A federal appeals court denied requests Wednesday
to reinstate a lawsuit filed by hundreds of people affected by a race
riot in Tulsa, Okla., in 1921. A three-judge panel of the U.S. Tenth
Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the plaintiffs waited too long to sue
the city, police and other officials. The Denver-based court ruled the
statute of limitations bars the lawsuit from proceeding. The decision
upholds an earlier ruling by an Oklahoma district court. "The Tulsa
race riot represents a tragic chapter in out collective history," the
appeals panel wrote. "While we have found no legal avenue exists
through which plaintiffs can bring their claims, we take no great
comfort in that conclusion." More than 400 plaintiffs - including about
150 survivors of the riot and 300 descendants of those killed or who
lost property - filed the suit in February 2003. Their attorney had
argued a report issued in 2001 disclosed new information about the
riot, and it was not until after the end of the Jim Crow era in the
1960s that courts became receptive to civil rights lawsuits. [more ]
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