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Though the FBI's effort has been applauded, some believe the pursuit comes too late. "I think the window has been closing for a couple of years because many of the potential defendants are dying or have died. This was an effort that would have been wonderful about 15 years ago," said Susan Glisson, director of the William Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation at the University of Mississippi. Southern Poverty Law Center president Richard Cohen said his organization has turned over information to the FBI in hopes someone will be prosecuted in at least a few of the remaining unsolved killings. "The justice that is achieved in those few is going to have to serve as symbolic justice for the whole," Cohen said. Deitle said the investigations are "incredibly labor intensive." Agents who can't get in touch with relatives seek sheriffs or deputies and comb neighborhoods where the crimes occurred. If that fails, they turn to grand jury dockets. "We've dug that deep to just find anybody," she said.
[Associated
Press;
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