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On June 12, 1963, at age 42, De La Beckwith murdered NAACP and civil rights leader Medgar Evers shortly after the activist arrived home in Jackson. Evers was the first NAACP field secretary in the state. De La Beckwith had positioned himself across the street from Evers's home. Using a rifle, he shot Evers in the back. [5]
Medgar Wiley Evers (/ ˈ m ɛ d ɡ ər /; July 2, 1925 – June 12, 1963) was an American civil rights activist and soldier who was the NAACP's first field secretary in Mississippi.
Robert Burt DeLaughter Sr. (born February 28, 1954, in Vicksburg, Mississippi) is a former state prosecutor and then Hinds County Circuit Judge. He prosecuted and secured the conviction in 1994 of Byron De La Beckwith, charged with the murder of the civil rights leader Medgar Evers on June 12, 1963.
Byron De La Beckwith was convicted of killing civil rights leader Medgar Wiley Evers on February 5, 1994
Medgar Evers, a civil rights activist who was killed outside his Jackson home in 1963, was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Evers investigated lynchings, beatings and other violence that Black residents suffered at the hands of white segregationists. JACKSON, Miss. (AP) The post 60 years after Medgar Evers’ murder ...
Medgar Evers was an African-American civil rights activist in Mississippi murdered on June 12, 1963. It was suspected that Byron De La Beckwith, a white supremacist, was the murderer. He had been tried twice in the 1960s and both trials ended in hung juries. Evers' widow Myrlie Evers had been trying to bring De La Beckwith to justice for over ...
Medgar Evers: 1963: 12 June American civil rights activist Jackson, Mississippi United States: Byron De La Beckwith: Louis Allen: 1964: 31 January American voting rights activist Amite County, Mississippi United States: Disputed James Chaney: 1964: 21 June American civil rights Mississippi United States: Ku Klux Klan: Andrew Goodman: 1964: 21 June