DeNeen L. Brown writes in the Washington Post that lynching have never stopped in Mississippi:
Since
2000, there have been at least eight suspected lynchings of Black men and
teenagers in Mississippi, according to court records and police reports.
“The
last recorded lynching in the United States was in 1981,” said Jill Collen
Jefferson, a lawyer and founder of Julian, a civil rights organization named
after the late civil rights leader Julian Bond. “But the thing is, lynchings
never stopped in the United States. Lynchings in Mississippi never stopped. The
evil bastards just stopped taking photographs and passing them around like
baseball cards.”
Jefferson
was born in Jones County, Miss., which was an epicenter of the Ku Klux Klan’s
reign of terror during the civil rights movement. “Coming from Mississippi and
seeing stuff intersect, talking about this stuff is like talking about what
happened down the road,” said Jefferson, a Harvard Law School graduate who
trained as a civil justice investigator with Bond.
In
2017, Jefferson began compiling records of Black people found hanging or
mutilated across the country. In 2019, Jefferson began focusing her
investigation on Mississippi. In each case she investigated, law enforcement
officials ruled the deaths suicides, but the families said the victims had been
lynched.
Historically,
lynchings were often defined as fatal hangings by mobs, often acting with
impunity and in an extrajudicial capacity to create racial terror. Crowds of
White people often gathered in town squares or on courthouse lawns to watch
Black people be lynched.
From
1877 to 1950, more than 4,000 Black men, women and children were lynched in
cities and towns across the country, according to the Equal Justice Initiative
(EJI), a human rights organization based in Montgomery, Ala., which opened the
National Memorial for Peace and Justice in 2018 to honor thousands of lynching
victims. During that period, Mississippi recorded 581, the highest number of
lynchings recorded by state.
Historians
say lynchings often evoke the image of public hangings, however EJI and the
NAACP expanded that definition to include any extrajudicial racial terror
killing and mutilation committed to uphold racial segregation and a false
premise of racial hierarchy.
The
NAACP defines lynchings as “the public killing of an individual who has not
received” due process under the law.
During
her investigation focusing intensely on Mississippi, Jefferson began seeing
patterns in the deaths and connecting the dots in recent cases of Black people
found hanging.
“There
is a pattern to how these cases are investigated,” Jefferson said. “When
authorities arrive on the scene of a hanging, it’s treated as a suicide almost
immediately. The crime scene is not preserved. The investigation is shoddy. And
then there is a formal ruling of suicide, despite evidence to the contrary. And
the case is never heard from again unless someone brings it up.”
Each
day, Jefferson works on that list of eight suspected hangings — including the
2018 hanging Willie Andrew Jones Jr. — trying to bring justice to grieving
families. The following are eight of those victims.
Raynard
Johnson, 17
JUNE
16, 2000
Raynard
Johnson was found hanging from a pecan tree in his front yard in Kokomo, Miss.
The Mississippi Bureau of Investigation called the hanging a suicide, according
to records. But his family believes Johnson was lynched, Jefferson said.
In
2000, the Rev. Jesse Jackson traveled to Mississippi to call attention to
Johnson’s hanging.
“There’s
enough circumstantial stuff here that warrants a serious investigation. We will
not rest until those who committed this murder are brought to justice,” Jackson
told demonstrators before leading a march to the pecan tree where Raynard was
found. “We reject the suicide theory.”
In
February 2001, the Justice Department announced it ended its investigation into
Johnson’s death: “The evidence does not support a federal criminal civil rights
prosecution.”
Raynard’s
mother, Maria Johnson, says she is still waiting for some kind of justice. “My
son’s death marked the modern age of a fight that Black people have been in in
Mississippi and this nation for centuries,” Johnson said. “They tried to cover
this up, but I’ve never given up hope. And that’s the thing that should scare
them, because I never will.”
Nick
Naylor, 23
JAN. 9,
2003
Three
years later, Nick Naylor, 23, was found hanging from a tree about 11 miles from
his house in Porterville, Miss. A dog chain was wrapped around his neck. Police
ruled the death a suicide, but an attorney for the family said it was a
lynching.
“Every
time someone loses their life in a hate crime, it opens up the wound,” said
Lequicha Naylor, 43, Naylor’s sister. “We have no closure. His killers are
probably still around here, walking around. I have little Black boys. I’ve got
grand boys — kids walking around the same place where my brother got hung. And
we had tell them what happened for their own protection. One thing we always
wonder is what they did to him before he died.”
Roy
Veal, 55
APRIL
22, 2004
A year
later, Roy Veal, was found hanging from a pecan tree near Woodville, Miss.
Relatives said Veal was found with a hood over his head. A state police
spokesman told reporters Veal’s death was “consistent with suicide.” Relatives
said they believed Veal, who had returned to Mississippi to fight for his family’s
land, was lynched. A spokesman for the sheriff’s office in Woodville said the
case is with the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation.
LEFT:
The Rev. Jesse Jackson holds the branch of a pecan tree on July 8, 2000, the
site where Raynard Johnson was found hanging from a belt in Kokomo, Miss., on
June 16, 2000. RIGHT: The Rev. Jesse Jackson is joined by ministers from across
Mississippi for the funeral of Raynard Johnson in Sandy Hook, Miss., on June
27, 2000.
Frederick
Jermaine Carter, 26
DEC. 3,
2010
Frederick
Jermaine Carter was found hanging from a tree limb in a White neighborhood in
Greenwood, Miss. The state medical examiner ruled Carter’s death a suicide.
Relatives called it a lynching and demanded for a federal investigation.
Derrick
Johnson, then-state president of the Mississippi NAACP, told reporters that the
community had “lost all confidence in the ability of local law enforcement to
investigate” the case of Carter’s hanging. He called on the Justice Department
to investigate.
A
spokesperson for the department declined to comment on the case.
The day
before Carter was found dead, he had been working with his stepfather on a
painting project. Relatives said he disappeared after his stepfather went to
buy more paint.
“Not
knowing what happened is a torment,” Brenda Carter-Evans told reporters in
2010. “I need to know what happened to my son.”
Craig
Anderson, 49
JUNE
26, 2011
One of
the most graphic examples of a modern-day racial terror killing occurred on
June 26, 2011, when 10 white teenagers killed 49-year-old James Craig Anderson
in Jackson, Miss.
The
teenagers, who according to court records, decided to “go f---k with some
n-----s,” ran over Anderson in a parking lot while yelling “white power.”
That
night two carloads of White teenagers drove into a motel parking lot where they
spotted Anderson, according to records. Some teens jumped out of the cars and
started beating Anderson, in an attack captured on a surveillance video.
In
March 2012, three of the teenagers — identified as Deryl Dedmon, John Rice and
Dylan Butler — pleaded guilty in federal district court to charges of
conspiracy and committing a hate crime.
During
a sentencing hearing, U.S. District Judge Carlton Reeves connected the killing
of Anderson to the state’s gruesome history of lynchings, telling the courtroom
that “a toxic mix of alcohol, foolishness and unadulterated hatred caused these
young people to resurrect the nightmarish specter of lynchings and lynch mobs
from the Mississippi we long forget.”
Reeves
said the group of White teenagers targeted Black neighborhoods in Jackson, “for
the sole purpose of harassing, terrorizing, physically assaulting and causing
bodily injury to Black folk.”
The
“marauders,” the judge said, prowled the community. “They recruited and
encouraged others to join in the coordinated chaos; and they boasted about
their shameful activity,” Reeves said. “This was a 2011 version of the n-----
hunts.”
“Mississippi
has expressed its savagery in a number of ways throughout its history, slavery
being the cruelest example,” Reeves said, “but a close second being
Mississippi’s infatuation with lynchings.”
Otis
Byrd, 54
MARCH
19, 2015
Otis
Byrd, who had been missing since March 2, 2015, was found hanging from a tree
on March 19, 2015, in Port Gibson, Miss.
The
Claiborne County sheriff’s office said Byrd was found with a bedsheet wrapped
around his neck. Byrd had been convicted in 1980 of murder in the death of a
White woman, according to the Mississippi Department of Corrections. He had been
paroled in 2006.
The FBI
and the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division launched an investigation.
In 2015, the Justice Department released a statement regarding Byrd’s death
saying that investigators had found no foul play.
“After
a careful and thorough review, a team of experienced federal prosecutors and
FBI agents determined that there was no evidence to prove that Byrd’s death was
a homicide,” the Justice Department said.
Phillip
Carroll, 22
MAY 28,
2017
Phillip
Carroll was found hanging from a tree in Jackson, Miss. Police called the death
a suicide. Early reports said Carroll had been found with his hands tied behind
his back. Police denied that account.
“If
there’s any other information or evidence that anyone may have to make us
believe that it may not be a suicide, again, we’re open to any information and
any evidence to aid us in the investigation,” Jackson Police Commander Tyree
Jones told reporters. “But as of right now, we don’t have anything other than
the fact that his death has been ruled a suicide.”
Deondrey
Montreal Hopkins, 35
MAY 5,
2019
Deondrey
Montreal Hopkins, who lived in Columbus, Miss., was found hanging from a tree
on a bank of the Luxapallila Creek. Columbus Police Chief Fred Shelton said
Hopkins’s death was not a homicide.
The
Justice Department declined to comment on the case.
To read more CLICK HERE
No comments:
Post a Comment