Federal probe of 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre says 'no avenue' for criminal
case in connection to attack
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[January 11, 2025]
By SEAN MURPHY
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The first-ever U.S. Justice Department review of
the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre concluded Friday that while federal
prosecution may have been possible a century ago there is no longer an
avenue to bring a criminal case more than 100 years after one of the
worst racial attacks in U.S. history.
The Department of Justice said at the outset of its probe it had no
expectation anyone would be prosecuted, but in a more than 120-page
report federal investigators outlined the scope and impact of the
massacre, an attack by a white mob on a thriving Black district that
left as many as 300 people dead and 1,200 homes, businesses, schools and
churches destroyed.
“Now, the perpetrators are long dead, statutes of limitations for all
civil rights charges expired decades ago, and there are no viable
avenues for further investigation,” the report states.
Among the findings in the DOJ investigation were federal reports from
just days after the massacre, in 1921, conducted by an agent with the
precursor agency to the FBI. But today's investigators said they found
no evidence that any federal prosecutors ever evaluated those reports.
“It may be that federal prosecutors considered filing charges and, after
consideration, did not do so for reasons that would be understandable if
we had a record of the decision,” the report concluded, adding that if
the department didn't seriously consider such charges, “then its failure
to do so is disappointing.”
The report also examined the role of various people and organizations in
the massacre, including the Tulsa Police Department, local sheriff,
Oklahoma National Guard and then-Tulsa Mayor T.D. Evans, determining
that each played a role in the chaos and destruction, either by failing
to act or by actively participating in the attack.
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People attend a dedication of a prayer wall outside of the historic
Vernon African Methodist Episcopal Church in the Greenwood
neighborhood during the centennial of the Tulsa Race Massacre, in
Tulsa, Okla., May 31, 2021. (AP Photo/John Locher, File)
Damario Solomon-Simmons, an attorney for the last known survivors of
the massacre, Viola Fletcher and Lessie Benningfield Randle, both of
whom are 110, did not immediately respond Friday to a request for
comment on the report. Solomon-Simmons had previously decribed the
DOJ's decision to investigate the massacre as a “joyous occasion.”
Victor Luckerson, a Black author and historian who wrote a book
about Tulsa's Greenwood district, said there is value in the
government establishing a definitive record of the attack.
“Having government documents available lays the groundwork for the
possibility of reparations,” Luckerson said. “Any of those
discussions about reparations, one of the first questions is how we
establish a factual record of what happened.”
A researcher working for a state commission in 1999 estimated the
damage from the attack to be $1.8 million in 1921 dollars, a figure
the report said would be about $32.2 million today.
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.
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.
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