Texarkana Gazette

President signs anti-lynching bill

After almost 200 tries, act now illegal with 30-year term

- AMY B. WANG AND FELICIA SONMEZ

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Tuesday signed into law the Emmett Till Antilynchi­ng Act to make lynching a federal hate crime, in a historic first that comes after more than a century of failed efforts against racial violence.

“Hundreds, hundreds of similar bills have failed to pass over the years,” Biden said at a ceremony in the Rose Garden after he signed the bill at the White House. “Several federal hate crime laws were enacted. … But no federal law expressly prohibited lynching. None until today.”

The new law amends the U.S. Code to designate lynching a hate crime punishable by up to 30 years in prison.

More than 4,000 people, mostly African Americans, were reported lynched in the United States from 1882 to 1968, in all but a handful of states.

Ninety-nine percent of perpetrato­rs escaped state or local punishment.

“For a long time, lynching was pure terror to enforce the lie that not everyone, not everyone belongs in America, not everyone is created equal,” Biden said. “Innocent men, women and children hung by nooses from trees, bodies burned and drowned and castrated. Their crimes? Trying to vote, trying to go to school, trying to own a business or preach the gospel. False accusation­s of murder, arson and robbery. Simply being Black.”

Lawmakers tried, and failed, to pass anti-lynching bills nearly 200 times.

The earliest such attempt came in 1900, when Rep. George Henry White, R-N.C., then the country’s only Black member of Congress, stood on the floor of the House and read the text of his unpreceden­ted measure, which would have prosecuted lynchings at the federal level. The bill later died in committee.

Years later, Rep. Leonidas Dyer, R-Mo., introduced an anti-lynching bill that passed the House but was filibuster­ed in the Senate by Southern Democrats, many of whom opposed it in the name of “states’ rights.”

The Emmett Till Antilynchi­ng Act was introduced in 2019 by Rep. Bobby Rush, D-Ill., in the House and Sens. Cory Booker, D-N.J., and Tim Scott, R-S.C., in the Senate. It is named for the 14-year-old Black boy whose killing in Mississipp­i in 1955 sparked the civil-rights movement.

On Tuesday, Biden paid tribute to the Till family for finding “purpose through your pain” — and also emphasized that the law was not just about past crimes but about those who remain victims of racial hatred.

“Racial hate is an old problem. It’s a persistent problem,” Biden said. “Hate never goes away. It only hides, it hides under the rocks. Given just a little bit of oxygen, it comes roaring back out, screaming.”

Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris both also paid tribute to Ida Wells, a Black investigat­ive journalist who in the late 1800s and early 1900s documented the barbaric nature of lynching in extensive detail.

In 2020, Wells was posthumous­ly awarded a Pulitzer Prize special citation for her work.

Michelle Duster, Wells’s great-granddaugh­ter who spoke at the ceremony Tuesday, noted that Wells had visited President William McKinley in 1898 at the White

House to urge him to make lynching a federal crime, though efforts to enact such legislatio­n would fail for 124 more years.

Shortly after she stepped up to the podium, Duster said she needed a moment to take everything in.

“We finally stand here today, generation­s later, to witness this historic moment,” Duster said. “We are here today because of the tenacity of the civil rights leaders and commitment of members of Congress who are here today.”

Harris, who was a co-sponsor of the legislatio­n when she was a senator, said they were gathered Tuesday to do “unfinished business” to declare that lynching is and always has been a hate crime.

The victims of lynching were business owners, teachers, activists, Harris said — and for their families, the stories of those crimes were “not lines in a history book, but vivid memories.”

“As we recognize them, as we recognize our history,” Harris said.

In a statement, Rush called lynching “a long-standing and uniquely American weapon of racial terror that has for decades been used to maintain the white hierarchy.”

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