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House Votes To Reopen Civil Rights Cases

AR Articles on Liberal Myths
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How Legends are Created (Apr. 1994) (On George Washington Carver.)
The Truth About Tuskegee (Feb. 3, 2004)
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More news stories on Liberal Myths
Ben Evans, AP, June 20, 2007

The Justice Department would get more than $100 million for new prosecutors, FBI agents and other resources to revisit unsolved murders from the civil rights era under a bill passed by the House Wednesday.

The bill, which is also moving swiftly through the Senate, would authorize $10 million a year over the next decade to build on the Justice Department’s recent successes in reopening racially motivated crimes that had sat cold for decades. It also would earmark $2 million per year in grants for state and local law enforcement agencies to investigate cases in which federal prosecution isn’t practical, and an additional $1.5 million to improve coordination among investigating agencies.

The bill, passed 422-2, is named in honor of Emmett Till, a black teenager from Chicago who was beaten and murdered in Mississippi in 1955 after being accused of whistling at a white woman. His killers were never convicted.

{snip}

State and federal prosecutors have had a string of successes recently in reopening civil rights crimes from the 1950s and 1960s, including the 1963 Birmingham, Ala., church bombing and the 1964 slayings of three civil rights volunteers in Mississippi.

Most recently, prosecutors last week won the conviction of reputed Klansman James Ford Seale on federal charges of kidnapping and conspiracy in the 1964 deaths of Charles Moore and Henry Hezekiah Dee. The 19-year-olds disappeared from Franklin County, Miss., in 1964, and their bodies were found later in the Mississippi River.

The bill calls for the attorney general to appoint a deputy chief in the Justice Department and supervisory special agent at the FBI to coordinate the investigations, while leaving the agencies discretion in organizing the effort.

At a recent hearing, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Grace Chung Becker said the department plans to review at least 100 more cases, many based on files turned over by the Alabama-based Southern Poverty Law Center, which has long pressed for more prosecutions.

{snip}

Two Republicans, Ron Paul of Texas and Lynn Westmoreland of Georgia, voted against the bill.

Brian Robinson, a spokesman for Westmoreland, said the congressman supports pursuing civil rights cases where leads and evidence exist but that the Justice Department should be able to handle those cases within its existing budget.

{snip}

The bill is HR 923.

Original article

(Posted on June 20, 2007)

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