By Dan Martin
Filed Thursday, June 21, 2007 at 5:25 PM
It seems former Senator Jim Talent is getting his legislation passed from beyond the political grave. Labels: U.S._HouseYesterday, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill whose original version was sponsored in 2005 by Talent, who was defeated last year by Democrat Claire McCaskill, and Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Connecticut). The bill calls for the US Department ofJustice to reopen "cold" cases of civil rights crimes committed prior to 1970.
The House version of the bill is named in honor of Emmett Till, a 14 year-old black teenager murdered in Mississippi in 1955 by two white men. It passed by a vote of 422 to 2. McCaskill was one of the bill's co-sponsors.
The two nay votes came from Congressman Lynn A. Westmoreland (R-Georgia) and Congressman Ron Paul (L-Texas). The Senate has already passed a similar bill.
The passage of this bill comes just five days after the June 15 "cold case" conviction of Klansman James Seale for kidnapping and conspiracy in the 1964 slaying of two black teenagers in Mississippi. Seale was indicted this past January, nearly 43 years after the killings. He now awaits sentencing on August 24 and potentially up to life in prison.
The Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crimes Act is headed to conference committee to work out the minor differences between the Senate and House versions.
2 Comments:
A great story. The irony is that the same justice department has too often been against civil rights.
The Pub Defender was part of the greatest voting rights massacre of the last election cycle.
I blog about it at:
www.theblogofindependence.com
6/22/2007 12:44 PM
what is this, "white guilt", or a lame attempt to convince black voters that the "justice department" is really concerned about past racially motivated crimes and their subsequent injustice, perpatrated by the "justice department" GTFOOH!!!!!
6/22/2007 5:10 PM
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