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The Mississippi Burning Trial ^Jnited States vs. Price et al.): A Trial Amount	Page	10	of	11
and that the three lives should be absolutely respected." Sentencing followed Killen's conviction earlier in the week. The manslaughter convictions came after nearly three days of jury deliberations. The jury found that there was reasonable doubt as to whether Killen intended that the klansmen kill the civil rights workers, and thus did not return a murder conviction.
Update (November 2007):
Linda Schiro, the ex-girlfriend of former mobster Gregory Scarpa, nicknamed "The Grim Reaper," testifying for the prosecution in a murder case, stated that Scarpa put a gun in the mouth of a Ku KJux Klansman in an effort to gain information about the location of the bodies of Chaney, Schwerner, and Goodman. The ploy worked and the bodies were soon dug up in an earthen dam. Scarpa died in prison in the 1990s.
Schiro's story confirmed reports, coming from confidential FBI sources in 1994, that a frustrated J. Edgar Hoover had turned to the Colombo crime family for help in cracking the "Mississippi Burning" case.
Update (August 2009):
On August 13, Billy Wayne Posey died at age 73. Alejandro Miyar, a spokesperson for the Department of Justice, said that Posey's death does not "alter our cold-case investigation." Four suspects in the 1964 murders remain alive.
Update (March 2013):
On March 15, Owen Burrage died at age 82. Burrage owned the farm on which Goodman,
Chaney, and Schwerner were buried under an earthen dam, but was acquitted in the 1967 trial. Days before the killings, Burrage bragged that his 250-foot long dam would make a good burial place for civil rights workers.
According to an FBI informant,
http ://law2. umkc.edu/ faculty/proj ects/ftrials/price&bowers/Account .html
6/18/2013


Ku Klux Klan Mississippi-Burning-Trial-(10)
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