Los Angeles Times

Emmett Till case reopened, 63 years later

The Emmett Till case is reopened 63 years after the teen’s slaying galvanized the civil rights movement.

- By Jenny Jarvie Jarvie is a special correspond­ent.

The Justice Department cites new informatio­n in one of the most notorious slayings of the Jim Crow-era Deep South.

ATLANTA — The investigat­ion into the death of Emmett Till, one of the most notorious slayings of the Jim Crow-era Deep South, has been reopened more than 60 years after the 14-year-old African American boy’s mutilated body was pulled out of Mississipp­i’s Tallahatch­ie River.

Two white men, Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam, were prosecuted by state authoritie­s in 1955 for the killing — only to be acquitted by an all-white jury after just an hour of deliberati­on.

The case galvanized the civil rights movement, and even today, Till’s death has been invoked by protesters decrying brutality against African Americans.

In a report submitted to Congress in March, the Justice Department said it had reopened its inquiry “based upon the discovery of new informatio­n.”

The department did not elaborate, citing the ongoing nature of the investigat­ion.

Long an enduring icon of the civil rights movement — inspiring poems, plays and songs from artists such as Langston Hughes, James Baldwin and Bob Dylan — Till has surged to modernday consciousn­ess as the nation has grappled with rising tension in recent years over a wave of violence and fatal police shootings of African Americans.

His casket has been positioned in the Smithsonia­n’s new National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington. Historic preservati­onists have called for his modest redbrick childhood Chicago home to receive official landmark status.

His story has also sparked interest from Hollywood, with Jay-Z, Will Smith and Casey Affleck teaming up to produce an HBO miniseries about Till’s life, and Whoopi Goldberg and documentar­y filmmaker Keith Beachamp fundraisin­g for a feature film titled “Till.”

Till’s slaying has also provoked 21st century cultural skirmishes. Last year, there were protests at the Whitney Biennial in New York City over “Open Casket,” a painting by artist Dana Schutz, who is white, that depicts Till’s open-casket funeral based on historical photograph­s. “It is not acceptable for a white person to transmute black suffering into profit and fun,” a critic of the painting wrote, urging curators to destroy it.

“It amazes me just how this case continues to pop up,” said Devery Anderson, author of “Emmett Till: The Murder that Shocked the World and Propelled the Civil Rights Movement.” “Emmett Till is just the boy who never died, because with no justice served in this case, it kind of keeps the worst aspects of his case alive .... The consolatio­n is we’re continuous­ly reminded of Till and how tragic it was and what things are like today.”

“Every time an unarmed black man is killed, for whatever reason, Emmett Till’s name comes up and we remember that past,” Anderson said in an interview Thursday. “It’s the same story, really .... It seems like the kind of thing we always have to work out later, go back and see the kind of impact it had and what it really meant.”

The boy from Chicago was visiting relatives in Money, Miss., in August 1955 when he walked into a whiteowned grocery store. After one of the store owners, a 21year-old white woman, Carolyn Bryant, said he had grabbed her and made crude sexual advances, white men later snatched him from his bed in the middle of the night.

Three days later, his body was found in the Tallahatch­ie River, along with a 75-pound cotton-gin fan tied to his neck with barbed wire.

He had been beaten, tortured and shot in the head.

Till’s mother, Mamie Till Mobley, requested an opencasket funeral so that people around the world could witness her son’s disfigured, swollen body.

“Nobody would know Till’s name if it wasn’t for her,” said Patrick Weems, director of the Emmett Till Interpreti­ve Center, a museum set in the historic courthouse in Sumner, Miss., where the 1955 trial took place.

“It was really the first Black Lives Matter moment, because she made the world confront that and they didn’t want to,” Anderson said, noting that Till’s mother was criticized at the time for displaying her son. “Then, as now, we kind of use every trick in the book to not have to confront it, to not have to deal with it.”

The slaying — which took place a year after the Brown vs. Board of Education ruling desegregat­ing schools and three months before Rosa Parks was jailed in Alabama for refusing to give up her bus seat — provoked national and internatio­nal outrage about segregatio­n and the brutal subjugatio­n of blacks in the Deep South.

The men acquitted of the killing, Bryant and Milam, subsequent­ly confessed to the crime in an interview with Look magazine. They are now dead.

However, the woman who made the allegation­s against Till, now known as Carolyn Bryant Donham, is alive — and last year, a historian revealed that in an interview she recanted some of her claims.

In a book published last year, “The Blood of Emmett Till,” Duke University professor Timothy B. Tyson wrote that Donham said of her allegation­s that Emmett grabbed her and was sexually crude toward her: “That part is not true.”

Till’s relatives and civil rights activists have long urged the Justice Department to prosecute any potential survivors involved in Till’s death. In 2004, the Justice Department reopened an investigat­ion into the case, after a documentar­y filmmaker claimed as many as 14 individual­s were involved. But the department decided not to bring charges, arguing that the five-year statute of limitation on federal civil rights violations had expired.

In 2007, the department referred the case to Mississipp­i prosecutor­s. However, a grand jury declined to bring a manslaught­er indictment against Donham.

“The Emmett Till case started with one person, and that person is still alive,” Simeon Wright, Till’s cousin, told The Times in 2007 after the grand jury declined to indict Donham. “She played a role in identifyin­g Emmett, she participat­ed in his kidnapping and now she is getting away with murder.”

Wright, who witnessed Till’s abduction, died in September.

Other family members have continued to urge state and federal officials to reopen the case. Last week, Deborah Watts, one of Till’s cousins and a co-founder of the Emmett Till Legacy Foundation, wrote a piece for USA Today calling for the reopening of the investigat­ion after reports that Donham had recanted part of her story.

“Our patience has worn thin,” she wrote. “Time is up!”

“Is Donham above the law?” she added. “Does she never have to answer for being an accomplice in Emmett’s kidnapping and murder?”

 ??  ?? EMMETT TILL with his mother, Mamie Till Mobley, in a family photo. Emmett, 14, was visiting relatives in Money, Miss., in 1955 when he was abducted and killed.
EMMETT TILL with his mother, Mamie Till Mobley, in a family photo. Emmett, 14, was visiting relatives in Money, Miss., in 1955 when he was abducted and killed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States