Kitty Genovese was murdered in March of 1964, in Kew Gardens, Brooklyn, New York. As reported by the New York Times, 38 witnesses did nothing while she was stabbed three times over a half-hour period, screaming for help. The reports of witnesses saying "I didn't want to get involved," shocked the nation into examining its conscience, and changing the way crime reports are handled. Forty years later, the case is still used as an example of the failure of social responsibility.
Rebuts the famous New York Times article, asserting that it got most of the facts wrong. Includes transcripts of the killer's confession and witness testimony at trial, diagram of the scene, and modern photographs of the area. www.oldkewgardens.com/ss-lefferts-1100.html
Examines the social reasons why people took no action, discusses an experiment involving witnesses to a perceived emergency, and suggests that people can appeal to individual responsibility to avoid similar fates. www.objectivistcenter.org/../../..