Journalist withheld information about Emmett Till's murder, documents show
Source: Washington Post
Retropolis
Journalist withheld information about Emmett Tills murder, documents show
William Bradford Huies newly released research notes show he suspected more than two men tortured and killed 14-year-old Emmett Till, but suggest that he left that out when it threatened his story.
By Gillian Brockell
August 28, 2024 at 11:00 a.m. EDT
A journalist whose 1956 article was billed as the true account of Emmett Tills killing withheld credible information about people involved in the crime, according to newly discovered documents. ... William Bradford Huies article in Look magazine helped shape the countrys understanding of 14-year-old Tills abduction, torture and slaying in Jim Crow-era Mississippi. The article detailed the confessions of two White men who previously had been acquitted by an all-White jury in the killing. The men told Huie they had no accomplices.
Yet Huies own research notes, recently released by the descendants of a lawyer in the case, indicate his reporting showed that others were involved and suggest he chose to leave that out when it threatened the sale of his story. He also was seeking a movie deal about the killing and had agreed to pay the two acquitted men, J.W. Milam and Roy Bryant, part of the proceeds. ... If Huie had fully reported what hed learned, it could have led to charges against additional participants in the murder, three historians say. ... Protected by the U.S. Constitutions double-jeopardy clause, Milam and Bryant told Huie after their acquittal that they had killed Till after Carolyn Bryant, Roys wife, claimed the boy accosted her in August 1955.
Between 1955 and 2005, it was without question the single most influential version of the story. And [Huie] was intentionally protecting guilty people, said Dave Tell, a University of Kansas professor whose 2019 book, Remembering Emmett Till, was harshly critical of Huies reporting. ... Tills brutal killing shocked the world and helped galvanize the civil rights movement. But misconceptions of the events leading to his death have persisted, and the FBI has reopened the case several times most recently in 2017.
In addition to Huies 33-page research notes, the newly released documents include letters he exchanged with John Whitten, one of the mens defense attorneys. Whittens granddaughter, Ellen Whitten, found the documents in April and with her mother donated them to the Emmett Till Archives at Florida State University [diginole.lib.fsu.edu]. (1) ... I think shedding light on historical wrongs is never a bad thing, Ellen Whitten said in an interview.
{snip}
By Gillian Brockell
Gillian Brockell is a staff writer for The Washington Posts history blog, Retropolis. She has been at The Post since 2013 and previously worked as a video editor.
(1) https://repository.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu:emmetttillarchivesmain
Read more: https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2024/08/26/emmett-till-william-bradford-huie-carolyn-bryant-civil-rights/
Lulu KC
(3,728 posts)It's a cryin' shame.
Zoomie1986
(1,213 posts)That this racist pig was ever a good journalist.
Yet another data point demonstrating how routine it's been for American journalists to support the fascist oligarch narrative.
Lulu KC
(3,728 posts)is how Wikipedia describes him, referring to the exposé from WaPo.
I would rephrase my thought as "when good journalism goes bad."
I hold to the purpose of journalism to expose corruption, not contribute to it. I am seeing the growth of non-profit professional journalism in the last five years as a bright spot, from what I have seen in places I've lived. It's comforting to know that some wealthy philanthropists see a vacuum where there used to be reporting.
yardwork
(63,817 posts)Atrocious.