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Another stroke of luck for Tom Jennings, who produced "MLK: The Assassination Tapes," was finding Vince Hughes, who was a 20-year-old Memphis police dispatcher on his second day of work when King was killed. Hughes kept audiotapes of police calls on that day and crime scene photos from where King was shot, and the material was made available for the film. Jennings also went to radio station WDIA to collect interviews from black Memphis residents at the time. The white-owned and operated TV stations at the time had little such material, Royle said. "This (documentary) plunges you into the immediacy of the period and allows you to absorb it the way people at the time absorbed it," Royle said. "There's something that's electric about that. It gets you to sit up and pay attention." Smithsonian plans to air the special on Feb. 12.
[Associated
Press;
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