Dan White
Dan White (September 2, 1946 - October 21, 1985) was the former city supervisor of San Francisco who assassinated Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone on November 27, 1978 at City Hall. The primary motivation for the murders was likely depression and desperation after he resigned his post as city supervisor and only days later asked Moscone to reinstate him. Moscone refused, and White shot him first upon entering City Hall. He is also believed to have been motivated by homophobia—Harvey Milk was the first open homosexual to hold the position of city supervisor in San Francisco, and was perhaps the first openly gay politician in American politics. White had resigned the office of city supervisor following the passage of a gay rights bill that he had publicly opposed.
During his trial, White's attorneys produced a witness who testified that the normally-health-conscious White's increased consumption of Twinkies and other junk food showed evidence that he suffered from depression when he committed the crime. His attorneys argued that this depression was a mitigating circumstance, giving rise to the term "Twinkie defense". White was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and served five years at Soledad State Prison. Two years after his parole he killed himself with carbon monoxide from his car's exhaust.
External links
- Execution of Justice (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0176705/) Showtime original movie about the events leading up to the November 27 assassinations.