SMRs and AMRs

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Unsolved Crimes of the Civil Rights Era


Associated Press — NATCHEZ, MISS., FEB. 28, 1967 — The scene at a car bombing that killed Wharlest Jackson, one of many racially motivated and unsolved crimes from the era.

When Cold Cases Stay Cold

By DAN BARRY, CAMPBELL ROBERTSON and ROBBIE BROWN, NYT
Published: March 16, 2013

FERRIDAY, La. — In the spring of 1965, the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Washington received a letter from Concordia Parish in northeastern Louisiana. Addressed to the bureau’s director, J. Edgar Hoover, the letter pleaded for justice in the killing of a well-respected black merchant.

A few months earlier, the businessman, Frank Morris, had come upon two white men early one morning at the front of his shoe-repair shop, one pointing a shotgun at him, the other holding a canister of gas. A match was ignited, a conflagration begun, and Morris died four days later of his burns without naming the men, perhaps fearing retribution against his family.

The letter expressed grave concern that the crime would go unpunished because the local police were probably complicit. “Your office is our only hope so don’t fail us,” it concluded. It was signed:

“Yours truly, The Colored People of Concordia Parish.”

(More here.)

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