Brother Wins Arrest in '64 Case
The Jackson Free Press teamed with the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. to follow an Army vet and Mississippi native on his journey back home, looking for justice for his little brother who was killed by the Klan in 1964. This is his story.
For four decades, Thomas Moore had shouldered guilt and shame. Guilt that he was not there to protect his younger brother; shame that he didn't have the nerve to avenge Charles's death. Over the years, the 63-year-old Army veteran had violent and bloody fantasies of confronting the men suspected of killing his brother. Then one day, someone offered to help him shoot the men - not with a gun, but with a camera.
LinkHere
For four decades, Thomas Moore had shouldered guilt and shame. Guilt that he was not there to protect his younger brother; shame that he didn't have the nerve to avenge Charles's death. Over the years, the 63-year-old Army veteran had violent and bloody fantasies of confronting the men suspected of killing his brother. Then one day, someone offered to help him shoot the men - not with a gun, but with a camera.
LinkHere
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