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Klansman arrested in 1964 killings of civil rights workers
By Peter Daniels
19 January 2005
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More than 40 years after the killings of three civil rights
workers in Philadelphia, Mississippian atrocity that made
the town a symbol of racism in the bitter struggle to dismantle
Jim Crow segregation in the United Statesthe first murder
charge has been brought in the case. A longtime leader of the
Ku Klux Klan, Edgar Ray Killen, now 79 years old, was arrested
early this month. Killen has been freed on $250,000 bail, and
his trial has been set for March 28.
Killens name is well known in connection with the murders
of Michael Schwerner, Andrew Goodman and James Chaney, which took
place on the night of June 21, 1964. In 1967, he was among 18
Klansmen who were tried on federal civil rights charges, after
local and state authorities refused to take action. Seven of these
defendants were convicted and received light sentences, ranging
from 3 years to 10 years. None served more than six years, and
Killen himself was released when the jury deadlocked 11-to-1 for
conviction.
The circumstances of the killings were brought out at the 1967
trial, with further details added through interviews and revelations
from the surviving murderers in subsequent decades. Schwerner
was the main target in the murders. A native of New York City
and a 24-year-old graduate of Cornell University, he had arrived
in Mississippi with his wife Rita in January of that year, and
had been working for the Congress of Racial Equality.
Chaney, a 21-year-old black man from Meridian, Mississippi,
had been working closely with Schwerner.
Goodman, 20 years old and a student at Queens College, came
from the Upper West Side of Manhattan, and had arrived in Mississippi
only a day before he was killed.
The three men were among the many participants in Freedom Summer,
a voter registration drive that brought together black and white
workers and youth from around the country to challenge the racist
exclusion of black voters.
The three civil rights workers were arrested for speeding
on the afternoon of June 21. While they were held in the sheriffs
office in Philadelphia, Mississippi, Deputy Sheriff Cecil Price
relayed information on them to local Klansmen, including Killen,
who organized a group for the purpose of following and killing
them when they were released from jail later that night.
Chaney was beaten to death and Schwerner and Goodman were shot
in the chest. Their bodies were buried under a dam on a nearby
farm, and not discovered until six weeks later.
After the 1967 trials, the case of the murdered civil rights
workers languished for decades. It was reopened in 1999, after
a Jackson, Mississippi, newspaper published excerpts from a secret
interview with Sam Bowers, a Klan leader who had been found guilty
in the federal trial and had later been sentenced to life in prison
in connection with another civil rights murder, the 1966 firebombing
that took the life of Vernon Dahmer.
In 2004, a grand jury reportedly heard accounts from witnesses
and individuals who had direct knowledge of the 1964 murders.
Additional evidence for the long-delayed prosecution was found
in the files of the State Sovereignty Commission, founded in 1956
to spy on opponents of racism and segregation. The commission,
before it was abolished in 1977, gathered evidence on 87,000 individuals,
and included information on the murders of Goodman, Schwerner
and Chaney. These files were only opened in recent years.
The indictment of Klansman Killen is one of a series of high-profile
cases which have been prosecuted or reopened in the past decade.
These include the 1994 trial and conviction of Byron de la Beckwith
in the 1963 assassination of civil rights leader Medgar Evers,
the 1998 conviction of Sam Bowers in the above-mentioned killing
of Vernon Dahmer, and the 2002 conviction of Bobby Frank Cherry
in the killing of four young girls in the infamous 1963 Birmingham,
Alabama, church bombing.
While the new prosecution makes possible a fuller historical
accounting and a measure of justice for those who gave their lives
fighting for equality, the latest turn in this case highlights
the extent to which this struggle continues today, although under
transformed conditions.
The year 1964 was in many respects a turning point in the struggle
against Jim Crow. The Philadelphia, Mississippi, murders helped
to galvanize support for both the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and
the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
While Jim Crow was ended, the social and economic system of
capitalism that gave rise to it endured. Some of the relatives
of the civil rights martyrs alluded to the continuation of social
inequality in remarks to the media in the past week. James Chaneys
mother, Fannie Lee Chaney, who now lives in New Jersey, told the
New York Times that she had visited Jamess grave
in Meridian last July. The black people, I see, got a little
nicer houses and got a little better jobs in some places,
she said. Thats all I see changed.
Stephen Schwerner, a retired college professor and Michael
Schwerners brother, referred to a course he once taught
on the civil rights movement. Whats important for
students to realize is that this was not ancient history, people
still alive were involved in this, and that we still have a long,
long way to go.
The political compromise that ended Jim Crow is symbolized
in the fact that so many of the Klansmen involved in the 1964
killings either received light sentences or got off scot-free.
Killen has lived for the past four decades as a sawmill operator
and a fundamentalist preacher. While denying involvement in the
killings, he has openly defended them. In an interview with the
Jackson Clarion-Ledger last year, he said of the killers
of the civil rights workers, Im not going to say they
were wrong. I believe in self-defense.
This issue transcends the individual fate of these killers.
Much has changed since 1964, but much also remains essentially
the same. A system of unequal justice, reflected in prison and
parole statistics and the permanent voting disenfranchisement
of convicted felons, endures today not only in the South, but
throughout the United States.
The political descendants of the politicians and police who
conspired in the killings of Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner
and James Chaney continue to wield political power today. In 1964,
the racists played their role primarily through the Democratic
Party. For decades, Southern Democratic officials were granted
national political influence out of all proportion to their numbers,
as a means of dividing the working class and defending the interests
of the ruling elite.
In the 1960s, however, the Southern Dixiecrats began deserting
the Democratic Party for the Republican Party, which sought to
recruit them in order to establish a base for itself in the South.
Today, their political heirs are a key component of the ultra-right
forces in the Republican Party that play a leading role within
the Bush White House.
These elements do not rule in the old way, and they are usually
careful to declaim hypocritically on the importance of equal rightswhile
signaling their support for racism. Ronald Reagan perfected this
technique. As the place to launch his 1980 presidential campaign,
he choseof all the cities and towns across the United StatesPhiladelphia,
Mississippi, in order to show his understanding of
Southern traditions. He followed this with demagogic
attacks on welfare cheats, along with other code words
and slogans designed to pit employed against unemployed, and white
against black workers.
Occasionally, some political figure will step over the line.
When then-Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott of Mississippi uttered
impolitic comments lauding 1948 Dixiecrat presidential candidate
Strom Thurmond on his 100th birthday two years ago, Lott paid
for his indiscretion with the loss of his leadership post.
Jim Crow is no more, and incidents of racist terror are not
the commonplace they were in earlier times, but racial inequality
and discrimination remain, continuing to fulfill the needs of
the profit system. The Southern political establishment continues
to function as a bulwark of reaction. A thin layer of the black
upper-middle-class, along with political functionaries, has benefited
from the dismantling of certain racial barriers, but most workers
have not.
Today, the struggle to defend democratic rights and achieve
social equality, the cause that Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner
and James Chaney fought and died for, raises the need more urgently
than ever to unite the working class against the governing plutocracy
in a political struggle against the profit system and for socialism.
See Also:
"Strange Fruit":
the story of a song
[8 February 2002]
Pennsylvania mayor
arraigned for 1969 racist murder
[7 August 2001]
Pennsylvanian mayor
indicted for murder of black woman during civil rights era
[25 May 2001]
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