Edgar Ray Killen, the reputed Ku Klux
Klansman accused of killing three civil rights workers in 1964, said in
a television interview Wednesday that he will be exonerated because he
was attending a funeral at the time of the slayings. Killen also told
Jackson's WLBT-TV that all he knew of the case at the time was what he
had heard from media reports. "I am accused of murdering someone that I
didn't even know existed until the news media broke that they were
missing," said Killen, 80. "I wasn't even in the location, and they'll
learn that." Killen, a part-time preacher, was indicted last month on
state murder charges in the killings of Michael Schwerner, Andrew
Goodman and James Chaney, who had been helping register blacks to vote.
The men's bodies were buried in an earthen dam. In the WLBT interview,
Killen said some people were making millions of dollars off the revived
state investigation into the killings. "This is not a legal battle,
this is a political battle," he said. Nineteen men, including Killen,
were previously indicted on federal charges in the case. His case ended
in a hung jury, but seven others were convicted in 1967 of violating
the victims' civil rights. None served more than six years. [more]
Senate passes bill to rename portion of highway in honor of slain civil rights workers [more]
Reopened probe may close chapter on racial slaying [more]
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