On February 27, 1967, an explosion ripped through Wharlest Jackson Sr.’s pickup truck, killing him instantly.
Jackson had just left his job at Armstrong Rubber and Tire plant in Natchez, Mississippi, where he had recently accepted a coveted promotion, and was driving the short distance home when the bomb went off, indelibly altering the lives of his wife, Exerlena, and their five young children. His son, Wharlest Jr., was eight years old when he rushed to the scene to find his father’s shattered body.
For the black community in and around Natchez, which had waged an activist campaign for racial equality, employment rights and voting rights, the bombing — widely believed to be committed by members of the Ku Klux Klan and their sympathizers — sent a chilling message.
Wharlest Jackson Sr., a Korean War veteran and treasurer of the local NAACP, was 36 years old when he was murdered. He was the first African American to work in a skilled job at the tire plant — an advanced position he had taken despite repeated threats. His daughter Denise, who was 12 years old when her father was killed, said “He sacrificed his life for a [17 cents] promotion to care for his family, and it killed him.”
That bombing, 48 years ago today, highlighted the extent to which racism continued to permeate American society and the lengths to which perpetrators would go to enforce white supremacy, generally with impunity. To date, no one has been charged or convicted of killing Wharlest Jackson Sr.
The Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crimes Act, passed in 2008, was enacted precisely to bring justice and accountability in cases like Wharlest Jackson’s murder. The law requires the Department of Justice and the FBI to identify victims and “thoroughly and expeditiously” investigate unsolved civil rights-era killings that occurred up to December 31, 1969.
But today, the DOJ has closed all but 11 of the 126 cases on their list (at least 2 of the open cases have multiple victims stemming from the same event), often without fully pursuing potential witnesses or family members of victims. There has been only one conviction under the Emmett Till Act, when former Alabama State Trooper Bonard Fowler pleaded guilty to misdemeanor manslaughter and served 5 months for the 1965 killing of voting rights activist Jimmie Lee Jackson.
Clearly, Congress intended more from the DOJ and the FBI under the Till Act. Congress authorized $13 million per year for this work, and called for collaboration with state and local law enforcement to resolve these cases. It is painfully apparent that much more must be done before the Till Act is scheduled to sunset in 2017.









