On August 21, 1971, days before the Soledad Brothers trial was set to start in the Mills murder case, George Jackson allegedly launched a riot and an escape attempt at San Quentin with a 9 mm
pistol. There is controversy over the course of events that led to him obtaining the firearm.
Stephen Bingham, who replaced Fay Stender as Jackson's attorney, had just visited his client. Prison officials claimed that Bingham smuggled Jackson an
Afro wig with a pistol hidden inside. They further alleged that as Jackson walked back to his cell after meeting with Bingham, a prison guard noticed a gun protruding from Jackson's Afro, and asked to see the object. Jackson's response was to pull the gun from his hair, release an entire floor of prisoners from the maximum-security wing, while announcing, "This is it, gentlemen, the Dragon has come!" In the melee that followed, three guards were killed—as were two prisoners suspected of being snitches—before Jackson rushed out into the yard where he was shot and killed by a guard. Other people involved in the case believe Jackson's death was a setup by prison authorities, who conspired to supply him with a gun in the hope that he would be killed in the melee, allegedly because they regarded his prison leadership as a threat to their control. Inconsistencies in the stories, although common among eyewitnesses in many crimes, fueled the controversy and helped to set off
an uprising at
Attica Correctional Facility in New York less than three weeks later. Bingham's acquittal in 1986 on charges that he smuggled Jackson a gun and a wig, and was thereby responsible for the escape attempt and murders, occurred after he emerged from hiding 13 years later to stand trial. ==Trial==