Police close decades old case involving slaying at Rolling Stones concertOAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Nearly 36 years after a slaying at a Rolling Stones concert at Altmont Speedway marked the end of the peace-and-love ’60s, investigators have closed the case, dismissing a theory that a second Hells Angel took part in the stabbing.
Meredith Hunter, 18, was killed during the free concert on Dec. 6, 1969, that was billed as a West Coast Woodstock. The concert, which drew an estimated 300,000 people, was later immortalized in the film documentary Gimme Shelter.
As the Stones played on stage, a member of the Hells Angels motorcycle gang, hired by the band to provide security, stabbed and killed the young man.
Alan Passaro was acquitted after a jury concluded he acted in self-defence because Hunter was carrying a gun. But there had been rumours over the years that a second unidentified assailant had inflicted the fatal wounds, and the case remained open.
But Sgt. Scott Dudek of the Alameda County Sheriff’s Department, said Wednesday that after a renewed investigation over the last two years, authorities concluded that Passaro, who died in 1985, was the only person to stab Hunter and did so only after Hunter pointed a gun at the stage.
Dudek said Passaro’s lawyer confirmed his client was the lone assailant. In addition, enhanced and slowed-down footage from the film shows Hunter brandishing the gun just before Passaro leaps from the stage and stabs him, Dudek said.
Hunter’s relatives said Wednesday they had always held out hope that someone would be convicted in the case. “The problem is the wounds that have been reopened are still devastating to the family,” Hunter’s sister, Dixie Ward, 63, told the San Francisco Chronicle.
― Huk-L, Thursday, 26 May 2005 17:00 (twenty-one years ago)
I have no opinion on the case except that I vaguely remember the gun in question being captured on film. I don't know anyone in security, however, who thinks the Angels were blameless...
― Pete Scholtes, Tuesday, 31 May 2005 20:50 (twenty-one years ago)
four years pass...
I have always wondered how the hippies & freaks perceived Altamont at the time it took place, because now rock writers frequently use the term Altamont as shorthand for "end of an era" in which the tide turned on hippie optimism. Why is this so? Not to downplay Mr. Hunter's death, I think it's very tragic, but wasn't someone killed at Woodstock too? were the post Woodstock expectations for a festival just too high? it seemes like some kind of collective mellow got harshed after this went down
― lukevalentine, Monday, 7 December 2009 17:55 (sixteen years ago)