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| EMAIL THIS MUGSHOT TO A FRIEND |
| Best known as a member of the “Chicago
Seven” protesters at the 1968 Democratic Party Convention, David
Dellinger was a lifelong radical pacifist whose career of political
action spanned seven decades. The mugshot of Dellinger presented above
was taken in 1943 upon his arrest for failing to report for his World
War II draft physical. In fact, that arrest was Dellinger’s second
arrest for failing to comply with the draft requirements of the United
States. In 1940, when he was a student at Union Theological Seminary in
New York, Dellinger refused to register for the draft despite
assurances that he would not be drafted because of his ministerial
calling. On the first occasion, Dellinger was sent to Danbury Prison
for a year, where he protested racial segregation; on the second
occasion, Dellinger was sent to Lewisburg Maximum Security Prison for
two years. During the 1960s, Dellinger organized and led massive antiwar rallies, as well as the protests at the 1968 Democratic Party Convention which led to him being charged with conspiracy and crossing state lines with the intention of inciting a riot. Initially found guilty, Dellinger’s conviction was later overturned on the basis of Judge Julius Hoffman’s conduct and the FBI’s bugging of the defense lawyers. Dellinger’s lifelong devotion to pacifism ran contrary to the current of mainstream society during World War II, when military duty was seen as a moral obligation, and was borne out of an experience during his education at Yale University. Dellinger recalled punching a local resident during a fight at a football game and realizing that he never wanted to do it again. |