The
Mississippi
Burning Trial
(
U. S.
vs. Price et al.)
by Douglas O. Linder
It was an old-fashioned lynching, carried out with the help of
county officials, that came to symbolize hardcore resistance to integration.
Dead were three civil rights workers, Michael Schwerner, Andrew Goodman, and
James Chaney. All three shot in the dark of night on a lonely road in
Neshoba County
,
Mississippi
. Many people predicted such a tragedy when the
Mississippi
Summer Project, an effort that would bring hundreds of college-age volunteers
to "the most totalitarian state in the country" was announced in
April, 1964. The FBI's all-out search for the conspirators who killed the
three young men, depicted in the movie "Mississippi
Burning," was successful, leading three years later to a trial
in the courtroom of one of America's most determined segregationist
judges.
Sam
Bowers, the Imperial Wizard of the White Knights of the Klu Klux Klan
of Mississippi, sent word in May, 1964 to the Klansmen of Lauderdale and Neshoba
counties that it was time to "activate Plan 4." Plan 4 provided
for "the elimination" of the despised civil rights activist Michael
Schwerner, who the Klan called "Goatee" or
"Jew-Boy." Schwerner, the first white civil rights worker based
outside of the capitol of Jackson, had earned the enmity of the Klan by
organizing a black boycott of a white-owned business and aggressively trying to
register blacks in and around
Meridian
to vote.
The Klan's first attempt to eliminate Schwerner came on June 16,
1964 in the rural
Neshoba
County
community of Longdale
[LINK TO MAP]. Schwerner had visited Longdale on Memorial Day
to ask permission of the black congregation at
Mount
Zion
Church
to use their church as the site of a "
Freedom
School
." The Klan knew of Schwerner's Memorial Day visit to Longdale and
expected him to return for a business meeting held at the church on the
evening of June 16. About 10 p.m., when the
Mount
Zion
meeting broke up, seven black men and three black women left the building to
discover thirty men lined up in military fashion with rifles and shotguns.
More men were gathered at the rear of the church. Frustrated when their
search for "Jew-Boy" was unsuccessful, some of the Klan members began
beating the departing blacks. Ten gallons of gasoline were removed from
one of the Klan members cars and spread around the inside of the church.
Mount
Zion
Church
was soon engulfed in flames.
News of the beatings and fire reached Michael Schwerner in
Oxford
,
Ohio
. Schwerner and his twenty-one-year-old chief aide , a native
black
Meridian
named James
Chaney, were in
Ohio
to attend a three-day program sponsored by the National Council of Churches to
train recruits for the
Mississippi
Summer Project. Among those being trained for a summer of work aimed at
improving the lives of black Mississippians was a
Queens
College
student named Andrew
Goodman, who Schwerner convinced to come to
Meridian
. Anxious to get back to Mississippi to learn what they could about the
disturbing events in Longdale, Schwerner, Chaney, and the newly-recruited
Goodman loaded into a blue CORE-owned Ford station wagon in the early morning
hours of June 20 for long trip back to Meridian. The next day, after a
short night's sleep and a breakfast in
Meridian
, the three civil rights workers were again in the CORE wagon heading northwest
towards Longdale.
Longdale was in Neshoba County, known as a high risk area for civil
rights workers. Lawrence
Rainey, Neshoba County Sheriff, and his deputy, Cecil
Price, were both members of the Klan. Although their Klan
membership was not generally known, both had reputations as being tough on
blacks. Rainey had been elected sheriff the previous November after
campaigning as "the man who can cope
with situations that might arise." In
Neshoba
County
, it was well understood that the "situations" Rainey referred to
meant meddlesome interference by outsiders with
Mississippi
's state-enforced policy of segregation. Schwerner told Meridian CORE
worker Sue Brown that they should be back in the CORE office in
Meridian
by 4:00. If they weren't back by 4:30, she should start making phone
calls.
Schwerner, Chaney, and Goodman began their Midsummer's Day visit to
Neshoba
County
with an inspection of the burned out remains of
Mount
Zion
Church
. They then visited the homes of four black members of the congregation to
learn more about the incident. At one of the homes, the three civil rights
workers were warned that a group of white men were looking for them. About
3 p.m., the trio was ready to head back to the relative safety of their
Meridian
office. There were two possible routes to
Meridian
. The most direct route was the road they had come up, Highway 491, a
narrow clay road intersected by numerous dirt roads. An ambush would be
easy on 491. The other, less direct route, was a black topped Highway 16,
which would take them west through
Philadelphia
, the county seat. Chaney turned onto Highway 16.
Deputy Sheriff Price was at that time heading east on Highway 16.
A few miles outside of Philadelphia, Price spotted the well-known CORE wagon
heading in his direction. Schwerner and Goodman most likely were crouched
low in their seats, allowing Price to see only the black driver, James Chaney.
Price shouted over his radio, "I've got a good one! George Raymond!"
(Raymond was a black civil rights leader hated by Klan throughout
Mississippi
.) Price did a quick U-turn and headed back after his quarry. Chaney
pulled the CORE wagon over to the side of the road just inside the
Philadelphia
city limits. Price arrested Schwerner, Goodman, and Chaney, allegedly for
suspicion of having been involved in the church arson, and deposited the three
in the
Neshoba County jail. Soon thereafter he met with the
Neshoba
County
Klan kleagle, or recruiter,
Edgar Ray Killen to tell him of his exciting catch and to plan the
deadly conspiracy that would unfold later that night.
Some of what happened over the next seven hours in the
Neshoba
County
jail is known. We know that Schwerner asked to make a phone call, but his
request was denied. If he wasn't concerned about his physical well-being
before that time, he would have been then. We also know that a call was
made to the jail at 5:20 in the afternoon asking whether anyone there had
information concerning the whereabouts of the three overdue civil rights
workers. We know also that the jailer who answered the call, Minnie
Herring, lied. We know that shortly after 10:00 P.M. Cecil Price showed up
at the jail, telling the jailer, "Chaney wants to pay off-- we'll let him
pay off and release them all." Price led them to their parked car,
then tailed them as they headed east out of town on Highway 19.
The three civil rights workers by then no doubt suspected that they
were being led into a trap, and in fact they were. Since receiving word
from Price that Schwerner had been captured, Edgar Ray Killen, the Klan kleagle
and an ordained Baptist minister, had been busy recruiting members of the
Neshoba and
Lauderdale
County
klaverns for some "butt ripping," as he put it. An afternoon
meeting at the Longhorn Drive-In in
Meridian
with local Klan bigwigs was followed by a later meeting at Akin's Mobile Homes
with eager, younger members who would participate in the actual killings.
Killen told the dozen or more recruits to buy rubber gloves and to be in
Philadelphia
by 8:15 P. M. After offering the Klan men a drive-by tour of the
Neshoba
County
jail and going over the details of the planned release, Killen headed off to
see a departed uncle at the local funeral home and to thereby establish his
alibi.
After following the CORE station wagon out of town, Price returned to
Philadelphia
to drop off an accompanying
Philadelphia
police officer, then raced back onto Highway 19 in pursuit of the three civil
rights workers. Meanwhile, two other cars filled with young Klan members
were also speeding down with the same object in mind. Price's
souped-up Chevy saw the CORE wagon come into view less than ten miles from the
county line. Chaney decided to run for it, and a high speed chase ensued.
Chaney swerved quickly onto Highway 492, but Price made the turn as well.
Seconds later, for reasons unknown, Chaney braked his car and the three
surrendered.
According to James
Jordan, a Klan member who would later become a key FBI informant,
Price said, "I thought you were going back to
Meridian
if we let you out of jail?" When Chaney said that's where they were
headed, Price said, "You sure were taking the long way around. Get
out of the car." The three were placed in Deputy Price's car.
Soon three cars, Price's and two full of Klan members, were traveling in a
procession down an unmarked dirt turnoff called
Rock Cut Road
.
It is not known whether the three were beaten before they were
killed. Klan informants deny that they were, but there is some physical
evidence to the contrary. What is known is that a twenty-six-year-old
dishonorably discharged ex-Marine, Wayne
Roberts, was the trigger man, shooting first Schwerner, then Goodman,
then Chaney, all at point blank range. (FBI informant James Jordan, according to
a second informant present at the killings, Doyle Barnette, also fired two shots
at Chaney.) The bodies of the three civil rights workers were taken to a
dam site at the 253-acre Old Jolly Farm. The farm was owned by
Philadelphia
businessman Olen Burrage who reportedly had announced at a Klan meeting when
the impending arrival in
Mississippi
of an army of civil rights workers was discussed, "Hell, I've got a dam
that'll hold a hundred of them." The bodies were placed together in a
hollow at the dam site and then covered with tons of dirt by a Caterpillar D-4.
While the bodies were being buried, Price had returned to his
duties in
Philadelphia
. Around 12:30 A. M., Price met with Sheriff Rainey. Given their
Klan membership and the close relationship between the two, it is almost
unimaginable that at that time Price did not relate, in full detail, the events
following the release from jail of Schwerner, Goodman, and Chaney.
At the CORE office in
Meridian
, meanwhile, staffers were growing increasingly concerned about the long overdue
civil rights workers. Calls inquiring about their whereabouts turned up no
helpful information. At 12:30 A.M., a call was placed to John
Doar, the Justice Department's point man in
Mississippi
. Less than a week earlier Doar had been in
Oxford
,
Ohio
warning Summer Project volunteers that there was "no federal police
force" that could protect them from expected trouble in
Mississippi
. Doar feared the worst. By 6:00 A.M., Doar had invested the FBI
with the power to investigate a possible violation of federal law.
The morning after the civil rights worker's disappearance, the
phone rang in the office of Meridian-based FBI agent John
Proctor. (In the movie "
Mississippi
Burning," the character played by Gene Hackman is loosely based on
Proctor.) Within hours, Proctor was in
Neshoba
County
interviewing blacks, community leaders
, Sheriff Rainey, and Deputy Price. Proctor was a Alabama
native who had successfully cultivated relationships with all sorts of people,
including local law enforcement officers, who might aid in his investigations.
After his interview with Cecil Price, the Deputy slapped Proctor on the back and
said, "Hell, John, let's have a drink." Price went to his car
and pulled contraband liquor out of his trunk.
By the next day, June 23, Proctor had been joined by ten newly
arrived special agents and Harry Maynor, his New Orleans-based supervisor. The
first big break in the FBI investigation, called MIBURN (for "Mississippi
Burning"), came when Proctor received a tip that a smoldering car had been
seen in northeast Neshoba County. While Proctor was at the scene,
searching the area around what turned out to be the burned blue CORE station
wagon, he looked up to see Joseph
Sullivan, the FBI's Major Case Inspector. It was by then
abundantly clear that the Johnson Administration was placing top priority on the
case. By June 25, the federal military had joined the search, with
busloads of sailors arriving in
Neshoba
County
to beat their way through snake-infested swamps and woods. Days later, FBI
Director J. Edgar Hoover would fly to
Jackson
to announce the opening of the FBI's first office in
Mississippi
.
It soon became apparent to Inspector Sullivan the case "would
ultimately be solved by conducting an investigation rather than a search."
It turned out to be an extraordinarily difficult investigation. Neshoba
County residents, many of whom either participated in the conspiracy or knew of
it, were tight-lipped. Proctor found that some of his most useful
information came from kids, so he would stuff candy in his pockets before
setting out for a day's schedule of interviews. A promise of $30,000 in
reward money finally brought forward information, passed through an
intermediary, concerning the location of the bodies. On August 4, 1964,
John Proctor was at the Old Jolly Farm to take photographs of the bodies as they
were uncovered at the dam site. Inspector Sullivan invited Price to the
dam site to help in the removal of the bodies. Sullivan was interested in
observing the reaction of the Deputy, who was by then under heavy suspicion.
Proctor noted that "Price picked up a shovel and dug right in, and gave no
indication whatsoever that any of it bothered him."
Finally it would be informants from within the Klan that would
break the case open. The first information, from a Klan member at the
periphery of the conspiracy, enabled the FBI to focus on the more central
figures. One Klan member who received a great deal of attention from John
Proctor was James Jordan, a
Meridian
speakeasy owner. Over the course of five increasingly rough interviews,
Jordan
came to see turning state's evidence as his best bet to avoid a long prison
term. He was also promised $3500 and help in relocating himself and his
family in return for his full story.
Jordan
would become the government's key witness to the crime.
By December, 1964, the Justice Department had enough information to
authorize arrests. On the drizzly morning of December 4, a team of
federal agents swept through Neshoba and
Lauderdale
Counties
arresting nineteen men for conspiring to deprive Schwerner, Chaney, and Goodman
of their civil rights under color of state law. Six days later, a
U. S.
Commissioner dismissed the charges, declaring that the confession on which the
arrests were based was hearsay evidence. A month later, government attorneys
secured indictments against the conspirators from a federal grand jury in
Jackson
. The Justice Department was again disappointed, however, when on February
24, 1965, Federal
Judge William Harold Cox
, an ardent segregationist, threw out the indictments against all
conspirators other than Rainey and Price on the ground that the other seventeen
were not acting "under color of state law." In March, 1966, the
United States
Supreme Court overruled Cox and reinstated the indictments [LINK
TO SUPREME COURT DECISION]. As the Justice Department prepared
for trial, defense attorneys made the cynical argument that the original
indictments were flawed because the pool of jurors from which the grand jury was
drawn contained insufficient numbers of minorities. Rather than attempt to
refute the charge, the government summoned a new grand jury and, on February 28,
1967, won reindictments. The list of those indicted differed slightly from
the original list, and included the names of eighteen Klansmen.
Trial in the case of United States versus Cecil Price et al. began
on October 7, 1967 in the
Meridian
courtroom of Judge William Cox. Chief Prosecutor John Doar and other
government attorneys had reason to be concerned about Cox. Cox, appointed
as an effort to appease powerful Judiciary Committee Chairman (and former
roommate of Cox at Ole Miss) Senator James Eastland, had been a constant source
of problems for Justice Department lawyers (especially John Doar) who were
seeking to enforce civil rights laws in Mississippi. In one incident,
Judge Cox referred to a group of African Americans set to testify in a voting
rights case as "a bunch of chimpanzees."
A jury of seven white men and five white women, ranging in ages
from 34 to 67, was selected
[link to list of jurors]. Defense attorneys exercised peremptory
challenges against all seventeen potential black jurors. A white man, who
admitted under questioning by Robert Hauberg, the U.S. Attorney for Mississippi,
that he had been a member of the KKK "a couple of years ago," was
challenged for cause. Judge Cox denied the challenge.
The defense made a major mistake as John Doar presented background
witnesses for the prosecution. When Doar finished his direct examination
of Reverend Charles Johnson, who worked with Schwerner, Defense Attorney Laurel
Weir launched into a series of outrageous questions culminating with a question
asking whether Johnson had sought to "get young Negro males to sign a
pledge to rape a white woman once a week during the hot summer of 1964?"
Judge Cox broke in to say that such a question was "highly improper"
unless the defense could show a reason for posing it. When Weir said the
question had been passed to him in writing, Cox demanded to know who wrote it.
Finally one of the defense attorneys admitted that "Brother Killen,''
defendant Edgar Ray Killen, had written the question. The incident made
clear to the defendants that Judge Cox, who may have mellowed somewhat after a
recent unsuccessful impeachment effort against him in Congress, was taking the
trial seriously.
The heart of the government's case was presented through the
testimony of three Klan informants, Wallace Miller, Delmar
Dennis, and James Jordan. Miller described the organization of
the Lauderdale klavern and described his conversations with Exalted Cyclops
Frank Herndon and Kleagle Edgar Ray Killen about the June 21 operation in
Neshoba
County
. Dennis incriminated Sam Bowers, the founder and Imperial Wizard of the
White Knights of the KKK of
Mississippi
. Dennis quoted Bowers as having said after the killing of Schwerner and
the two others, "It was the first time that Christians had planned and
carried out the execution of a Jew." It was also through Dennis that
the government introduced the contents a letter written by Bowers but pretending
to be from an official
of a logging company referring to the murders as "the big
logging operation" and to the suspects of the FBI investigation as
"those deep in the swamp
[LINK TO KKK LOGGING LETTER]." At another point in his
testimony, Dennis described a Klan meeting in the pasture of Klan member Clayton
Lewis. He then pointed to Lewis, the mayor of
Philadelphia
, sitting at the defense table as a member of the twelve-man defense team. James
Jordan was the government's only witness to the actual killings. Fearing a
Klan assassination, the government had arranged to have
Jordan
hustled into court by five agents with guns drawn. After first requiring
hospitalization for hyperventilating, and then collapsing and having to be
carried from the courtroom on a stretcher, an obviously nervous
Jordan
finally made it to the witness stand.
Jordan
described the events of June 21 and the early morning of June 22, from the
gathering of Klan members in
Meridian
to the burial of the bodies at the Old Jolly Farm. His vivid testimony
caused one black female spectator to break down and have to be led from the
courtroom, sobbing.
The defense case consisted of a series of alibi and character
witnesses. Local residents testified as to the "reputation for truth
and veracity" of various defendants, or to having seen them on June
21 at locations such as funeral homes or hospitals.
John Doar presented the closing argument for the government on
October 18. Doar told the jury that "this was a calculated,
cold-blooded plot. Three men, hardly more than boys were its victims."
Pointing at Price, Doar said that "Price used the machinery of law, his
office, his power, his authority, his badge, his uniform, his jail, his police
car, his police gun, he used them all to take, to hold, to capture and
kill." Doar concluded by telling jurors that what he and the other
lawyers said "will soon be forgotten, but what you twelve do here today
will long be remembered."
One day after having begun its deliberations, the jury reported to
Judge Cox that it was deeply divided and unable to reach a verdict. Over
defense objections, the judge responding by giving the jury what is called the
"Allen charge," or the "dynamite charge," for its purpose of
breaking open a deadlocked jury. Shortly after Cox gave his charge,
defendant Wayne Roberts joked to Cecil Price, "We've got some dynamite for
them ourselves." The remark was overheard by a court officer and
reported to the judge.
On the morning of October 20, 1967, the jury returned with its
verdict. The verdict on its face appears to be the result of a compromise.
Seven defendants, mostly from
Lauderdale
County
, were convicted. The list of convicted men included Deputy Sheriff Cecil
Price, Imperial Wizard Sam Bowers, trigger man Wayne Roberts, Jimmy Snowden,
Billey Wayne Posey, and Horace Barnett. Seven men, mostly from
Neshoba
County
, were acquitted, including Sheriff Lawrence Rainey, burial site owner Olen
Burrage, and Exalted Cyclops Frank Herndon. In three cases, including that
of Edgar Ray Killen, the jury was unable to reach a verdict [LINK
TO ARTICLES ABOUT JURY DELIBERATIONS]. (Charges were dropped
against one defendant, Travis Barnette, before deliberations.) The convictions
in the case represented the first ever convictions in
Mississippi
for the killing of a civil rights worker. The New York Times called the
verdict "a measure of the quiet revolution that is taking place in southern
attitudes."
On December 29, Judge Cox imposed sentences. Roberts and
Bowers got ten years, Posey and Price got six years, and the other three
convicted defendants got four. Cox said of his sentences, "They
killed one nigger, one Jew, and a white man-- I gave them all what I thought
they deserved."
After serving four years of his six-year sentence, Cecil Price
rejoined his family in
Philadelphia
. In a 1977 New York Times Magazine interview, Price revealed that he
recently watched and enjoyed the television show "Roots." His
views on integration had changed, he said. "We've got to accept this
is the way things are going to be and that's it."
Update
(November, 2000):
Mississippi prosecutors are now considering bringing state murder
charges against some of the conspirators, including Edgar Ray Killen.
Mississippi Attorney General Michael Moore recently explained, "The problem
with [the
Mississippi
Burning] case is that we didn't do anything--we didn't investigate it; we
didn't prosecute it." In 1999, the state reopened the investigation.
The FBI turned over to the state more than 40,000 files pertaining to the case.
One of the problems with bringing charges in the 36-year-old case is that many
of the key witnesses that testified in the federal case are now dead. A
successful prosecution will most likely require that the state be successful
in convincing some of the conspirators to testify for the prosecution.
Attorney General Moore sees value in reviving the case: "Maybe by doing
this old case, we'll change some of those old stereotypes [about
Mississippi
]."
Update (May,
2001):
On May 6, 2001, three days after falling from a lift in an
equipment rental store, Cecil Price died of head injuries. Price's death
was seen by Attorney General Moore as a huge setback to the ongoing
investigation of the 1964 case: "If he had been a defendant, he would have
been a principal defendant. If he had been a witness, he would have been
our best witness. Either way, his death is a tragic blow to our
case."
Update (October, 2004):

In the photo to the left,
Jackson
State
University
students and others march in downtown
Jackson
in October 2004 demanding that Attorney General Jim Hood prosecute Edgar Ray
Killen, 79, a suspect in the 1964 killings of three civil rights workers.
On October 6, 2004 approximately 500 people marched in support of
state prosecution of former Klan preacher Edgar Ray Killen for the murder of
James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner. Killen, now 79,
escaped conviction in 1967 when a lone juror refused "to convict a
preacher." Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood, asked about the
efforts to gain an indictment of Killen, said that he would not be pressured by
emotion to reopen the old case. "This is going to be about
facts," he said in an interview with Ryan Clark of the Clarion-Ledger.
Killen offered no comment about public efforts to gain his conviction.
Update (January 7,
2005):

Edgar
Ray Killen in 2005 - Joe Ellis The Clarion-Ledger
On January 6, 2005, the State of
Mississippi
charged 79-year-old former Klan preacher Edgar
Ray Killen with murder in connection with the slayings of Chaney,
Goodman, and Schwerner. Police arrested Killen at his home following a
grand jury session, according to
Neshoba
County
Sheriff Larry Myers. Convicted Klan conspirator Billy
Wayne Posey expressed anger at Killen's arrest: "After 40 years
to come back and do something like this is ridiculous...like a nightmare."
More arrests in the case are expected. Carolyn Goodman, the 89-year-old
mother of victim Andrew Goodman was pleased with the news. She hoped the
killers would someday be "behind bars and think about what they've
done."
Prosecutor John Doar told me in 1999 that the failure of the
federal jury in 1967 to convict Killen was his biggest disappointment. Killen
"was really central to the conspiracy," Doar said. He believed
the jury might have divided on Killen because the evidence against him was more
circumstantial that it was for those convicted. When Killen returned home
to
Philadelphia
after the 1967 trial he greeted one of his neighbors by saying, "Man, I
thought they were fittin' me for overalls over there [at the trial in
Meridian
]."
Update (June 13, 2005):
Jury selection opened today in
Philadelphia
,
Mississippi
in the murder trial of Edgar Ray Killen. Killen watched the
proceedings from a wheelchair he has used since he broke his legs in a
tree-cutting accident in March. Security was tight with streets around the
courthouse barricaded. Ben Chaney, the brother of murder victim James
Chaney, told reporters he found the prosecution encouraging. Other civil
rights observers complained, however, that other surviving conspirators, such as
Olen
Burrage, should be facing charges as well.
Update (June 23,
2005):
Judge Marcus Gordon today sentenced Edgar Ray Killen to serve three
20-year terms, one for each conviction of manslaughter in connection with the
deaths of Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner in 1964. Judge Gordon said in
pronouncing sentence, "I have taken into consideration that there are three
lives in this case and that the three lives should be absolutely
respected." Sentencing followed Killen's conviction earlier in the
week. The manslaughter convictions came after nearly three days of jury
deliberations. The jury found that there was reasonable doubt as to
whether Killen intended that the klansmen kill the civil rights workers, and
thus did not return a murder conviction.
Update
(November 2007):

Gregory Scarpa, the mobster who helped crack the "Mississippi Burning"
case when he stuck a gun down the mouth of an appliance-selling KKK member.
Linda Schiro, the ex-girlfriend of former mobster Gregory Scarpa,
nicknamed "The Grim Reaper," testifying for the prosecution in a
murder case, stated that Scarpa put a gun in the mouth of a Ku Klux Klansman in
an effort to gain information about the location of the bodies of Chaney,
Schwerner, and Goodman. The ploy worked and the bodies were soon dug up in
an earthen dam. Scarpa died in prison in the 1990s.
Schiro's story confirmed reports, coming from confidential FBI sources in
1994, that a frustrated J. Edgar Hoover had turned to the Colombo crime family
for help in cracking the "Mississippi Burning" case.
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/price&bowers/Account.html
January
6, 2009