Albuquerque Journal

Case files on 1964 civil rights worker killings made public

Outrage over Miss. deaths helped pass Civil Rights Act

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JACKSON, Miss. — Never before seen case files, photograph­s and other records documentin­g the investigat­ion into the infamous slayings of three civil rights workers in Mississipp­i are now open to the public for the first time, 57 years after their deaths.

The 1964 killings of civil rights activists James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner in Neshoba County sparked national outrage and helped spur passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. They later became the subject of the movie “Mississipp­i Burning.”

The previously sealed materials — dating from 1964 to 2007 — were transferre­d to the Mississipp­i Department of Archives and History from the Mississipp­i attorney general’s office in 2019. As of last week, they are now available for viewing by the public at William F. Winter Archives and History Building in Jackson.

The records include case files, Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion memoranda, research notes and federal informant reports and witness testimonie­s. There are also photograph­s of the exhumation of the victims’ bodies and subsequent autopsies, along with aerial photograph­s of the burial site, according to an announceme­nt from the Mississipp­i Department of Archives and History.

The collection is being stored in three catalog records: Series 2870 houses the attorney general’s research files, Series 2902 houses the FBI memos and Series 2903 houses the photograph­s.

The three Freedom Summer workers, all in their 20s, had been investigat­ing the burning of a black church near Philadelph­ia, Mississipp­i when they disappeare­d in June 1964.

A deputy sheriff in Philadelph­ia had arrested them on a traffic charge, then released them after alerting a mob. Mississipp­i’s then-governor claimed their disappeara­nce was a hoax, before their bodies were dug up, found weeks later in an earthen dam.

Nineteen men were indicted on federal charges. Seven were convicted of violating the victims’ civil rights. None served more than six years.

In 2004, the Mississipp­i Attorney General’s office reopened the investigat­ion. That led to the June 2005 conviction of Edgar Ray Killen, a 1960s Ku Klux Klan leader and Baptist minister, on manslaught­er charges.

During his state trial in 2005, witnesses testified that on June 21, 1964, Killen went to Meridian to round up carloads of klansmen to ambush Schwerner, Chaney and Goodman.

Killen died in prison in 2018. ThenAttorn­ey General Jim Hood officially closed the investigat­ion in 2016.

 ?? FBI FILE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Case files, FBI notes and reports, photos and witness testimonie­s in the investigat­ion of the deaths of from left, Michael Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman are now open to the public in Jackson, Miss.
FBI FILE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Case files, FBI notes and reports, photos and witness testimonie­s in the investigat­ion of the deaths of from left, Michael Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman are now open to the public in Jackson, Miss.

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