Posted on 07/12/2018 5:04:57 AM PDT by rightwingintelligentsia
The federal government has reopened its investigation into the slaying of Emmett Till, the black teenager whose brutal 1955 killing in Mississippi shocked the world.
A Justice Department report to Congress says the agency is reinvestigating Till's slaying after receiving what it calls "new information."
Till, a 14-year-old boy from Chicago, was kidnapped from his uncle's home in the town of Money and killed after he wolf-whistled at Carolyn Donham, a shopkeeper.
Three days later, his mutilated body was found in the muddy Tallahatchie River, weighted down with a cotton gin fan. His left eye was missing, and his right eye was dangling on his cheek. The body was identified only by a ring he was wearing.
Two men -- Donham's then-husband Roy Bryant and his half-brother J.W. Milam -- were charged with murder but acquitted in the slaying of Till. The men later confessed to the crime in a magazine interview, but weren't retried and are now dead.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
The news reports I've read this week all seem to indicate that the woman was interviewed for a recent book, and that she told a story that was different than the jury was told. This new info triggers new federal follow-up of some sort. That the news stories are coming out now, instead of when DOJ announced the planned follow-up (in a report to Congress dated late March 2018) seems to contradict any notion that this was something that folks of ill will intended as a publicity piece.
Have you ever looked at the "EXECUTIVE COMMUNICATIONS, ETC." section in the Congressional Record and tried to find out more about one of the documents abstracted therein? Well, that's the section where this DOJ report was announced (Congressional Record, April 5, 2018, p. H3057-8). Here's the text of the item:
"4365. A letter from the Assistant Attorney General, Department of Justice, transmitting the seventh annual report to Congress pursuant to the Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act of 2007, and first Annual Report to Congress pursuant to the Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crimes Reauthorization Act of 2016, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 509 note; Public Law 110-344, Sec. 3(c)(2); (122 Stat. 3935); to the Committee on the Judiciary."
A couple of weeks ago, I saw a document listed in that "EXECUTIVE COMMUNICATIONS, ETC." section that I wanted to find out more about (it was a DOD document informing Congress which reserve units might soon be activated for duty). After spending a half an hour or so without finding the referenced document anywhere on the web, I sent an online suggestion to my Congressman. Maybe if Congress provided pdfs of these documents they receive, we'd have heard about the Emmett Till update months sooner. "Dear Representative Rice:
I was reading the Congressional Record today, and a have a question that I hope you can answer. There's a section titled "EXECUTIVE COMMUNICATIONS, ETC." I was interested in the first document listed in that section in the June 29 Congressional Record. Each document described in that section is assigned a number. I went to www.house.gov and searched the external communications database there using the number assigned to the document I was interested in. The search was successful in finding an abstract of the document (the abstract contained the same info that I had just read in the description of the document in the Congressional Record. I was disappointed that there wasn't a link to a pdf image of the document. My question is: would you please consider sponsoring legislation to ensure that every document described in that section of the Congressional be made freely available for online viewing?
By the way, I searched some of the involved department's websites to try and find the document there, to no avail.
Thanks and best wishes,
Steven B. Schulin
506 43rd Avenue South
North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
843-685-6824
steve.schulin@gmail.com
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