Viola Liuzzo Murder Site -- Lowndes Co. AL
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 32° 15.708 W 086° 38.624
16S E 533555 N 3569510
A memorial at the spot where Viola Liuzzo, who was transporting local civil rights activists back to Selma, was shot and killed by the Ku Klux Klan
Waymark Code: WMWEXF
Location: Alabama, United States
Date Posted: 08/25/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member TerraViators
Views: 2

This simber memorial in a small fenced landscaped area marks the spot where Viola Liuzzo's desperate flight from pursuing Ku Klux Klan members came to an end. After a high-speed chase of several miles, the KKK were able to catch up to her car and shoot her through the window. Her car crashed here after she was shot.

From AL.com, a combined website for Alabama newspapers:

"Viola Gregg Liuzzo, activist murdered in Selma in 1965, honored for life's work
Posted on March 22, 2015 at 7:38 AM

For 24 years, a stone marker has stood along U.S. 80 in Alabama's Lowndes County, near the spot where Viola Gregg Liuzzo was fatally shot by Klansmen while shuttling demonstrators after the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights march.

But in Liuzzo's hometown of Detroit, such public recognition is scarce. A wooden marker bearing her name sits on a fence beside a small neighborhood playfield; Last year, an exhibit in Lansing included Liuzzo among Michigan women who contributed significantly to civil rights.

That will change on April 10. Liuzzo's former school, Wayne State University, plans to award her an honorary doctor of laws degree. It's the first posthumous honorary degree in the 145-year-old school's history. Wayne State also will dedicate a tree or green space for Liuzzo.

Liuzzo's five children have been invited to the ceremony. Liuzzo's husband, Anthony Liuzzo Sr., died in 1978.

"I cried," Liuzzo's daughter, Mary Liuzzo Lilleboe, said of her reaction to Wayne State's decision. "It's the highest honor an educational institution can bestow on someone. It's the honor that's being paid to her. She's a civil rights giant."

Kim Trent, a member of Wayne State's Board of Governors, initially broached the idea a decade ago as president of Wayne State's black alumni organization. The school declined, citing its policy of not awarding posthumous degrees, Trent said.

"The truth of the matter is that Viola is worthy because she is deceased," Trent said. "She is a civil rights martyr. I understood there was something more important at stake."

Trent was elected to the same board in 2012, and recently took another run at recognition for Liuzzo. They passed the recommendation in February.

"My colleagues were like, 'Sure, we should do this,'" Trent said.

Liuzzo was a nursing student at Wayne State when she joined the civil rights movement. At the time of her death, the white, 39-year-old mother also was a member of Detroit's branch of the NAACP.

From her home, Liuzzo watched televised news reports of demonstrators being beaten by police in Selma on March 7, 1965, during the first attempt to march to Montgomery, a day that became known as "Bloody Sunday."

That march was followed two days later by another, abbreviated demonstration led by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. The Rev. James Reeb, a white Unitarian minister from Boston, was severely beaten that night and later died. An all-white jury acquitted three white men of murder charges in Reeb's death.

Just over two weeks after Reeb's death, Liuzzo too was dead, struck in the head by shots fired from a passing car. Her black passenger, 19-year-old Leroy Moton, was wounded but survived by pretending to be dead. Four Ku Klux Klan members were arrested, and an all-white, all-male jury acquitted three of them of murder. Those same three were later convicted of federal charges in Liuzzo's death. The fourth assailant was granted immunity and placed in the federal witness protection program.

Lilleboe said she was 17 when her mother quietly drove to Alabama the weekend before the third attempt to march from Selma to Montgomery, planned for March 25.

"If she saw wrong and she couldn't right it, she took action," said Lilleboe. "She always told us the story that she was treated badly because she was poor, but the 'little black kids were treated worse.'"

Liuzzo didn't reveal where she was going until well after she left, because she didn't want her husband to stop her, Lilleboe said. She did, however, contact her family regularly by phone.

"She called and she was rather jubilant because the march had made it," Lilleboe recalled. "She was coming home. My brothers picked up little pretend signs and started marching around singing 'We Shall Overcome.'

"About midnight, dad got a phone call and they said 'your wife ... there has been an accident.' We knew she had been murdered."

Law professor Peter Hammer, director of the Damon J. Keith Center for Civil Rights at Wayne State, said non-blacks who fought to dismantle Jim Crow segregation "were subject to the same vitriol" aimed at blacks, "and in some respects -- even more so."

"For a white woman to cross the line took even more courage and was probably subject to more hatred," Hammer said. Also, he said, there is a tendency, in telling civil rights history, to sideline roles played by women of all races.

The Alabama marker honoring Liuzzo was erected by the Women of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in 1991. At the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Liuzzo is the only white woman honored among the martyrs.

After Liuzzo's death, her family endured a cross burning and hate mail at their Detroit home. Her children were harassed at school. Liuzzo's husband hired armed guards for protection. A smear campaign, engineered by the FBI, hinted that Liuzzo used drugs and had illicit relationships with black men.

Liuzzo's family filed a $2 million negligence claim against the federal government in 1977, saying the FBI knew ahead of time that Liuzzo's killers planned to commit violence and did nothing to stop them.

The government refused to negotiate that claim. The family filed a lawsuit that went to non-jury trial in federal court in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in 1983, and was dismissed.

"What's nice about what's taking place now is that nobody is remembering the lies," Hammer said. "People are remembering her life and courage."

Lilleboe, who now lives in Oregon, is proud of her mother's enduring legacy. She has traveled to Selma for "Bloody Sunday" commemorations for the past 11 years, including the 50th anniversary earlier this month.

"They embraced me with their whole hearts ... because I'm my mother's daughter," Lilleboe said. "When I see the difference in their eyes I am so proud of my mother."

The names of the men who killed Viola Liuzzo do not appear on tje above article, but we were able to discover their identities on Wikipedia: (visit link)

"One of the four Klansmen in the car from which the shots were fired was Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) informant Gary Thomas Rowe. Rowe testified against the shooters and was moved and given an assumed name by the FBI. . . .

The four Klan members in the car, Collie Wilkins (21), FBI informant Gary Rowe (34), William Eaton (41) and Eugene Thomas (42) were quickly arrested . . .

Wilkins, Eaton, and Thomas were indicted in the State of Alabama for Liuzzo's death on April 22. FBI informant Rowe was not indicted and served as a witness. Rowe testified that Wilkins had fired two shots on the order of Thomas.[13] Defense lawyer Matt Murphy quickly attempted to have the case dismissed on the grounds that President Johnson had violated the suspects' civil rights when he named them in his televised announcement. Murphy also indicated he would call Johnson as a witness during the upcoming trial.

On May 3 an all-white jury was selected for Wilkins' trial, with Rowe the key witness. Three days later, Murphy made blatantly racist comments during his final arguments, including calling Liuzzo a "white nigger," in order to sway the jury. The tactic was successful enough that the all-white jury could not come to a decision (voting 10–2 in favor of conviction) and a mistrial was declared. On May 10, the three accused killers were part of a Klan parade which closed with a standing ovation for them.

Another all-white jury was selected on October 20. Before the re-trial got under way, defense attorney Murphy fell asleep while driving an automobile and was killed when his car hit a gasoline truck on August 20. The former mayor of Birmingham, Alabama, Art Hanes, agreed to take over representation for all three defendants one week later. Hanes was a staunch segregationist who served as mayor during the tumultuous 1963 period in which police commissioner Eugene "Bull" Connor used fire hoses on African American protesters. The attorney attacked the credibility of the informant, Rowe, stating that he fabricated information. The two-day trial ended when the empanelled jurors took less than two hours to acquit Wilkins.

Federal civil trial[edit]
The next phase of the lengthy process began when a federal trial charged the defendants with conspiracy to intimidate African-Americans under the 1871 Ku Klux Klan Act, a Reconstruction civil rights statute. The charges did not specifically refer to Liuzzo's murder. On December 3, the trio were found guilty by an all-white, all-male jury, and were sentenced to ten years in prison, a landmark in southern legal history.

While out on appeal, Wilkins and Thomas were each found guilty of firearms violations and sent to jail for those crimes. . .

After all three defendants were convicted of the federal charges, state murder cases proceeded against Eaton and Thomas. Eaton, the only defendant who remained out of jail, died of a heart attack on March 9. Thomas's state murder trial - the final trial - got under way on September 26, 1966. The prosecution built a strong circumstantial case in the trial that included an FBI ballistics expert testifying that the bullet removed from the woman's brain was fired from a revolver owned by Thomas. Two witnesses testified they had seen Wilkins drinking beer at a VFW Hall near Birmingham, 125 miles from the murder scene, an hour or less after Liuzzo was shot. Despite the presence of eight African Americans on the jury, Thomas was acquitted of the state murder charge the following day after just 90 minutes of deliberations. State attorney general Richmond Flowers, Sr. criticized the verdict, deriding the black members of the panel, who had been carefully screened, as "Uncle Toms."

On April 27, 1967, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans upheld the federal convictions of the surviving defendants. Thomas served six years in prison for the crime. Due to threats from the Klan, both before and after his testimony, Gary Thomas Rowe went into the federal witness protection program. Rowe died in 1998 in Savannah Georgia after having lived several decades under several assumed identities."
Date of crime: 03/25/1965

Public access allowed: yes

Fee required: no

Web site: [Web Link]

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