Kimbro and Sams both turned
state's evidence and admitted their roles in the killing, in exchange for reducing the charges to
second degree murder; although that crime carried a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment, both men would be freed after serving four years. Ripples from the case continued to spread when Sams testified that in killing Rackley, he had been acting on direct orders from
Bobby Seale, who had stopped by the Orchard Street headquarters on May 20 after his Yale speech. Sams also implicated
Ericka Huggins in the decision to execute Rackley. Kimbro did not corroborate Sams's evidence about Seale, and although the FBI and New Haven police gave this investigative angle their full attention, no further evidence of Seale's involvement was found. Nevertheless, both Seale and Huggins were arrested and held for trial in Connecticut. During his trial, McLucas again admitted firing the second shot into Rackley's body but insisted he had been an unwilling collaborator in the killing. Jurors listened to audio recordings the Panthers had made of Rackley's whimpering, tortured voice during his two days of agony. In September 1970, Lonnie McLucas was found guilty and sentenced to 12 to 15 years in prison. The deliberations of the racially mixed jury, which lasted 33 hours over six days, were the longest in Connecticut history to date, and the jurors acquitted McLucas of other, more serious charges, including a capital charge for kidnapping leading to death. His enormously relieved defense attorney, Theodore Roskoff, declared, "The judge was fair, the jury was fair, and, in this case, a black revolutionary was given a fair trial." In October, Seale and Huggins' trial began. Seale was represented by
Charles Garry and Huggins by
Catherine Roraback. George Sams, the one-time "field marshal", testified again. By this time, Sams was reviled by the Panthers as a traitor and accused of being a renegade psychopath who had killed Rackley on his own and who was pinning the crime on Seale to please his new masters in the "
Establishment". It was even suggested that Sams had been in cahoots with the FBI all along, that
he was the real informant and had accused and murdered Rackley to cover his tracks. ==Legacy==