Killing of Vincent Chin
Vincent Jen Chin (Chinese: 陳果仁; May 18, 1955 – June 23, 1982) was an American draftsman of Chinese descent who was killed in a racially motivated assault[1][2][3] by two white men, Chrysler plant supervisor Ronald Ebens and his stepson, laid-off autoworker Michael Nitz.[4] Ebens and Nitz assailed Chin following a brawl that took place at a strip club in Highland Park, Michigan, where Chin had been celebrating his bachelor party with friends in advance of his upcoming wedding. Against the backdrop of high anti-Japanese sentiment in the United States at the time – known as "Japan bashing" – they had assumed that Chin was Japanese and witnesses described them using anti-Asian racial slurs as they attacked him, ultimately beating him to death.
Killing of Vincent Chin | |
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![]() Vincent Chin | |
Location | Highland Park, Michigan, U.S. |
Date | June 19, 1982 |
Attack type | Homicide by bludgeoning, manslaughter, hate crime |
Victim | Vincent Jen Chin |
Perpetrators |
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Motive | Resentment over unemployment in auto industry, blamed on Japanese imports, Anti-Asian racism |
Verdict | State charges: Pleaded guilty to manslaughter Federal charges: Ebens guilty of one count of violation of civil rights, but verdict overturned Nitz not guilty of violation of civil rights |
Sentence | State sentences: Both perpetrators sentenced to three years of probation and $3,780 fine Federal sentence: Ebens: 25 years in prison (overturned) |
Charges | State charges: Manslaughter Second-degree murder (dropped after plea deal) Federal charges: Violation of civil rights (2 counts each) |
Litigation | Ebens ordered to pay $1.5 million to Chin's family, Nitz ordered to pay $50,000 |
Vincent Jen Chin | |||||||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 陳果仁 | ||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 陈果仁 | ||||||||||||
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Although accounts vary, the men were expelled from the club following a physical altercation. Ebens and Nitz eventually found Chin in front of a Highland Park McDonald’s. There, Nitz held Chin down while Ebens repeatedly bashed him in the head with a baseball bat. Chin was taken to Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, where he died of his injuries four days later.[5] In their first trial, Ebens and Nitz accepted a plea bargain to reduce the charges from second-degree murder to manslaughter.
Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Charles Kaufman sentenced Ebens and Nitz to three years' probation and a $3,000 fine, but no jail time. Explaining his rationale, Kaufman said that Ebens and Nitz "weren't the kind of men you send to jail ... You don't make the punishment fit the crime; you make the punishment fit the criminal."[6][7] Described by the president of the Detroit Chinese Welfare Council as a "$3,000 license to kill", the lenient sentence led to an uproar from Asian Americans and spurred the community into activism. The advocacy group American Citizens for Justice (ACJ) was formed to protest the sentencing.[7] The case has since been viewed as a critical turning point for Asian American civil rights engagement and a rallying cry for stronger federal hate crime legislation.[8]
Background
Vincent Chin was born on May 18, 1955, in Guangdong province, Mainland China.[5] He was the only child of Bing Hing "David" Chin (a.k.a. C.W. Hing) and Lily Chin (née Yee).[9] His father earned the right to bring a Chinese bride into the United States through his service in World War II. After Lily suffered a miscarriage in 1949 and was unable to have children, the couple adopted Vincent from a Chinese orphanage in 1961.[5][10]
Throughout most of the 1960s, Chin grew up in Highland Park. In 1971, after the elderly Hing was mugged, the family moved to Oak Park, Michigan. Vincent Chin graduated from Oak Park High School in 1973, going on to study at Control Data Institute[11]: 58 and Lawrence Tech.[12] At the time of his death, he was employed as an industrial draftsman at Efficient Engineering, an automotive supplier, and waiting tables on weekends[10][13] at the Golden Star restaurant in Ferndale, Michigan.[4] He was engaged to be married on June 28, 1982.[14]
During an economic recession in the early 1980s, the decline of the auto industry provoked resentment toward imported Japanese cars, especially in Detroit, the center of the automotive industry in the United States. "Japan bashing" became popular with politicians such as U.S. representative from Michigan John Dingell, who blamed "little yellow men" for domestic automakers' misfortune. Anti-Asian racism often accompanied campaigns urging consumers to "Buy American".[15]
Homicide
On June 19, 1982, Chin was having a bachelor party with his friends Jimmy Choi, Gary Koivu and Robert Siroskey at the Fancy Pants Club in Highland Park (he was to be married eight days later).[16] Seated across the stage from them were two white men, Chrysler plant supervisor Ronald Ebens and his stepson, laid-off autoworker Michael Nitz.[4] According to an interview by American documentary filmmaker Michael Moore for the Detroit Free Press, after Chin gave a white stripper a generous gratuity, Ebens shouted, "Hey, you little motherfuckers!" and told the black dancer, "Don't pay any attention to those little fuckers, they wouldn't know a good dancer if they'd seen one."[16] Racine Colwell, a dancer at the bar, later testified that Ebens said, "It's because of you little motherfuckers that we're out of work".[17][18][19] This statement later provided the evidence for civil rights litigation against Ebens.[20] He later claimed the argument was not about Chin's race but the black dancer's gratuity.[16]
Ebens claimed that Chin walked over to Ebens and Nitz and threw a punch at Ebens' jaw.[16] The fight escalated as Nitz shoved Chin in defense of his stepfather, and Chin countered.[16] One of the dancers reported that Ebens and Chin picked up chairs and started swinging them at each other.[15] Nitz suffered a cut on his head from a chair that Ebens had intended to use to strike Chin.[16] Chin and his friends left the room, while a bouncer led Ebens and Nitz to the restroom to clean up the wound. While they were there, Robert Siroskey, one of Chin's friends, came back inside to use the restroom. He apologized to the group, stating that Chin had a few drinks because of his bachelor's party. Ebens and Nitz had also been drinking that night, although not at the club, which did not serve alcohol. Jimmy Choi also reentered the club to look for Siroskey.
When Ebens and Nitz left the club, they encountered Chin and his friends who were waiting outside for Siroskey. Chin called Ebens a "chicken shit", at which point Nitz retrieved a baseball bat from his car and Chin and his friends ran down the street.[16] Ebens and Nitz searched the neighborhood for 20 to 30 minutes and even paid another man 20 dollars to help look for Chin, before finding him at a McDonald's restaurant. Chin tried to escape but was held by Nitz while Ebens repeatedly bludgeoned Chin with a baseball bat until Chin's head cracked open.[21] Ebens was arrested and taken into custody at the scene of the crime by two off-duty police officers who had witnessed the beating.[22] One of the officers said that Ebens wielded the bat like he was swinging "for a home run".[21]
Michael Gardenhire, one of the two police officers, called for an ambulance.[23] Chin was rushed to Henry Ford Hospital, arriving unconscious. He died on June 23, 1982, after remaining in a coma for four days.[5][23]
Legal proceedings
State criminal charges
Ebens and Nitz were charged with second-degree murder, but accepted a plea bargain to reduce the charges to manslaughter.[6][24] They were sentenced by Wayne County Circuit Judge Charles Kaufman to three years' probation and were each ordered to pay a $3,000 fine plus $780 in court costs, but received no jail time.[6][24]
Kaufman explained his light sentences based on Ebens's and Nitz's lack of previous criminal records, their stability in the community, and his opinion that the two would not go on to harm anyone else.[15] He said in justifying his decision that Ebens and Nitz "weren't the kind of men you send to jail"[6][7] and "You don’t make the punishment fit the crime; you make the punishment fit the criminal".[6][15] Kaufman argued that the assault was "the continuation of a fight that Mr. Chin apparently started", and that had the incident been a case of self-defense, Ebens and Nitz "would not be guilty of anything."[15] Kaufman had been a Japanese-held prisoner of war during World War II,[1][6] but denied that any anti-Asian sentiment had influenced his ruling.[1]
The Detroit Free Press argued in an editorial that "the overall handling of the Chin case seems disturbingly casual", remarking on the limited evidence presented at sentencing, the reduced charges due to plea bargaining, the lack of a prosecutor at the hearing to argue for a harsher sentence, and Kaufman's disregarding of the pre-sentence report's recommendation of imprisonment. The editorial concluded that the "result was a process that made Vincent Chin's life seem cheap and the criminal justice system either callous or perverse".[25]

The lenient sentences angered the Asian-American communities in the Detroit area and across the United States, who saw it as a sign of public indifference toward racism directed at Asian Americans.[6] The president of the Detroit Chinese Welfare Council said the verdict amounted to a "$3,000 license to kill" Chinese Americans.[8] Asian Americans across the country were spurred into activism; the advocacy group American Citizens for Justice (ACJ) was formed to protest the sentencing[7] and began working toward a judicial appeal.[6] The case has since been viewed as a critical turning point for Asian American civil rights engagement and a rallying cry for stronger federal hate crime legislation.[8]
Federal civil rights charges
At the time, government officials, politicians, and several prominent legal organizations generally dismissed the theory that civil rights law should be applied to the beating of Chin. The Detroit chapters of the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Lawyers Guild did not consider Chin's killing a violation of his civil rights.[26] At first, the ACJ was the only group that supported applying existing civil rights laws to Asian Americans. Eventually, the national body of the National Lawyers Guild endorsed its efforts.[27]
Journalist Helen Zia and lawyer Liza Chan (traditional Chinese: 陳綽薇; simplified Chinese: 陈绰薇; pinyin: Chén Chuòwēi) led the fight for federal charges,[28] which resulted in the two killers being accused of two counts of violating Chin's civil rights, under section 245 of title 18 of the United States Code.[29]
The 1984 federal civil rights case against the men found Ebens guilty of the second count and sentenced him to 25 years in prison; Nitz was acquitted of both counts. Ebens' conviction was overturned in 1986—a federal appeals court found that an attorney for the ACJ had improperly coached witnesses.[6][30] Chin's friend Jimmy Choi had at first supported Ebens' version of no racial animosity or epithets and that Chin threw a chair that injured Nitz, but he changed his statement after meeting the ACJ attorney.[16][31]
After the verdict, the ACJ once again mobilized to press the Department of Justice for a retrial,[6] which took place in Cincinnati. U.S. District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor explained that Ebens could not be given a "fair and impartial trial" in Metro Detroit due to the "saturation of publicity" surrounding the case.[32] This trial, before a mostly white and male jury,[20] resulted in Ebens being acquitted on all charges.[6][33]
Civil suits
A civil suit for the unlawful death of Chin was settled out of court on March 23, 1987. Michael Nitz was ordered to pay $50,000. Ronald Ebens was ordered to pay $1.5 million, at $200/month for the first two years and 25% of his income or $200/month thereafter, whichever was greater. This represented the projected loss of income from Chin's engineering position, as well as Lily Chin's loss of Vincent's services as a laborer and driver.[34] Ebens left the state[6] and stopped making payments in 1989.[20]
In November 1989, Ebens reappeared in court for a creditor's hearing, where he detailed his finances and reportedly pledged to make good on his debt to the Chin estate.[35] However, in 1997,[36] the Chin estate was forced to renew the civil suit, as it was allowed to do every ten years.[34] With accrued interest and other charges, the adjusted total became $4,683,653.89.[36] Ebens sought in 2015 to have the resulting lien against his house vacated.[37]
Aftermath and legacy
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Chin was interred in Detroit's Forest Lawn Cemetery.[38] In September 1987, Chin's mother, Lily, moved from Oak Park back to her hometown of Guangzhou, China, reportedly to avoid being reminded of her son's death. She returned to the United States for medical treatment in late 2001 and died on June 9, 2002. Prior to her death, Lily Chin established a scholarship in Vincent's memory, to be administered by the ACJ.[39]
The attack was considered a hate crime by many,[6] but it predated the passage of hate crime laws in the United States. The ACJ quickly gained the support of diverse ethnic and religious groups, advocacy organizations, and politicians such as the Detroit City Council president and Congressman John Conyers.[40] Conyers later introduced multiple hate crimes bills from 1999 to 2009.
Chin's case has been cited by some Asian Americans in support of the idea that they are considered "perpetual foreigners" in contrast to "real" Americans who are considered full citizens.[41][42][43] Lily Chin stated: "What kind of law is this? What kind of justice? This happened because my son is Chinese. If two Chinese killed a white person, they must go to jail, maybe for their whole lives... Something is wrong with this country."[44]
Sociologist Meghan A. Burke writes that Chin's killing prompted the creation of activist coalitions and a shared sense of pan-Asian identity "for the first time in U.S. history".[6] In 2010, the city of Ferndale, Michigan, erected a legal milestone marker at the intersection of Woodward Avenue and 9 Mile Road in memorial of the killing of Chin.[45]
In media
Documentaries
- Who Killed Vincent Chin? (1988), documentary by Renee Tajima and Christine Choy. Nominated for a 1989 Academy Award for Best Documentary.[46]
- Vincent Who? (2009), documentary written and produced by Curtis Chin and directed by Tony Lam.
- "Killer Swing", Fatal Encounters. Investigation Discovery. July 23, 2013.[47]
- Who Killed Vincent Chin?' Revisited, Making Michigan More Competitive. One Detroit. June 9, 2022.[48]
In popular culture
- Because They Thought He Was... is a sculpture by Consuelo Echeverria. It is a life-size depiction of the incident made from forged steel auto parts.[49]
- In 1998, a play based on the case, Cherylene Lee's Carry the Tiger to the Mountain, was performed at the Contemporary American Theater Festival in Shepherdstown, West Virginia.[50] The West End Theatre in Manhattan performed the play in June 2007 as part of the first National Asian American Theater Festival.[51]
- Chin is referenced in the Blue Scholars' song "Morning of America".[52]
- Chin is referenced in The Dead Milkmen song "Anthropology Days".[53]
- On January 30, 2013, Judge Denny Chin along with faculty and professors from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law performed a re-enactment of the Vincent Chin trial.[54][55]
- Referenced in The Twilight Zone, season 1, episode 21, titled "Wong's Lost and Found Emporium" (aired November 22, 1985), as a central reason for the protagonist to have lost his compassion.
- The story of Vincent Chin's killing as told by his childhood friend, is the main subject of the 3rd section, titled Jade, of Peter Ho Davies' 2016 book The Fortunes.[56]
- Chin is referenced in the June 7, 2021, episode of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver about Asian Americans.
- Chin is referenced in the poem "Oriental Rat Flea" by Bryan Thao Worra.
- May 19, 2022, a Grey's Anatomy episode listed Chin's name during a discussion surrounding hate crimes committed against Asian Americans.
Other
- In 1983, Lily Chin appeared on The Phil Donahue Show in order to bring public attention to the case.[57]
- The 2001 book A Day for Vincent Chin and Me by Jacqueline Turner Banks (ISBN 978-0-618-54879-8) is about a Japanese-American child's efforts to slow down the traffic on a residential street in Kentucky, while his parents mount a local protest in support of the Chin case.
- In 2018, Annie Tan, Chin's first cousin once removed, told the story of her discovery of her connection with Chin as played as a part of The Moth Radio Hour.[58]
See also
References
- Fukurai, Hiroshi; Butler, Edgar W.; Krooth, Richard (1993). Race and the Jury: Racial Disenfranchisement and the Search for Justice. New York: Plenum Press. pp. 7–8. ISBN 978-0-306-44144-8.
- Civil rights issues facing Asian Americans in the 1990s. Washington, D.C.: United States Commission on Civil Rights; U.S. Government Printing Office. February 1992. p. 25. OCLC 1084220292.
- Niiya, Brian (ed.); Japanese American National Museum (1993). Japanese American History: An A-to-Z Reference from 1868 to the Present. New York: Facts on File. p. 117. ISBN 978-0-8160-2680-7.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link) - Kich, Martin (2019). "The Murder of Vincent Chin, 1982". In Dong, Lan (ed.). 25 Events that Shaped Asian American History: An Encyclopedia of the American Mosaic. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood Press. p. 374. ISBN 978-1-4408-6089-8.
- Lee, Jonathan H. X. (2015). Chinese Americans: The History and Culture of a People. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO. pp. 26–28. ISBN 978-1-61069-550-3.
- Burke, Meghan A. (2008). "Chin, Vincent (1955-1982)". In Schaefer, Richard T. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity, and Society. SAGE Publications. pp. 276–278. ISBN 978-1-4129-2694-2.
- Phe, Nicole P.; Yap, Elaine (May 20, 2022). "40 Years After Vincent Chin". The National Law Review. ISSN 2161-3362. Retrieved April 17, 2023.
- Fish, Eric (June 16, 2017). "35 Years After Vincent Chin's Murder, How Has America Changed?". Asia Society. Retrieved April 17, 2023.
- Wu, Frank H. (June 29, 2012). "難忘陳果仁" [Why Vincent Chin Matters]. The New York Times (in English and Chinese (China)). Retrieved April 9, 2021.
- Darden, Joe T.; Thomas, Richard W. (2013). "The Declining Auto Industry and Anti-Asian Racism: The Murder of Vincent Chin". Detroit: Race Riots, Racial Conflicts, and Efforts to Bridge the Racial Divide. Michigan State University Press. pp. 158–159. ISBN 978-1-60917-352-4.
- Zia, Helen (2000). "Detroit Blues: 'Because of You Motherfuckers'". Asian American Dreams: The Emergence of an American People. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 55–81. ISBN 978-0-374-52736-5. Reprinted in: Wu, Jean Yu-wen Shen; Chen, Thomas C., eds. (2010). Asian American Studies Now: A Critical Reader. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press. pp. 35 ff. ISBN 978-0-8135-4933-0.
- Aguilar, Louis (June 24, 2017). "Estate of Vincent Chin seeks millions from his killer". The Detroit News. Retrieved April 17, 2023.
- Zia (2000), p. 58.
- Flanigan, Brian (July 1, 1982). "Slaying ends couple's dream". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1, 15A. ISSN 1055-2758. Retrieved April 17, 2023 – via Freep.newspapers.com.
- Darden & Thomas (2013), p. 156.
- Moore, Michael (August 30, 1987). "The Man Who Killed Vincent Chin". Sunday Magazine. Detroit Free Press. 12–17, 20. ISSN 1055-2758.
- Ma, Sheng-mei (2000). The Deathly Embrace: Orientalism and Asian American Identity. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-8166-3711-9.
- Chang, Robert S. (1998). "Dreaming in Black and White: Racial-Sexual Policing in The Birth of a Nation, The Cheat, and Who Killed Vincent Chin?" (PDF). Asian Law Journal. 5. Note 68, p. 57. ISSN 1078-439X.
- Fishbein, Leslie (1995). "Who Killed Vincent Chin? (1988): Ethnicity and a Babble of Discourses". Film-Historia. 5 (2–3): 137–146. ISSN 2014-668X.
- Loth, Lydie R. (2016). "Chin, Vincent Jen, Murder of (1982)". In Chermak, Steven; Bailey, Frankie Y. (eds.). Crimes of the Centuries: Notorious Crimes, Criminals, and Criminal Trials in American History, Volume 1. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO. pp. 162–164. ISBN 978-1-61069-594-7.
- Hung, Louise (June 28, 2017). "35 years after Vincent Chin's brutal murder, nothing has changed". Global Comment. Retrieved August 9, 2017.
- Weingarten, Paul (July 31, 1983). "Deadly Encounter". Chicago Tribune. ISSN 1085-6706.
- Kich (2019), p. 375.
- Zia (2000), p. 60.
- Darden & Thomas (2013), pp. 156–157.
- Darden & Thomas (2013), p. 179.
- Zia (2000), p. 72.
- Ni, Ching-Ching (July 25, 2010). "Irvin R. Lai dies at 83; Chinese American community leader in Los Angeles". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 17, 2023.
- "Fourteenth Amendment. State Action. Seventh Circuit Recognizes a Broader State Duty to Act. Ross v. United States, 910 F.2d 1422 (7th Cir. 1990)". Harvard Law Review. 104 (5): 1147–1153. March 1991. doi:10.2307/1341678. ISSN 0017-811X. JSTOR 1341678.
- US. v. Ebens, 800 F.2d 1422 (U.S. App. 6th Cir. 1986).
- Guillermo, Emil (June 12, 2012). "Ronald Ebens, the man who killed Vincent Chin, apologizes 30 years later". Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund. Retrieved May 2, 2023.
- Darden & Thomas (2013), p. 173.
- "United States v. Ebens, 800 F.2d 1422 | Casetext Search + Citator". casetext.com. Retrieved September 5, 2022.
- Henry Yee and the Estate of Vincent Chin (deceased) vs. Ronald Ebens, Michael Nitz, and Fancy Pants lounge, 83-309788 CZ (Mich 3rd Cir 1983).
- Finkelstein, Jim (November 30, 1989). "The Man Convicted In Chin Case Pledges To Make Good On Debt". Detroit Free Press. p. 1B. ISSN 1055-2758.
- Paul Dufault, Temporary Person Representative of the Estate of Vincent Jen Chin, Deceased, vs. Ronald M. Ebens, 97-727321-CZ (Mich 3rd Cir 1997).
- Guillermo, Emil; Wang, Frances Kai-Hwa (December 11, 2015). "Man Charged With Vincent Chin's Death Seeks Lien Removed, Still Owes Millions". NBC News. Retrieved July 7, 2016.
- Lewis, Shawn D. (June 21, 2012). "30 years later, Vincent Chin's family awaits justice in fatal beating". The Detroit News. Archived from the original on February 2, 2014.
- "OCA Mourns Death of Lily Chin" (Press release). June 10, 2002. Archived from the original on August 3, 2017 – via Asian American Council (Dayton, Ohio).
- Zia (2000), p. 69.
- Wei, William (June 14, 2002). "An American Hate Crime: The Murder of Vincent Chin". Tolerance.org. Southern Poverty Law Center. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007.
- Wu, Frank H. (Winter 2002). "Where are You Really From?: Asian Americans and the Perpetual Foreigner Syndrome" (PDF). Civil Rights Journal. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. 6 (1): 22. OCLC 1236195306.
- Le, C. N. (n.d.). "Anti-Asian Racism & Violence". Asian-Nation: The Landscape of Asian America. Retrieved April 17, 2023.
- Chang, Iris (2003). The Chinese in America: A Narrative History. New York: Viking. p. 320. ISBN 978-0-670-03123-8.
- Minnis, John (January 6, 2011). "Plaque commemorating Vincent Chin case erected in Ferndale". Legalnews.com. Retrieved November 25, 2019.
- "Multicultural Studies: Who Killed Vincent Chin?". Filmakers Library. Archived from the original on October 20, 2006.
- Video on YouTube
- Who Killed Vincent Chin?' Revisited, Making Michigan More Competitive, retrieved July 17, 2022
- Zia (2000), p. 81.
- "Race and the Performing Arts". Morning Edition (audio file). July 20, 1998. NPR.
- "Carry the Tiger to the Mountain: Pan Asian Repertory Theater: By Cherylene Lee: Directed by Ron Nakahara". National Asian American Theater Festival. n.d. Archived from the original on August 14, 2007.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - Patrin, Nate (June 5, 2007). "Blue Scholars: Bayani Album Review". Pitchfork. Retrieved June 21, 2018.
- "The Dead Milkmen – Anthropology Days". Genius. Retrieved June 21, 2018.
- Video on YouTube
- UC Hastings College of the Law, The Killing of Vincent Chin Archived January 15, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, January 14, 2014.
- Thien, Madeleine (September 2, 2016). "The Fortunes by Peter Ho Davies review – what does it mean to be Chinese-American?". The Guardian. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
- "American Citizens for Justice Records: 1983–2004". Bentley Historical Library. University of Michigan. Retrieved June 21, 2018.
The Vincent Chin Case and Aftermath series (0.5 linear feet, 1983–1989) contains files relating to the Vincent Chin incident and legal case, including clippings and articles, ACJ's involvement with the case (court watch documents, petitions, remembrance services), as well as public reaction, including response letters from viewers of a Phil Donahue show that covered the Chin case in 1983.
- Tan, Annie (October 2, 2018). "Remembering Vincent". The Moth (audio file). Retrieved April 17, 2023.
Further reading
- "CAPAC Marks the 30th Anniversary of Vincent Chin's Murder" (Press release). Washington, D.C.: Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus. June 22, 2012.
- Ho, Christine (n.d.). "The Model Minority Awakened: The Murder of Vincent Chin - Part 1". USAsians.net. Archived from the original on October 11, 2022.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - Jones, Shannon (June 23, 2012). "Thirty years since the murder of Vincent Chin". World Socialist Web Site.
- Perez, Tom (June 25, 2012). "Remembering Vincent Chin". Washington, D.C.: Office of Public Affairs, United States Department of Justice.
- "Vincent Chin is murdered". This Day in History. History.com. A&E Television Networks. March 26, 2021.
- Wang, Frances Kai-Hwa (June 15, 2017). "Who Is Vincent Chin? The History and Relevance of a 1982 Killing". NBC News.
- Wilkinson, Sook; Jew, Victor, eds. (2015). Asian Americans in Michigan: Voices from the Midwest. Detroit: Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-3974-9.
- Wu, Frank H. (2002). Yellow: Race in America Beyond Black and White. New York: Basic Books. pp. 70–71. ISBN 978-0-465-00639-7.
- Yip, Alethea (June 5–13, 1997). "Remembering Vincent Chin". AsianWeek. Vol. 18, no. 43. ISSN 0195-2056. Archived from the original on June 2, 2007.
- Yoo, Paula (2021). From a Whisper to a Rallying Cry: The Killing of Vincent Chin and the Trial that Galvanized the Asian American Movement. New York: Norton Young Readers. ISBN 978-1-324-00288-8.
External links
- American Citizens for Justice Archived November 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- Partial transcripts from Who Killed Vincent Chin? at the Wayback Machine (archived August 23, 2002)
- Opening lecture at the 5th Annual Conference in Citizenship Studies: Boundaries, March 27–29, 2008, by Frank H. Wu, Wayne State University
- US v. Ebens appellate ruling
- VincentChin.net at the Wayback Machine (archived August 9, 2007)
- Vincent Chin page at McMurder.com
- Vincent Who? (2009) – Official Movie Site