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| Black Panther Party national chairman Bobby Seale (left) and defense minister Huey Newton |
| AP/Wide World Photos |
Conflicts between Black Panthers and police in the late 1960s and early '70s led to shoot-outs in California, New York, and Chicago, one of which resulted in Newton's going to prison for the murder of a patrolman. While some members of the party were guilty of criminal acts, the group was subjected to police harassment that sometimes took the form of violent attacks, prompting congressional investigations of police activities in dealing with the Panthers. By the mid-1970s, having lost many members and having fallen out of favor with many American black leaders, who objected to the party's methods, the Panthers turned from violence to concentrate on conventional politics and on providing social services in black neighborhoods. The party was effectively disbanded by the early 1980s.

Original six Black Panthers (November, 1966)
Top left to right: Elbert "Big Man" Howard; Huey P. Newton
(Defense Minister),
Sherman Forte, Bobby Seale (Chairman). Bottom: Reggie Forte and Little
Bobby Hutton (Treasurer).