Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 1 de may. de 2015 · 1 mayo 2015. Reuters. Gray, de 25 años, murió de lesiones en la médula espinal mientras estaba bajo custodia policial. La fiscal del estado de Maryland para Baltimore, Marilyn Mosby, anunció ...

  2. 5 de jul. de 2022 · Civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., left, and attorney Fred Gray, whom King called 'the brilliant young Negro who later became the chief counsel for the protest movement,' at a political ...

  3. 8 de jul. de 2022 · By: Jonathan Entin | Updated: Jul 8, 2022. Civil rights icon and attorney Fred Gray spoke about his former client Claudette Colvin, in October 2021, in Montgomery, Alabama, shortly after Colvin petitioned for her juvenile record to be expunged. Colvin was arrested in 1955 at age 15 and placed on indefinite probation in Montgomery for violating ...

  4. 14 de ago. de 2022 · Fred Gray and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., break into laughter at a joke told by a speaker at a political rally in Tuskegee, Ala., on April 29, 1966.

  5. 7 de jul. de 2022 · Over the past seven decades, longtime Alabama civil rights lawyer Fred Gray represented Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr. and the victims of the infamous Tuskegee syphilis experiment, in which the U.S. Public Health Service refused for decades to provide readily available treatment to Black men who had the disease. Gray played important roles in […]

  6. Fred Gray (1930- ) is a prominent Alabama civil rights attorney whose clients have included Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, and the victims of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. When he opened his Montgomery law office in 1954, Gray was one of the few African American attorneys in the state. His career blossomed in the context of the civil rights ...

  7. 1 de ene. de 2013 · First published in 1995, Bus Ride to Justice, the best-selling autobiography by acclaimed civil rights attorney Fred D. Gray, appears now in a newly revised edition that updates Gray's remarkable career of "destroying everything segregated that I could find." Of particular interest will be the details Gray reveals for the first time about Rosa Parks's 1955 arrest.