FBI probes claim suspects in 1946 Georgia mass lynching may be alive [View all]
http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/feb/16/suspects-1946-moores-ford-bridge-georgia-mass-lynching-alive
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US authorities are investigating whether some of those responsible for one of the American souths most notorious mass lynchings are still alive, in an attempt to finally bring prosecutions over the brutal unsolved killings.
FBI agents questioned a man in Georgia who was among several in their 80s and 90s newly named in connection with the Moores Ford Bridge lynching of 1946 on a list given to the US Department of Justice by civil rights activists, he told the Guardian.
Speaking at his home in Monroe, 10 miles west of the lynching site, Charlie Peppers denied taking part in the killings of four African Americans who were tied up and shot 60 times by a white mob.
Heck no, said Peppers, 86, when asked if he was involved. Back when all that happened, I didnt even know where Moores Ford was. Peppers, who was 18 at the time of the lynching, said: The blacks are blaming people that didnt even know what happened back then.
A report by the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) published last week found at least 700 more lynchings than had previously been recorded in southern states, renewing calls from campaigners for any suspects still at large to be brought to justice before it is too late.