Edgar Ray "
Preacher" Killen (born
January 17, 1925) is a former
Ku Klux Klan organizer who conspired in the murders of three civil rights activists—
James Chaney,
Andrew Goodman and
Michael Schwerner—in 1964.[1]
He was found guilty in state court of three counts of manslaughter on June 21,
2005, the forty-first anniversary of the crime. He appealed the verdict, but his sentence of three times 20 years in prison was upheld on
January 12,
2007, by the
Mississippi Supreme Court.
Edgar Ray Killen was born on January 17, 1925, in
Philadelphia, Mississippi, the second of eight children of Lonnie
Ray Killen (1901--1992) and Etta Hitt (1903--1983).
Killen was a sawmill
operator and a
Southern Baptist minister. He was also a kleagle, or klavern recruiter and organizer, for the
Neshoba and
Lauderdale County chapters of the Ku Klux Klan.
During the "
Freedom Summer" of 1964, James Chaney, 21, a young black man from
Meridian, Mississippi and Andrew Goodman, 20, and Michael Schwerner, 24, two
Jewish men from
New York, were murdered in Philadelphia, Mississippi. Killen, along with
Cecil Price, then deputy sheriff of
Neshoba County, was found to have assembled a group of armed men who conspired against, pursued, and killed the three civil rights workers.
The Mississippi civil rights workers murders galvanized the nation and helped bring about the passage of the
1964 Civil Rights Act and the
1965 Voting Rights Act.
At the time of the murders, the state of
Mississippi made little effort to prosecute the guilty parties.
The FBI, under the pro-civil-rights
President Lyndon Johnson and
Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, conducted a vigorous investigation. A federal prosecutor,
John Doar, circumventing dismissals by federal judges, opened a grand jury in
December 1964. In
November 1965,
Solicitor General Thurgood Marshall appeared before the
Supreme Court to defend the federal government's authority in bringing charges.
Eighteen men, including Killen, were arrested and charged with conspiracy to violate the victims' civil rights[2] in
United States v. Price.
The trial began in 1966 in the federal courthouse in Meridian, Mississippi before an all-white jury[3] convicted seven conspirators, including the deputy sheriff, and acquitted eight others. It was the first time a white jury convicted a white official of civil rights killings.[4] For three men, including Killen, the trial ended in a hung jury, with the jurors deadlocked 11--1 in favor of conviction. The lone holdout said that she could not convict a preacher. The prosecution decided not to retry Killen and he was released.
None of the men found guilty would serve more than six years in prison.
Over twenty years later,
Jerry Mitchell, an award-winning investigative reporter for
The Clarion-Ledger in
Jackson, Mississippi, wrote extensively about the case for six years.
Mitchell had already earned fame for helping secure convictions in other high profile
Civil Rights Era murder cases, including the assassination of
Medgar Evers, the
16th Street Baptist Church Bombing, and the murder of
Vernon Dahmer. Mitchell assembled new evidence regarding the murders of the three civil rights workers. He also located new witnesses and pressured the state to take action. Assisting Mitchell were high school teacher
Barry Bradford and a team of three students from
Illinois.[5]
The students persuaded Killen to do his only taped interview (to that
point) about the murders. That tape showed Killen clinging to his segregationist views and competent and aware. The student-teacher team found more potential witnesses, created a website, lobbied
Congress, and focused national media attention on reopening the case.
Caroline Goodman, the mother of one of the victims, called them "super heroes".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgar_Ray_Killen
- published: 05 Aug 2013
- views: 15606