The Commercial Appeal

Jones, Gray to visit White House for signing of Emmett Till Antilynchi­ng Act

- Katherine Burgess

Two prominent Memphians will stand by President Joe Biden’s side today as he signs the Emmett Till Antilynchi­ng Act into law.

Shelby County Commission­er Eddie Jones Jr., also president of the National Associatio­n of Black Officials, and the Rev. Lasimba Gray, chair of the Ida B. Wells Memorial Committee and former pastor of the New Sardis Baptist Church, were both invited to the White House to witness the historic signing of the bill Tuesday.

Jones said it is a “wonderful thing” to finally see lynching made a federal hate crime, even if it is now the year 2022.

“I’m honored to be called out to go and join our president as he signs this historical legislatio­n and it has been long overdue,” Jones said. “There’s a lot more that needs to happen.”

Congress first considered an antilynchi­ng bill in 1900, when it was introduced by Rep. George White, R-north Carolina, the only African American then in Congress. The effort was unsuccessf­ul. Since then, more than 200 anti-lynching bills have been introduced by members of Congress, but all have failed.

On March 9, 2022, the Senate unanimousl­y passed legislatio­n making lynching a federal hate crime, less than a month after the House passed the bill.

The act is named after Emmett Till, a 14-year-old African American boy who in August 1955 was abducted, brutally beaten and shot after being accused of whistling at a white woman at a store in Money, Miss. An all-white jury found the men who had killed Till not guilty of his murder, although a year later they publicly admitted they had killed Till.

Several decades before Till’s murder, African-american journalist Ida B. Wells wrote about the terror of lynching and pursued anti-lynching legislatio­n. After the 1892 lynchings of three grocery store owners in Memphis, one of whom was a friend, she began to document lynchings across the South, work that led to her being driven from Memphis

by white mobs.

“It is fortuitous that 130 years after the death of anti-lynching activist, Ida B. Wells, the family of Wells can claim some measure of victory as President Biden signs the Anti-lynching bill into law,” Gray said in a statement. “This law serves as validation that Ida B. Wells dramatical­ly changed the course of history.”

The Emmett Till Antilynchi­ng Act passed the Senate unanimousl­y. It allows crimes to be prosecuted as a lynching if a victim is killed or injured as a result of a hate crime. The companion legislatio­n was approved in the House on a 422-3 vote, with three Republican­s, Reps. Andrew Clyde of Georgia, Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Chip Roy of Texas, voting against the bill.

From 1877 to 1950, about 4,400 Black people were lynched in the U.S., according to the Equal Justice Initiative, a Montgomery, Alabama-based nonprofit that offers legal services to those who are wrongly convicted of crimes, among others. The NAACP counted about 4,700 lynchings from 1882 to 1968, and more than 70% of those killed were Black.

Both organizati­ons noted that the numbers probably were underrepor­ted.

Usatoday contribute­d to this report. Katherine Burgess covers county government and religion. She can be reached at katherine.burgess@commercial­appeal.com, 901-529-2799 or followed on Twitter @kathsburge­ss.

 ?? MAX GERSH / THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Commission­er Eddie S. Jones Jr. [pictured] and Rev. Lasimba Gray will be at the White House for the signing of the Emmett Till Antilynchi­ng Act.
MAX GERSH / THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Commission­er Eddie S. Jones Jr. [pictured] and Rev. Lasimba Gray will be at the White House for the signing of the Emmett Till Antilynchi­ng Act.

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