Enough is enough. That it took this long to convict Killen was bad.
Convicting him of only manslaughter and not murder was even worse. But,
freeing him on bail six weeks into his sentence only adds insult to injury.
Killen is an unrepentant white supremacist who has engaged in and condones
acts of violent race-based domestic terrorism. I suppose that acts of
violent race-based terrorism directed at African-Americans by whites is not
an important issue for the Federal government or state governments of this
country...but, then, has it ever been? The only time the majority population
of this country seems to get concerned about violence is when there is a
possibility of a Black violent response to continued acts of violent
race-based terrorism perpetuated by whites.

This past summer there have been violent attacks on Black men in the
neighborhoods of Howard Beach and Bensonhurst in Brooklyn (I'm sure that
there have been more acts of violent race-based terrorism across the country
but our nation's media likes to look at these occurrences as isolated local
incidences and not part of a continuum of historical behavior). When
interviewed, members of those communities take a "blame the victim" stance
as they support the thugs in their midst and make the claims that the Black
men were looking for trouble and that people should be careful where they
go. And this is twenty-odd years after the acts of violent race-based
terrorism in those communities rocked New York City when they resulted in
the beatings and deaths of Black men. Nothing has changed. Not an iota. And
the majority population of this country is silent.

The real concern regarding violence in this country right now is terrorism
by Iraqi insurgents and/or Muslim extremists because "they hate our
freedoms...our way of life"...not acts of violent race-based domestic
terrorism against Blacks by whites. But, if there ever is a Black violent
response to these acts of violent race-based domestic terrorism the bulk of
the majority population will support an immediate and swift militaristic
intervention to "quell the disturbances" and restore the status quo. The
government may even convene a panel to investigate the causes of the Black
violence. Of course, the panel's recommendations will be ignored. And, there
will be the individuals making the rounds to speak about the importance of
non-violence but I will bet my bottom dollar that they will never ever make
it to Bensonhurst, Howard Beach or the white neighborhoods of Philadelphia,
Mississippi.

Bob
============================================================================
===================

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/13/national/13killen.html?th&emc=th

The New York Times, August 13, 2005
Ex-Klan Figure in 1964 Killings Is Freed on Bail
By SHAILA DEWAN
Edgar Ray Killen, the former Klansman whose conviction in June in the 1964
killing of three civil rights workers in Mississippi seemed to close one of
the state's darkest chapters, was released yesterday when a judge granted
bail pending an appeal.

The release raises the possibility that Mr. Killen, 80 and in poor health,
will die a free man after serving barely six weeks of his sentence.

He was convicted on three counts of manslaughter on June 21, 41 years to the
day after a mob of Klansmen killed the three campaigners - James Chaney,
Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner - in an incident that galvanized
national support for the civil rights movement. Prosecutors said Mr. Killen
organized the mob.

Judge Marcus Gordon of Circuit Court, who gave Mr. Killen the maximum
possible sentence, said in court that he had little choice but to set bond
while Mr. Killen appealed his conviction. Judge Gordon said the state had
not proved that Mr. Killen, who uses a wheelchair, was a flight risk or
threat.

"It's not a matter of what I feel, it's a matter of the law," Judge Gordon
said.

Rita Bender, wife of Mr. Schwerner, said the judge had not considered the
danger to the community in the broader sense.

"To me this indicates a lack of understanding the seriousness of, and
conveying the seriousness of, crimes of racial violence," Ms. Bender said by
telephone from Seattle, where she lives.

Mr. Killen's release, she said, increases "the risk of violence by people
who get the message once again that there is no control over them."

Jewel Rush McDonald, a member of the black church where the three victims
had made contacts for a voter registration drive, also denounced the
decision after attending the court proceedings.

"We have worked so hard in trying to clear this dark cloud from over Neshoba
County, and as far as I'm concerned the judge just set us back 41 years,"
Ms. McDonald said.

Her church, Mount Zion United Methodist, has been a major force in a
multiracial coalition that issued a "call for justice" in the case last
year, before Mr. Killen's indictment.

To make the bond, which Judge Gordon set at $600,000, five friends of Mr.
Killen put up property, County Clerk Patti Duncan Lee said. Mr. Killen and
his brother Bobby also put up a parcel of land valued at $38,000, Ms. Lee
added.

Seven witnesses, including a man who put up property, vouched for Mr.
Killen.

Mr. Killen took the stand, complaining of a lack of medical care since he
entered the Central Mississippi prison in Pearl, though he acknowledged that
he had been seen by doctors.

"They checked me through the line like a cattle auction," he said. "I'm very
unhappy with the treatment I've received."

Mr. Killen is recovering from a logging accident in March and required an
oxygen tank at his trial.

Mr. Killen said he had to bribe a convict to obtain a pillow.

"I can barely sleep," he said. "I still don't understand how I could lie in
severe pain for 24 hours and no one even brings me an aspirin. I'm not a
drug addict."

A spokesman for the State Corrections Department said Mr. Killen had
received proper medical care and he was not aware of any complaints.

Prosecutors worked for years to build the case against Mr. Killen, as other
cases from the civil rights era were successfully reopened, resulting in
convictions that at had one time seemed impossible.

When Mr. Chaney, Mr. Goodman and Mr. Schwerner disappeared, the nation was
riveted by the search for them. Their bodies were found in an earthen dam,
and the federal government tried 18 men in 1967 on charges that they
conspired to deprive the three victims of their civil rights. Seven men were
convicted. None served more than six years in prison.

In Mr. Killen's federal case, the all-white jury hung, 11 to 1, in favor of
conviction. In the state trial this year, the jurors did not convict him of
the most serious charge of murder, but rather manslaughter. The prosecution
and the defense agreed that Mr. Killen was not present at the actual
killings. Prosecutors maintained that he had planned the deaths and disposal
of the bodies.

If Mr. Killen had been convicted of murder, he would not be eligible for
release on bond.

Legal experts and others questioned the bail decision. James E. Prince III,
publisher of The Neshoba Democrat, a weekly newspaper, said:

"He may not be capable of enacting revenge, but he has stature within a
certain community. And they are capable of enacting revenge. It's difficult
to bring closure on the reign of terror with him out of prison It's
difficult, because that fear is still there with him out."

Mr. Prince criticized District Attorney Mark Duncan, for "a fairly weak
presentation," saying Mr. Duncan had failed to emphasize Mr. Killen's
connection to hate groups that might be capable of terror or violence. Mr.
Prince noted that Mr. Killen was convicted of telephone harassment, a
felony, in the 70's.

Experts have said Mississippi law is not crystal clear on when a judge has
to grant bail. The law says a person convicted of any felony other than
child abuse, sexual battery of a minor or a crime in which a death sentence
or life imprisonment is imposed is entitled to be released on bail pending
appeal if the convict shows that he is not a flight risk or a danger.

The statute also says the convict is entitled to release "within the
discretion of a judicial officer," and "only when the peculiar circumstances
of the case render it proper."

Jerry Mitchell contributed reporting from Philadelphia, Miss., for this
article.



Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company



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