Los Angeles Times

Fourth memorial erected to Emmett Till is bulletproo­f

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GLENDORA, Miss. — A new bulletproo­f memorial to Emmett Till was dedicated Saturday in Mississipp­i after previous historical markers were repeatedly vandalized.

The brutal murder of the black 14-year-old more than 60 years ago helped spur the civil rights movement.

Emmett was kidnapped, beaten and killed in 1955, hours after he was accused of whistling at a white woman. His body was found in a river days later. An all-white jury in Mississipp­i acquitted two white men of murder charges.

An investigat­ion into the case was reopened by the Department of Justice in 2018 after previous efforts to review the crime had come up empty. Patrick Weems, executive director of the Emmett Till Memorial Commission, said the new marker was dedicated Saturday.

Members of Emmett’s family attended the ceremony at the site where the boy’s body was pulled from the Tallahatch­ie River.

This is the fourth historical marker at the site. Previous ones became a target for vandals.

The first historical marker was placed in 2008. Someone tossed it in the river. The second and third signs were shot at and left riddled with bullet holes.

The new 500-pound steel sign has a glass bulletproo­f front, Weems said.

Weems said the markers were placed as an attempt to acknowledg­e the truth of what happened there with the hope of sparking “new conversati­ons.”

“For 50 years nobody talked about Emmett Till,” Weems said.

“I think we just have to be resilient and know there are folks out there that don’t want to know this history or who want to erase the history. We are just going to be resilient in continuing to put them back up and be truthful in making make sure that Emmett didn’t die in vain,” he said.

Two of Emmett’s cousins, the Rev. Wheeler Parker and Ollie Gordon, attended the ceremony, Weems said.

In 2004, the Justice Department reopened the case after a documentar­y film asserted that as many as 14 people were involved in the killing.

But the department decided not to bring charges on the grounds that the fiveyear 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 the woman who made — and later partially recanted — the allegation­s against Emmett, Carolyn Bryant Donham.

 ?? Associated Press ?? PREVIOUS historical markers of Emmett Till’s 1955 lynching in Mississipp­i became a target for vandals.
Associated Press PREVIOUS historical markers of Emmett Till’s 1955 lynching in Mississipp­i became a target for vandals.

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