Ottawa Citizen

1940 CIVIL RIGHTS WORKER SLAYING CASE REOPENED.

- Adrian Sainz

MEMPHIS, TENN. • More than 78 years after civil rights worker Elbert Williams’ body was found in a Tennessee river, a district attorney announced Wednesday that he is reopening the investigat­ion into the slaying.

Haywood County District Attorney Garry Brown said his office is launching an investigat­ion into the death of the 32-year-old black man, whose body was found in a Brownsvill­e river in June 1940, three days after being taken from his home by a group of men led by a police officer.

“We cannot do all in 2018 that should have been done in 1940, but justice and historic truth demand that questions about the cause of Elbert Williams’ death, and the identity of his killer(s), that should have been answered long ago, be answered now if possible,” Brown said. “We will do what we can.”

The Department of Justice initially ordered the case be presented to a federal grand jury, then mysterious­ly reversed itself and closed the case in early 1942. A U.S. attorney in Memphis declined to re-open the investigat­ion in 2017, after a request from Williams’ relatives and Jim Emison, a lawyer who became intrigued by the case.

An NAACP official has called Williams “the first martyr of the NAACP.” No one was ever charged in the case, and Williams’ grave has not been found, though it is believed to be in a cemetery near Brownsvill­e.

It was not clear if Brown has new leads or if new evidence has been discovered.

The move comes about three weeks after the U.S. government renewed its investigat­ion into the 1955 slaying of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old black teen from Chicago who was visiting relatives in Mississipp­i when he was killed.

Former U.S. attorney Edward Stanton III said in a February 2017 letter to Williams’ family that his office could not re-open the investigat­ion because more than 75 years had passed since the crimes and many if not all of the potential witnesses have died. He also wrote that the statute of limitation­s for any federal crime had expired.

However, there is no time limit on first-degree murder charges in Tennessee. Brown said the case falls under Tennessee’s new Civil Rights Crimes Cold Case Law, which mandates a statewide survey of cold civil rights crimes.

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Elbert Williams

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