The long awaited report into the 1955 killing of Emmett Till concludes no federal charges will be filed in the case, but District Attorney Joyce L. Chiles will make the decision on state charges, the FBI says. The FBI turned the report over to Chiles' office on Thursday. Chiles, who was trying a case in Leflore County, was not immediately available for comment.
John G. Raucci, special agent in charge of the FBI in Mississippi, said it would be up to Chiles to decide if any local charges would be filed. There is no statute of limitations on murder in Mississippi.
Previous Comments
- ID
- 131396
- Comment
From the article: There is no statute of limitations on murder in Mississippi. I think the AP has it wrong. I have been told that there was a statute of limitations on murder in Mississippi until 1959 or so, and that under ex post facto, this means that there essentially still is a statute of limitations for pre-1959 murders. This, I was told, is why state charges were never seriously considered. Does anyone else remember hearing this? Certainly I'd rather see state charges pursued, but if they can't be due to the statute of limitations, then the FBI's offer seems a little strange. Cheers, TH
- Author
- Tom Head
- Date
- 2006-03-16T18:39:06-06:00
More like this story
More stories by this author
- EDITOR'S NOTE: 19 Years of Love, Hope, Miss S, Dr. S and Never, Ever Giving Up
- EDITOR'S NOTE: Systemic Racism Created Jackson’s Violence; More Policing Cannot Stop It
- Rest in Peace, Ronni Mott: Your Journalism Saved Lives. This I Know.
- EDITOR'S NOTE: Rest Well, Gov. Winter. We Will Keep Your Fire Burning.
- EDITOR'S NOTE: Truth and Journalism on the Front Lines of COVID-19