftermath
Postmortem examination
In charge of determining Stewart's cause of death was the city's
In a second autopsy conducted a month later, Gross declared that Stewart had died from a spinal cord injury in the upper neck.[12] In his third assessment he said that Stewart died from blunt-force trauma. According to The New York Times, "Gross declined to specify what caused the injury, explaining only that 'there are a number of possibilities as to how an injury of these type can occur.' He refused to talk to press unless testifying before the grand jury."[13]
Gross said Stewart's injuries, including the facial bruising and the abrasions on his wrists sustained during his arrest, were not said to contribute to his death. Nurses said his hands and face were blue when he arrived at the hospital, and that it took 3 minutes to remove the cuffs. They also said that he had been beaten brutally.[12]
Doctors hired by Stewart's family to perform a secondary autopsy contradicted the findings in the final autopsy report done by Gross, finding that the cause of death was strangulation.[14] Gross said there was no evidence of strangulation. Stewart's eyes were not provided for examination by the doctors hired by Stewart's family.[15] The eyes were crucial because they would have shown evidence of hemorrhaging due to lack of oxygen from being strangled.[12] Claims of Gross's incompetence led the Stewart family to call for a petition to remove him as chief medical examiner claiming alleged wrongdoing and the medical examiners office cannot be trusted with the safekeeping of items.[14] Dr. Gross was later fired.[12]
Grand jury investigation and trials
A
During the five-month trial in the New York Supreme Court, some witnesses testified that Stewart was struck and kicked by officers, while other witnesses said they did not see officers beat Stewart. None were able to determine who was responsible for handling Stewart, and none were able to identify which officers took which actions at the arrest. Experts could not agree on what combination of injuries, intoxication, and cardiac health issues ended Stewart's life. Seven months into the grand jury investigation, the case was dismissed because a juror, Ronald P. Fields, initiated private investigations on the case.
In February 1984, a second grand jury introduced the case before Justice George F. Roberts which indicted three officers, John Kostick, Anthony Piscola and Henry Boerner, with criminally negligent homicide, assault and perjury. Three other officers, Sgt. Henry Hassler, Sgt. James Barry and Susan Techky, who denied that they saw officers kick Stewart, were charged with perjury. In June 1985, jury selection began in State Supreme Court in Manhattan for the trial.
Prosecutor Morgenthau went to the second trial with two theories, one of neck injury leading to the death and the other that beatings caused cardiac arrest. Prosecutors pushed for second degree manslaughter to be charged if it was determined the officers recklessly caused the death. The jury was instructed that to support a charge of criminally negligent homicide, they had to find that the officers failed to take reasonable steps to prevent death. The prosecution hoped to establish a law requiring officers to "have an affirmative duty to protect prisoners in their custody from abuse".[18]
William McKechnie, of the Transit Patrolman's Benevolent Association, denied the officers' role in the death stating, "If someone dies of a heart attack, we are not doctors".
In 1987, the Stewart family brought $40-million civil lawsuit against the eleven officers and the MTA. Consequently, hundreds of off-duty transit police officers marched along Madison Avenue in front of the MTA's headquarters carrying signs reading "End the witch hunt" and "When are we finally innocent?" In August 1990, Stewart's parents and his siblings John and Lisha Cole Stewart settled the civil lawsuit out of court for $1.7 million.[20] Neither the police nor city officials took responsibility for the death of Michael Stewart.
Reactions
Stewart's family called his death an act of racism and brutality.[9] Attorneys representing the Stewart family described Michael as "a retiring and almost docile 135-pound young artist and a Pratt Institute student" who was on his way home to his Clinton Hill, Brooklyn neighborhood where he lived with his mother, Carrie, and father, Millard, who was a retired Metropolitan Transit Authority maintenance worker.[21] They maintained that the white officers had beaten a black artist and model. It stirred public protests by black activists and others, believing that city officials were covering up for the transit police.[9]
In 1984, Franck Lazare Goldberg directed a short documentary titled Who Killed Michael Stewart? about the killing.[22]
In March 1987, the MTA determined that only one officer, John Kostick, was subject to suspension based on departmental charges of perjury. The MTA Board approved additional training for transit officers in the handling of emotionally disturbed people and changed its policies on how the department's internal affairs unit becomes involved with cases of possible misconduct.[23]
In 2025, The Man Nobody Killed: Life, Death, and Art in Michael Stewart's New York, by Elon Green was published. New York Times critic James Lasdum said the book "...is part elegy for Stewart himself, part portrait of the city that failed him. It avoids drawing explicit parallels with our own time, but then it hardly needs to."[24]
Tributes
- The death of Radio Raheem by a police choke-hold in Spike Lee's 1989 film Do the Right Thing is inspired by Michael Stewart's arrest, as confirmed by Lee on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.[25] The film is dedicated to the families of Michael Stewart and other victims of police violence in New York.[26]
- In the song "Graffiti Limbo" penned by songwriter Michelle Shocked on her Short Sharp Shocked release, an extra verse she sings live is not on the album: "You see in order to determine that Michael Stewart was strangled to death / The coroner had to use Michael Stewart's eyeballs, his eyes, as evidence, / So now when I tell you it was Michael Stewart's eyes that the coroner lost / Do you know what I mean when I say that justice is blind."[27]
- "Hold On" from Eleanor Bumpursand Michael Stewart must have appreciated that."
- Artist Jean-Michel Basquiat created Defacement (The Death of Michael Stewart) as a response to his death.[28][29][30]
- Stewart's girlfriend
- For his 1985 show at Tony Shafrazi gallery Keith Haring did a painting about Stewart's death, titled Michael Stewart – USA for Africa.[33] It depicts a black man being strangled while handcuffed to a skeleton holding a key. People from all nations drown in a river of blood below, while others shield their eyes from the scene, and the green hand of big money oversees the scene.[34]
- In his 1987 film Police State, Nick Zedd makes reference to Michael Stewart in a scene depicting a conversation between a cop and a young man, leading to an unlawful arrest. The film was a black comedy about police brutality, inspired in part by the Michael Stewart case and Operation Pressure Point, an operation designed to "clean up" and gentrify the Lower East Side of NYC.[35]
- In 2019, Chaédria LaBouvier curated a solo exhibition at the Guggenheim which included the painting by Basquiat. In addition to the painting, the history and story behind Stewart's death was examined.[28]
Legacy
Spike Lee dedicated the film Do the Right Thing to the family of Michael Stewart and other victims.[36]
References
- ^ "Who is Michael Stewart?". Basquiat's Defacement: The Project. Archived from the original on February 16, 2018. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
- ^ Nielson, Erik (September 16, 2013). "'It Could Have Been Me': The 1983 Death Of A NYC Graffiti Artist". NPR. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f Bono, Sal (December 15, 2020; updated December 19, 2020). The Case of Michael Stewart, the New York Artist Some Say Was Sentenced to Death for Drawing on Subway Tile. Inside Edition. Retrieved April 29, 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f g Krajicek, David (September 14, 2013). "Police dodge slay rap in 1983 death of graffiti artist Michael Stewart". NY Daily News. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
- ^ "JRE #1353". YouTube. September 16, 2019. Archived from the original on December 13, 2021.
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-553-41992-4.
- ^ ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
- ^ Gruson, Lindsey (September 30, 1983). "Injuries of a Police Prisoner Did Not Kill, Autopsy Finds". The New York Times: II 2:1.
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
- ^ a b c d "Who Killed Michael Stewart?". Vimeo. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
- ^ Schanberg, Sydney H. (January 14, 1984). "NEW YORK; THE STEWART CASE". The New York Times. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
- ^ a b Gopstein, Doron (March 30, 1984). "Hon. Edward I. Koch, Re: Role of Medical Examiner's Office in the investigation of the death of Michael Stewart" (PDF). La Guardia and Wagner Archives, Edward I. Koch Collection, Koch Collection Subject Files (Memorandum). New York, NY: 38. Retrieved December 26, 2017 – via LaGuardia Community College/CUNY.
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
- ^ a b Chambers, Marcia (February 22, 1984). "6 Transit Officers Indicted in Death in Graffiti Arrest". The New York Times: A 11.
- ^ Blair, By William G. (August 29, 1990). Family Gets $1.7 Million for Stewart's Death. The New York Times. Retrieved April 29, 2025.
- ^ "How Do You Know Banksy Is White? #QuestionsThatNeedAnswers". Archived from the original on December 25, 2017.
- ^ "Film/Video". FRANCK LAZARE. Retrieved December 31, 2020.[permanent dead link]
- ^ Levine, Richard (March 28, 1987). "M.T.A. Won't Charge 10 in Michael Stewart Case". The New York Times.
- ^ Lasdum, James (March 10, 2025). "The Cops Thrashed Him. Madonna, Spike Lee and Toni Morrison Took Notice." New York Times.
- ^ "Spike Lee and Jimmy Watch His Powerful Tribute to George Floyd". YouTube. June 8, 2020. Archived from the original on June 10, 2020. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
- ^ "The Enduring Urgency of Spike Lee's "Do the Right Thing" at Thirty". The New Yorker. June 28, 2019. Archived from the original on June 29, 2019. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
- ^ "Blind Justice". Archived from the original on May 17, 2009. Retrieved June 19, 2009.
- ^ ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 3, 2020.
- ^ Fretz, Eric. Jean-Michel Basquiat: A Biography. Greenwood Press, 2010. pp. xvii, 112, 180
- ^ Basquiat's Memorial To a Young Artist Killed by Police, New Yorker, July 1, 2019, retrieved March 6, 2021
- ^ Barker, Matt (July 15, 2019). "The brutal death that politicised New York's art world". BBC. Archived from the original on January 21, 2021. Retrieved January 1, 2021.
- ^ "3 Teens Kill 4 and Madonna Michael Stewart Benefit at Danceteria". Brian Butterick. February 9, 2019. Archived from the original on May 2, 2021. Retrieved May 2, 2021.
- ^ Keith Haring. Michael Stewart – USA for Africa (1985) acrylic and oil on canvas, 305 x 458 cm.
- ^ Kolossa, Alexandra Keith Haring, 1958–1990 Taschen, 2004
- ISBN 9781859843031.
- ^ Brody, Richard (June 28, 2019). "The Enduring Urgency of Spike Lee's "Do the Right Thing" at Thirty". The New Yorker. Retrieved September 8, 2021.