Showing posts with label civil rights cold case. Show all posts
Showing posts with label civil rights cold case. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

W.E. A.L.L. B.E. TV:"Before Trayvon: The Murder & Cover-Up of Johnnie Mae Chappell"

 
W.E. A.L.L. B.E. TV:"Before Trayvon: The Murder & Cover-Up of Johnnie Mae Chappell"

WATCH NOW:

http://youtu.be/mRbWjss93Qc

"Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced, where ignorance prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that society is an organized conspiracy to oppress, rob and degrade them, neither persons nor property will be safe."
~Frederick Douglass



Featured Guests...

1.) Shelton Chappell (Johnnie Mae Chappell's Son)

2.) Sgt. Lee Cody
 Former police detectives Lee Cody (left) and Don Coleman visit the Civil Rights Memorial, which contains the name of Johnnie Mae Chappell.

C. Lee Cody Jr. was a detective sergeant with the sheriff's office when Johnnie Mae Chappell was killed. Lee says the sheriff's department did not assign anyone to investigate the murder, so he and his partner took on the case themselves.

Lee says he and his partner arrested the suspects, got full confessions and found the murder weapon. Still, Lee says charges against three of the four men were completely dropped. "Here is a black woman gunned down in cold blood on a dark, lonely highway, and none of them cared. We lived in a racist city and a racist town run by racist people," Lee says.

Outraged, Lee demanded answers from his bosses. Soon after, he was fired and his life began to unravel. "I got a job driving a garbage truck, and I wasn't a very good husband, and I drank too much," he says. "I was eaten up with it, there's no doubt about it."

Read more:  

Get & Read Bro. Lee Cody's book abut the Johnnie Mae Chappell murder and coverup entitled "The 14th Denial":


3.) Sis. Ruth Monteiro (Johnnie Mae Chappell)

About Johnnie Mae Chappell, Her Murder & The Cover-Up:

On March 23, 1964, race riots raged in downtown Jacksonville, Florida. Johnnie Mae Chappell, a 35-year-old wife and mother of 10 children, was not anywhere near downtown that evening, though. Instead, she was frantically searching the roadside near her home in Pickettville, the poor all-black neighborhood in the Jacksonville area, with two neighbors, hoping to find the wallet she had lost on her way home (Hastings, 2003). Unfortunately, Chappell would lose her life to senseless violence that night simply because of the color of her skin.

While Chappell and her neighbors were searching the edge of the road with a flashlight, a car carrying four white men approached. The men, who had been incensed by radio reports about the riots, were driving around looking to "get" a black person. When they saw three black individuals on the side of the road, the man seated in the front passenger seat pulled up a gun and fired. Chappell was struck in the stomach by a single bullet and died on the way to the hospital (Hastings, 2003).

As was the case with the killing of many African Americans during the Jim Crow era, Chappell's murder received very little attention. The local media mentioned her death only as a side note in stories about the riots that focused mainly on white citizens who had been injured (Murphy, 2005). Also, according to the detectives who eventually investigated and solved Chappell's murder, nobody within the local police force had ever been assigned to investigate the crime. Instead, detectives Lee Cody and Donald Coleman cracked the case somewhat by chance (Hastings, 2003).

In August 1964, five months after the murder, Cody and Coleman were approached on two separate occasions by a young man named Wayne Chessman, who said he wanted to help the detectives. The detectives were initially unsure what Chessman was talking about, but after seeing Chessman leave their second encounter in a car that matched the one that carried Chappell's murderer, the detectives decided to question Chessman at the police station. During the subsequent interview, Chessman provided a detailed account of Chappell's murder and implicated 3 other men: Elmer Kato, the driver of the car, James Alex Davis, who sat in the back seat with Chessman that night, and J.W. Rich, the shooter (Hastings, 2003). Under questioning, Kato and Rich confessed to the crime, although Rich claimed that it was an accident (Mitchell, 2010).

After Cody and Coleman completed their investigation, Chessman, Kato, Rich, and Davis were arrested and charged with first-degree murder. However, the threads of justice began to unravel at that point. The two detectives claim that they were berated by their commanding officer for investigating the crime, and they were subsequently removed from the case. Additionally, the murder weapon mysteriously disappeared. Despite the loss of evidence, the state proceeded with its case, and an all-white jury found Rich guilty of a lesser charge of manslaughter. This was a surprising result, given that many whites avoided any punishment for killing black men, women, and children throughout the Jim Crow era. Rich was sentenced to ten years in prison as a result of his conviction, but he only served three years before being released. All charges against the other three men were dropped (Hastings, 2003).

While her killers went largely unpunished for their crime, Chappell's family was torn apart following her death. The eldest five children, all daughters from Chappell's first marriage, were sent to live with various relatives on their father's side of the family. Authorities removed the five youngest children, all boys, from their father Willie's care and split them up among foster families. For over 30 years, the children had very little information about what had really happened to their mother. On the 32nd anniversary of her death, Chappell's children finally heard the story of what happened to their mother when Cody approached them at a family reunion (Hastings, 2003).

Cody and Coleman also had their lives permanently altered by the Chappell case. The detectives claim that their pursuance of the truth caused them to be demoted and, shortly thereafter, fired for insubordination. Neither man ever worked in law enforcement again, but neither ever forgot the Chappell case (Murphy, 2005).

Although the state provided little justice in the murder of Johnnie Mae Chappell, she will not be one of the forgotten or unknown. Chappell's name was added to the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Alabama, in 2000 (Mitchell, 2010). Also, in 2005, the Florida legislature honored Chappell by renaming a section of the highway where she was murdered the "Johnnie Mae Chappell Parkway" (Murphy, 2005). The memory of Chappell serves as a powerful reminder of the hatred and brutal violence that robbed so many individuals of their lives solely because of their race.

Neil Baumgartner
Staff Docent
Jim Crow Museum
November 2012

References

Hastings, D. (2003, December 1). Johnnie Mae Chappell: Long road to truth. The Associated Press.

Mitchell, J. (2010, November 18). Former detective says 1964 murder can be prosecuted [Journey to Justice].

Murphy, D. (2005, September 7). Seeking justice for a racial killing, 40 years later:
The Johnnie Mae Chappell case could become the latest in a wave of the South's "atonement trials". Dateline NBC on Dateline. Retrieved from http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8670054/ns/dateline_nbc/t/seeking-justice-racial-killing-years-later/.

More Info On The Johnnie Mae Chappell Case:

Former detective says 1964 murder can be prosecuted

Filming the Johnnie Mae Chappell Story

The 1964 Murder of Johnnie Mae Chappell

Remembering Johnnie Mae Chappell

***

And The Best IYet To Come!!!

***

Support The W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Movement!!!
Donate online:

Or send a money order to
the following address:
Attn: Ron Herd II
The W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Group Inc.
P.O. Box 752062
Memphis, TN 38175

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Saturday, February 15, 2014

Sun. Feb. 16, 2014 @ 3pm C/4pm E/1pm P~W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio: "'Spies Of Mississippi' & 'Giving Justice Crusader Bro. Alvin Sykes His Just Due Along With Flowers'!!!"

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W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio: "'Spies Of Mississippi' & 'Giving Justice Crusader Bro. Alvin Sykes His Just Due Along With Flowers'!!!" 



 W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio: Resurrecting Black Radio One Podcast At A Time!!!

Date: Sunday Feb. 16, 2014

Showtime:

4pm Eastern/3pm Central/1pm Pacific

 This is a 2 hour show/discussion

Listen Live!!! 


***All Shows Are Recorded & Archived & Available For Listens & Downloads 24/7 @ The Same Links Of Their LIVE Airing***

Call-In & Participate!!!

646-652-4593

***

***With Special Co-Host Dr. Leah***

Featured Guests & Topics...

1st Hour
 'The Spies Of Mississippi' Revisited

PBS TV ONLINE: WATCH 'SPIES OF MISSISSIPPI' NOW:
http://video.pbs.org/video/2365163372/ 


Featured Guests...
1.) Sis. Dawn Porter (Director/Producer) of 'Spies Of Mississippi,' 'Gideon's Army' & Co-Founder of Trilogy Films

Dawn Porter is an award-winning producer/director whose most recent documentary, Gideon’s Army, won the 2013 Sundance Editing Award in addition to the Tribeca All Access Creative Promise Award. The film has received generous grants from the Ford Foundation, The Tribeca Film Institute, The Sundance Film Institute and Chicken & Egg Pictures. The film will be broadcast by HBO in Summer 2013. Dawn previously worked as Director of Standards and Practices at ABC News and as a Vice President of Standard and Practices at A&E Television Networks. Dawn was an Executive Producer on Serious Moonlight (Magnolia Pictures), written by Adrienne Shelley and starring Meg Ryan and Timothy Hutton and The Green (Showtime Networks) starring Cheyenne Jackson (30 Rock) and Julia Ormond.

Official Website:
http://www.spiesofmississippithefilm.com/

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2.) 'Spies Of Mississippi' Star, Civil Rights Legend & 2010 W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Artivist Of The Year Sis. Margaret Block!!!


Sis. Margaret: A Grassroots General That Can Carry A Tune 
 
Sis. Margaret Block (photo courtesy of W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News)
Miss. Civil Rights Legend Sis. Margaret Block Demonstrates & Discusses The Importance Of Freedom Songs In The Mississippi Civil Rights Movement @ The 46th Annual Mississippi Civil Rights Martyrs Memorial Service In Neshoba County, Ms...6/19/2010.

W.E. A.L.L. B.E. TV: Freedom Singing With Sis. Margaret Block, An American Civil Rights Legend
WATCH:

Sis. Margaret Block is a true grassroots cultural warrior activist…She has been a Freedom Fighter using words and song to fight bigotry and racial oppression since the 1960s American Civil Rights Movement, working alongside now legendary icons such as Stokely Carmichael and Fannie Lou Hamer in the very brutal Mississippi Delta Campaign. Coming from a long line of activists which included her brother, the very charismatic and highly revered Sam Block (the SNCC Field Secretary for the Northern Mississippi campaign), Sis. Margaret knew that serving the people was not only a choice, but a calling much like folks called to preach. 

Her activities in the movement raised the ire of many powerful entities and enemies of the people including the Klu Klux Klan and The Mississippi Sovereignty Commission a.k.a. The White Citizens Council…She became the target of so many death threats that she at one point had to be smuggled out of Charleston,MS, in a funeral hearse driven by unsung Mississippi Civil Rights Martyr Birdia Keglar. Since coming back to Cleveland, MS, from Oakland,CA, some years ago she has picked up where she left off in the 60s, not missing a beat. 


W.E. A.L.L. B.E. TV: "Sis. Margaret Block: If You Don't Vote Don't Cry..."

Delta State University
(Cleveland, MS) 9/19/2013
WATCH NOW:


***

2nd Hour
"Giving Justice Crusader Bro. Alvin Sykes Is His Just Due Along With Flowers!!!"


Featured Guest:
3.) Legendary Civil Rights Crusader & The Kansas City Public Library's 2013 Scholar In Residence Bro. Alvin Sykes

As a self-taught human rights worker who relies on local libraries for his primary research, the Kansas City Public Library's 2013 scholar in residence Bro. Alvin Sykes works with the justice system on behalf of minorities and the poor.
A True Man Of Action, Bro. Alvin Sykes has testified before Congress, bend the ears of politicians, and played an instrumental role  in creating the Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act, which gives the U.S. Department of Justice the means to investigate long-ago cases of civil rights violations.
Yet much of his work has been low profile: a case of workplace discrimination here, food stamps denied or an unfair eviction there. Frequently, his work is not only unpublicized but also uncompensated which equates to unsung. However, today we pay homage to the man and sing his praises!!!

The Kansas City Public Library: A Conversation With Alvin Sykes 1/30/2014
WATCH:


More Bro. Alvin Sykes On W.E. A.L.L. B.E.:


W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio: "Echoes Of Emmett & Justice For Keith Warren" 9/15/2013
(2nd Hour) LISTEN:


W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio: "Meet Alvin Sykes: Civil Rights Cold Case Justice Crusader" 4/1/2009
LISTEN:


A Great Profile Of Civil Rights Cold Case Justice Crusader Alvin Sykes...


***

And The Best Is Yet To Come!!!

***

Support The W.E. A.L.L. B.E.
Movement!!!
Donate online:

Or send a money order to
the following address:
Attn: Ron Herd II
The W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Group Inc.
P.O. Box 752062
Memphis, TN 38175