Los Angeles Times: Civil-Rights Era Murder Suspect to Appear at FairForward from mart
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Fw: Los Angeles Times Civil-Rights Era Murder 
Suspect to Appear at Fair


[ "Mississippians have heard little from Killen since 
1967, when witnesses at a federal trial testified that 
he had recruited men to kill Andrew Goodman, James 
Chaney and Michael Schwerner. The jury deadlocked 
on conspiracy charges against Killen by a vote of 11 
to 1; the lone holdout later said *she could not convict 
a preacher*" ] 


[ "Killen, 79, will appear Oct. 9 to shake hands and 
pose for snapshots with fairgoers, said Richard Barrett, 
general counsel for the Nationalist Movement. Barrett 
befriended Killen this summer and persuaded him to 
make the appearance, hailing his efforts against 
communism and  "the Negro revolution" in the United 
States" ]

=========================================

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Johnny Roberts 
Sent: Saturday, September 25, 2004 10:53 AM
Subject: Los Angeles Times Civil-Rights Era 
Murder Suspect to Appear at Fair



 
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-killen25sep25.story  

THE NATION

Civil-Rights Era Murder Suspect 
to Appear at Fair


White supremacist group invites Edgar Ray 
Killen to appear at its booth in Mississippi.


By Ellen Barry
Times Staff Writer

September 25, 2004


ATLANTA - A white supremacist organization's booth at the Mississippi State Fair this 
fall will feature a figure from the archives of the state's bloody civil rights 
struggle: Edgar Ray Killen, a preacher who was accused of planning the murders of 
three civil rights workers in the summer of 1964. 


Mississippians have heard little from Killen since 1967, when witnesses at a federal 
trial testified that he had recruited men to kill Andrew Goodman, James Chaney and 
Michael Schwerner. The jury deadlocked on conspiracy charges against Killen by a vote 
of 11 to 1; the lone holdout later said she could not convict a preacher. 


Killen, 79, will appear Oct. 9 to shake hands and pose for snapshots with fairgoers, 
said Richard Barrett, general counsel for the Nationalist Movement. Barrett befriended 
Killen this summer and persuaded him to make the appearance, hailing his efforts 
against communism and "the Negro revolution" in the United States. 


Killen could not be reached for comment. 


The announcement provoked dismay this week after the Clarion-Ledger in Jackson, Miss., 
published an article about Barrett's plans. Gov. Haley Barbour on Thursday dismissed 
Barrett's organization as "certainly not representative of today's Mississippi," and 
at least one organization yanked its booth from the fair. 


Fair authorities urged Mississippians to enjoy the event's attractions as usual. But 
some observers worried that Killen's appearance would stir up long-dormant anger over 
murders that the state never prosecuted; others thought he would highlight how far the 
state had come since then.


"He will be a curiosity, rightfully so," said David Sansing, a retired professor of 
history at the University of Mississippi. "He will be one of those people you see in 
the sideshow, or the freak show. The menagerie. I think people will gawk at him in 
amazement, and not in admiration." 


Killen, who was 38 when the civil rights workers were murdered, has lived a quiet life 
since, refusing requests for interviews and preaching occasionally in area churches. 


FBI documents released in 2000 described Killen as leader of the Neshoba County Ku 
Klux Klan and coordinator of the murders. 


The three civil rights workers were arrested for speeding in Philadelphia, Miss. After 
they were released from jail, a mob of men followed them, shot them and buried their 
bodies in an earthen dam. The federal jury convicted seven men of conspiracy in the 
murders and acquitted seven others. Three trials, including Killen's, ended in 
mistrial. Mississippi has never tried anyone in the murders. 


Killen has denied belonging to the Klan or playing any role in the crime.


In one of the few interviews he has given, to the Clarion-Ledger in 2002, Killen was 
asked what should happen to the killers of the civil rights workers: "I'm not going to 
say they were wrong," he said. "I don't believe in murder. I believe in self-defense." 


Barrett, 60, is an advocate of eugenic sterilization, repeal of the Voting Rights Act 
and "eradication" of homosexuality. Barrett has organized booths at the Mississippi 
State Fair in the past. 


He invited Killen to appear this year, saying it would be an "incomparable opportunity 
to set back and defeat communism." 


"The Negros are talking about boycotting the fair," Barrett said. "My response is, 
'Tyrants, go home. Cowards, go back.' I'm certainly not going to bow to those kinds of 
threats."


Fair officials were told by the state attorney general's office that they had no 
choice but to allow Barrett to set up a booth. If Killen does attend - fair officials 
have not yet issued him a pass - his presentation will be subject to strict rules. His 
opinions may only be voiced far from the fair's midway, within a 10-by-10 booth inside 
a building, said Michael Brinkley Jr., director of the Fair Commission. 


Brinkley urged Mississippians to attend the fair, which will feature a 60-foot slide, 
an enclosed circus and musical attractions such as Kansas and K.C. and the Sunshine 
Band. 


"He's one guy and he has his belief," Brinkley said. "We're thousands. If we let this 
guy stop this family fun that we have brought to this state for 143 years, he's won 
again." 


But at least one group has withdrawn from the fair, not wishing to be associated with 
Barrett's booth in any way. Dani Edmonson of the Mississippi Organ Recovery Agency 
said that because her organization serves people of all races, "my reaction was, 
instantly, 'I cannot be a part of that.' " 


Ben Chaney, who was 11 years old when his brother James Chaney was murdered, said 
Killen should be prosecuted, along with more powerful figures who "created the 
environment for the murders to take place." Chaney, who lives in New York, has never 
seen Killen in person. 




"If I could afford to take a trip to Mississippi, I would go to the fair and I would 
go to where he is going to be," he said. 



Jim Prince III, who has promoted racial reconciliation through the Philadelphia 
Coalition, said he hoped Killen's appearance at the fair would pressure state 
authorities to prosecute Killen for the murders. Outsiders should understand that 
Mississippi has left behind Barrett's brand of virulent racism, he said. 


Prince, who is co-chairman of the coalition, said: "It's just these old ghosts that 
appear, these old relics." 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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