Alabama Black Caucus Wants Ex Trooper Prosecuted in the 1965 Killing of Jimmy Lee Jackson
Saturday, April 9, 2005 at 10:17PM
TheSpook
Members of the Alabama Legislative
Black Caucus voted Tuesday to ask federal, state and local officials to
prosecute a former state trooper, James Bonard Fowler of Geneva, for
the death of Jimmy Lee Jackson 40 years ago. Jackson, a 26-year-old
black man, was shot in Marion on Feb. 18, 1965, after law officers
forcefully stopped a crowd from marching at night from a church to the
Perry County Jail, where a civil rights worker was held. Fowler, 71,
said in a phone interview that Jackson grabbed his pistol and the
weapon fired as they were fighting over it. ''Jimmy Lee Jackson was not
murdered,'' Fowler said. ''It was just an accident. It happened during
a melee, during a riot, during a civil disturbance.'' But state Rep.
Demetrius Newton, D-Birmingham, an attorney who said he was in Marion
just hours after the shooting, said many witnesses at the time said
Jackson was trying to defend his grandfather and mother from attacks by
law officers and that he was shot ''without provocation.'' Fowler said
he never was asked to testify before a grand jury about the shooting.
Sen. Hank Sanders, D-Selma, said that's why public officials should
investigate Fowler and the shooting now. Originally published in the Birmingham News (Alabama) March 30, 2005 Copyright 2005 The Birmingham News
Pictured above:
Jackson died eight days after he was shot. Newton said he remembers
civil rights leader the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. speaking at
Jackson's funeral. Sanders said anger over Jackson's shooting sparked
the ''Bloody Sunday'' march of March 7, 1965, when State Troopers beat
civil rights marchers at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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