SPECIAL REPORT: CAMPAIGN 2004

Collateral Damage

The Gleam Team

The War of the Flip Flops

Is Your Job Going Abroad?

WORKSHEET:
The Big Issues: A Summary
NATION
OBITUARY
How Reagan's Legacy Lives On
SOCIETY
Stem-Cell Rebels
BUSINESS
Make Vrooom for the Hybrids

WORKSHEET:
Interpreting Polls, Maps and Charts
CIVIL RIGHTS
Revisiting a Martyrdom
WORLD
IRAQ
Taking Back the Streets

Heeding the Call of the Cleric

The Scandal's Growing Stain

WORKSHEET:
The Handover of Power in Iraq
AFGHANISTAN
One for the Team
WAR ON TERROR
Who's the Enemy Now?
EUROPE
Where's the Old Magic?
MIDDLE EAST
Prepare To Evacuate

WORKSHEET:
Current Events in Review

Answers
 
CIVIL RIGHTS

Revisiting a Martyrdom
Inspired by a novice filmmaker, prosecutors launch a new investigation into the murder of Emmett Till


By David Van Biema

A woman's voice in the dark, a voice that meant death. Simeon Wright, who was lying next to his cousin Emmett Till that fateful Mississippi night, remembers the intruders well enough. But, he tells TIME, he also recalls a third man out on the porch. And he repeats his deceased father Mose's recollection that "they took Emmett out to the truck to ask ÔIs this the one?' And a female voice said, ÔHe's the one.'" Mose Wright used to repeat this often. But now a nation is listening.

Assistant Attorney General R. Alexander Acosta has launched a joint project with Mississippi to reopen the 1955 inquiry into the death of 14-year-old Emmett Till because "information has been brought to our attention that suggests that other individuals may have been involved in the murder." A main impetus, he said, was an unfinished documentary by novice director Keith Beauchamp.

Till's murder in Mississippi was the first great symbolic martyrdom of the civil rights era. After playfully whistling at a 21-year-old white woman named Carolyn Bryant, Till was ripped from his bed at 2:30 a.m. His corpse was later fished out of the nearby Tallahatchie River. His killers had severely beaten him, gouged out his eyes and put a hole in his head, through which his distraught mother said she could see daylight. Thousands of people came to his open-casket funeral, the black magazine Jet ran photos of his ruined face, and by the time an all-white jury acquitted Bryant's husband Roy and his half brother J.W. Milam in a sham trial, Till's death was a touchstone for black America, fueling support for the Montgomery, Alabama, bus boycott that same year.

Yet the crime was more complex than the myth. Bryant and Milam, who later confessed in Look magazine, were perfect, arrogant villains, but few in Money, Mississippi, thought they had acted alone. Civil rights leaders and members of the African-American press turned up witnesses—some suggesting that two of Milam's black employees were accomplices. (Both denied it.) Mose Wright often described that fatal female voice, speculating that it must have been Carolyn Bryant's. (She could not be reached for comment.) Till's indomitable mother Mamie Till Mobley and her supporters vainly lobbied the government to reinvestigate. She died last year.

Where they failed, Beauchamp's work on The Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till apparently succeeded. Initially researching a feature film, Beauchamp, 32, says, "I realized that I wasn't doing interviews—I was taking depositions." He says he found witnesses, including a woman who asserts on film that she saw a black man aiding the murderers' search for Till, and that Milam's green Chevy pickup was not alone when leaving the kidnapping, but one of a "caravan." Beauchamp eventually concluded that as many as 11 people—six of them white and five black—were complicit, and presented his findings to Mississippi authorities in February.

Simeon Wright differs with those who see little point to the investigation now that Bryant and Milam are dead. "Would it be proper for us to say Mohammed Atta and all his boys are dead, so let September 11 die?" he asks. "We can know who was in the conspiracy. They're in their 70s now. Why die with this stain on their hands?" And he adds, "Who knows? Maybe the state will call and say, ÔMr. Wright, we're so sorry your family suffered this grave injustice in Mississippi.'"

—from TIME, May 24, 2004

Questions

1. Who was Emmett Till and what role did his murder play in the civil rights movement?

2. Why is Till's death being investigated now?

TIME CLASSROOM

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