By Antonio D. French
Filed Thursday, April 27, 2006 at 3:15 PM
A group of legislators joined today to announce the reintroduction of a bill to create two new Federal offices to investigate and prosecute unsolved murders from the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and '60s.
Among the supporters of the "Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act" are Missouri Congressmen Lacy Clay (D-1) and Kenny Hulshof (R-9), and Senator Jim Talent (R-MO), who co-sponsored the bill last year.
State Auditor Claire McCaskill, a Democrat who is running against Talent for the U.S. Senate, said today that she also supports the bill.
"As a former prosecutor who has made a career of fighting to protect rights and enforce laws, I feel that providing the tools and resources to prosecute Civil Rights-era murders is long overdue," McCaskill said in a statement.
Clay took the opportunity to take a jab at the record of McCaskill's opponent. "The rest of the Missouri delegation needs to improve their NAACP scores, in particular our two Senators who both received an F," he said.
Cases like those of Emmett Till; Roger and Dorothy Malcom; and George and Mae Murray Dorsey are likely to be among those investigated if the bill is approved.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home