Justice Department will launch civil rights review into 1921 Tulsa Race
Massacre
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[October 01, 2024]
By SEAN MURPHY
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The Justice Department announced Monday it plans to
launch a review of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, an attack by a white
mob on a thriving Black district that is considered one of the worst
single acts of violence against Black people in U.S. history.
The review was launched under a federal cold-case initiative that has
led to prosecutions of some Civil Rights Era cases, although Assistant
U.S. Attorney General Kristen Clarke said they have “no expectation”
there is anyone living who could be prosecuted as a result of the
inquiry. Still, the announcement of a first-ever federal probe into the
massacre was embraced by descendants of survivors who have long
criticized city and state leaders for not doing more to compensate those
affected by the attack.
Clarke said the agency plans to issue a public report detailing its
findings by the end of the year.
“We acknowledge descendants of the survivors, and the victims continue
to bear the trauma of this act of racial terrorism,” Clarke said during
her remarks in Washington.
Damario Solomon-Simmons, an attorney for the last known survivors of the
massacre, 110-year-old Viola Fletcher and 109-year-old Lessie
Benningfield Randle, described Clarke's announcement as a “joyous
occasion.”
“It is about time,” said Solomon-Simmons, flanked by descendants of
massacre survivors. “It only took 103 years, but this is a joyous
occasion, a momentous day, an amazing opportunity for us to make sure
that what happened here in Tulsa is understood for what it was — the
largest crime scene in the history of this country.”
As many as 300 Black people were killed; more than 1,200 homes,
businesses, schools and churches were destroyed; and thousands were
forced into internment camps overseen by the National Guard when a white
mob, including some deputized by authorities, looted and burned the
Greenwood District, also known as Black Wall Street.
The Oklahoma Supreme Court in June dismissed a lawsuit by survivors,
dampening the hope of advocates for racial justice that the city would
make financial amends for the attack.
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In this 1921 image provided by the Library of Congress, smoke
billows over Tulsa, Okla. (Alvin C. Krupnick Co./Library of Congress
via AP, File)
The nine-member court upheld the decision made by a district court
judge in Tulsa last year, ruling that the plaintiff’s grievances
about the destruction of the Greenwood district, although
legitimate, did not fall within the scope of the state’s public
nuisance statute.
After the state Supreme Court turned away the lawsuit,
Solomon-Simmons asked the U.S. Department of Justice to open an
investigation into the massacre under the Emmett Till Unsolved Civil
Rights Crime Act.
Although investigations under the Act have led to successful
prosecutions of Civil Rights Era cases, the DOJ acknowledged in a
report to Congress last year that there are significant legal
barriers to cases before 1968.
“Even with our best efforts, investigations into historic cases are
exceptionally difficult, and rarely will justice be reached inside
of a courtroom,” the agency noted in the report.
Since the Act was approved in 2008, the DOJ has opened for review
137 cases, involving 160 known victims. The agency has fully
investigated and resolved 125 of those cases through prosecution,
referral or closure.
The report also notes the Act has led to two successful federal
prosecutions and three successful state prosecutions. Both federal
prosecutions involved separate murders of Black men in Mississippi
by members of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1960s.
The first federally assisted state prosecution under the initiative
was against Klansmen who bombed a Birmingham, Alabama, church in
1963, killing four young girls. That prosecution in the early 2000s
led to convictions and life sentences for two men involved in the
bombing.
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