Texarkana Gazette

Investigat­ions into 1946 lynching end, but hope for answers lingers

- By Kate Brumback

ATLANTA—It was the summer of 1946 when two young black couples riding along a rural road were stopped by a white mob in Georgia at Moore’s Ford Bridge, overlookin­g the Apalachee River. The mob dragged the victims from the vehicle, led them to the riverbank and shot them multiple times.

The brazen lynching of the four sharecropp­ers horrified the country that year. President Harry Truman sent the FBI to the site in rural Walton County. Months of investigat­ion yielded dozens of possible suspects. But a federal grand jury failed to indict anyone. The case was revisited several times decades later, and just last month Georgia’s top law enforcemen­t agency closed its latest investigat­ion not long after the FBI concluded its latest review, saying no one remained to prosecute because all the likely killers were dead.

Despite all that, activists and others who spent countless hours studying the slayings and trying to raise awareness still hope answers will surface.

“We want to perfect the record for history’s sake, to make sure this case is never forgotten,” said Tyrone Brooks, a veteran civil rights activist who began looking into the lynching in 1968 at the request of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

Even if no one is ultimately prosecuted for the deaths of Roger and Dorothy Malcom and George and Mae Murray Dorsey, it’s important to know what happened and who was involved, said Brooks, a former state lawmaker.

Particular­ly in recent decades, hopes of cracking the case have led civil rights activists, journalist­s, students, cold case groups and historians to the bridge and surroundin­g towns, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) east of Atlanta, seeking clues or trying to coax people into talking. But the community’s hesitancy to talk—out of fear or unwillingn­ess—has persisted, much as it stymied investigat­ors long ago.

Nonetheles­s, Brooks said the closure of the investigat­ions won’t stop him.

“Our resolve is as strong as it’s ever been,” he said.

And each July since 2005, he has helped organized a reenactmen­t of the lynching to raise public awareness that the case remains unsolved.

It all began after Roger Malcom, 24, had been jailed after stabbing and injuring a white man, Barnett Hester, during an argument. Witnesses told authoritie­s Malcom suspected Hester was sleeping with his wife.

Loy Harrison, a white farmer, paid $600 to bail Malcom out on July 25, 1946, and was driving Malcom, his wife and the other couple home when—he told investigat­ors— was ambushed by a mob.

Harrison, who was unharmed, told authoritie­s he didn’t recognize anyone in the mob, which the FBI numbered at 20 to 25 people. An FBI report noted Harrison was a former Ku Klux Klansman and well-known bootlegger. The initial investigat­ion lasted roughly six months and yielded dozens of possible suspects, some simply because they were Hester’s relatives, friends or neighbors, or because they had no alibis. Ultimately, there were no indictment­s.

Law enforcemen­t revisited the case in the 1990s after people came forward promising new informatio­n, though investigat­ors said they still couldn’t prosecute anyone. In June 2000, then-Gov. Roy Barnes ordered the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion to reopen the case. That investigat­ion closed in January and the bureau made public its redacted case file, including interviews, leads followed, case summaries and press clippings.

Laura Wexler, who wrote on the killings in “Fire in a Canebrake: The Last Mass Lynching in America,” said she experience­d the community’s reluctance to talk when she began researchin­g her book in 1997. When people did talk, she said, she heard different versions of the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the lynching, often split along racial lines.

“Unfortunat­ely, when these histories divide, what you get is a hole in the center where the truth should be,” she said. “To me, the closure of the case with nobody held accountabl­e is not surprising. I think it’s a demonstrat­ion of the power of race to distort even the best intentions to get at the truth.”

Vivian James was a Kennesaw State University anthropolo­gy student when she participat­ed in an excavation about seven years ago. The sleuthing uncovered dozens of bullets and casings and yielded a preliminar­y ballistics analysis.

She said she understand­s law enforcemen­t can’t continue committing resources to investigat­ions if they feel there’s no possibilit­y of bringing someone to trial. But the case is still important, she said, both for personal closure for some and— more broadly—to ensure such atrocities never happen again.

Janis McDonald, co-director of the Cold Case Justice Initiative at Syracuse University College of Law, said some of her students worked on the case in 2015. She said that at least with the investigat­ive files now publicly released, a fresh set of eyes might find something new.

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