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- NATION, Page 17American NotesMISSISSIPPIDelayed Justice
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- Byron de la Beckwith was a happy man in 1964 when two
- different all-white juries deadlocked on whether he was guilty
- of shooting black civil rights leader Medgar Evers in Jackson,
- Miss. But Beckwith's tribulations are far from over: last week
- the avowed white supremacist and former fertilizer salesman, now
- 70, was arrested in Tennessee and charged once again with the
- 1963 killing.
-
- The case was revived after more than a quarter-century by
- Jackson's daily Clarion-Ledger, which last year ran a series of
- investigative stories on Beckwith's earlier trials. That
- prompted Hinds County district attorney Ed Peters and assistant
- D.A. Bobby DeLaughter to re-examine the 1964 proceedings. From
- then on, as DeLaughter puts it, evidence began "falling into our
- laps."
-
- Evers' widow Myrlie produced a 1,500-page transcript of the
- earlier trials, though prosecutors had previously said that all
- known copies had disappeared. Then Beckwith's long-missing rifle
- mysteriously turned up in the garage of DeLaughter's
- father-in-law. Finally, two black witnesses are expected to
- place Beckwith in the vicinity of the shooting. Beckwith is
- fighting extradition to Mississippi. A hearing is scheduled for
- Feb. 22.
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