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Emmett Till.
Emmett Till. Photograph: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive
Emmett Till. Photograph: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive

Emmett Till: US reopens investigation into brutal 1955 killing of black teen

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Justice department is reinvestigating murder that helped inspire civil rights movement after receiving ‘new information’

The US federal government has reopened its investigation into the death of Emmett Till, the black teenager whose brutal killing in Mississippi shocked the world and helped inspire the civil rights movement more than 60 years ago.

The justice department told Congress in a report in March it is reinvestigating Till’s slaying in Money, Mississippi, in 1955 after receiving “new information”. The case was closed in 2007, with authorities saying the suspects were dead; a state grand jury did not file any new charges.

Deborah Watts, a cousin of Till, said she was unaware the case had been reopened until contacted by the Associated Press on Wednesday.

The federal report, sent annually to lawmakers under a law that bears Till’s name, does not indicate what the new information might be.

But it was issued in late March following the publication last year of The Blood of Emmett Till, a book that says a key figure in the case acknowledged lying about events preceding the killing of the 14-year-old youth from Chicago.

The book, by Timothy B Tyson, quotes a white woman, Carolyn Donham, as acknowledging during a 2008 interview that she was not truthful when she testified that Till grabbed her, whistled and made sexual advances at a store in 1955.

Two white men – Donham’s then husband Roy Bryant and his half-brother JW Milam – were charged with murder but acquitted in the slaying of Till, who had been staying with relatives in northern Mississippi at the time. The men later confessed to the crime in a magazine interview, but were not retried. Both are now dead.

Donham, who turns 84 this month, lives in Raleigh, North Carolina. A man who came to the door at her residence declined to comment about the FBI reopening the investigation.

“We don’t want to talk to you,” the man said before going back inside.

Paula Johnson, co-director of an academic group that reviews unsolved civil rights killings, said she could not think of anything other than Tyson’s book that could have prompted the justice department to reopen the Till investigation.

“We’re happy to have that be the case so that ultimately or finally someone can be held responsible for his murder,” said Johnson, who leads the Cold Case Justice Initiative at Syracuse University.

The justice department declined to comment on the status of the investigation.

Watts, Till’s cousin and co-founder of the Emmett Till Legacy Foundation, said it was “wonderful” that the killing was getting another look, but did not want to discuss details.

“None of us wants to do anything that jeopardizes any investigation or impedes, but we are also very interested in justice being done,” she said.

Abducted from the home where he was staying, Till was beaten and shot, and his mutilated body was found weighted down with a cotton gin fan in the Tallahatchie river. Images of his mutilated body in the casket gave witness to the depth of racial hatred in the deep south and helped build momentum for subsequent civil rights campaigns.

Relatives of Till pushed Jeff Sessions, the attorney general, to reopen the case last year following publication of the book.

Donham, then known as Carolyn Bryant and 21 years old at the time, testified in 1955 as a prospective defense witness in the trial of Bryant and Milam. With jurors out of the courtroom, she said a “nigger man” she didn’t know took her by the arm.

“Just what did he say when he grabbed your hand?” the defense attorney Sidney Carlton asked, according to a trial transcript released by the FBI a decade ago.

“He said, ‘How about a date, baby?’” she testified. Bryant said she pulled away, and moments later the young man “caught me at the cash register”, grasping her around the waist with both hands and pulling her toward him.

“He said, ‘What’s the matter baby, can’t you take it?’” she testified. Bryant also said he told her “you don’t need to be afraid of me,” claiming that he used an obscenity and mentioned something he had done “with white women before”.

A judge ruled the testimony inadmissible. An all-white jury freed her husband and the other man even without it. Testimony indicated a woman might have been in a car with Bryant and Milam when they abducted Till, but no one else was ever charged.

In the book, author Tyson wrote that Donham told him her testimony about Till accosting her was not true.

“Nothing that boy did could ever justify what happened to him,” the book quotes her as saying.

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