Gren the cake |
05-17-2005 09:05 PM |
i dont nkow where u r. but im doing my paper right now, id much rather be talking about poo with you, but its due at around 620 tomorrow.
:(. i hafto finish it tonight. of course, id have more time if i wasnt spending all morn ing at bfs house tomorrow.. but fuck, i have priorities, and theyre not history
bidibidibidibidibidibidibidibidibidi
neway. its coming along quite nicely. im getign the general idea down now, with the quotes. when im done with that. i sexify the whle thing.
ex.
Rowe testifed aganst the three and they were eventually indicted and convicted of the federal crime of conspiring to deprive Mrs. Liuzzo of her civil rights. Each received a ten-year sentence. It was at the state level that murder charges would be tried. According to Rowe, at the first trial, “... Two of the jurors were White Citizen's Council members” (Cook, 125). Rowe protested this to the prosecutor, stating that these two shared Klan ideals and should be removed from the jury box, but the prosecutor refused. The trial ended in a hung jury, with no surprise, with the two suspected White Citizen's Council members being the two to hold out. A retrial later ended in a verdict of not guilty. Just like in the case of the Birmingham church bombing that killed four black girls, law officials in the south “...faced the insurmountable task of finding a jury willing to convict a white man for a crime against blacks” (Sims, 126).
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