James Ford Seale Charged in 1964 Murders

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  • Jan. 25: James Ford Seale, a 71-year-old reputed Ku Klux Klansman, is escorted into the federal courthouse by marshals in Jackson, Miss.
  • This 1964 Mississippi State Highway Patrol photo shows James Ford Seale following his arrest in Mississippi in connection with the killings of two young black men.
  • This July 2005 photo provided by filmmaker David Ridgen shows the ice-cream stand outside Meadville, Miss., from which Charles Moore and Henry Dee were kidnapped by Klansmen in May 1964.
  • Jan. 24: Bobby Hilliard, a cousin to Henry Dee, one of two black teens believed to have been kidnapped and killed in 1964.
  • Jan. 24: Charlene Bradford, a Franklin County public school teacher in Roxie, Miss., believes the arrest of 71-year-old James Ford is an example of 'never saying never.'
  • This July 9, 2006, photo, taken from video footage shot by filmmaker David Ridgen, shows a confrontation at Bunkley Baptist Church outside Meadville, Miss., between Charles Edwards, left, and Thomas Moore.
  • July 8, 2005: Thomas Moore's younger brother, Charles Moore, and another black man, Henry Dee, died in 1964 after they were beaten and dumped in the Mississippi River.
  • This July 2005 photo, provided by filmmaker David Ridgen, shows Thomas Moore at his home in Colorado Springs, Colo., holding a photograph of himself, right, and his younger brother Charles.
  • Jan, 24: An unidentified male walks beside the recreational vehicle thought to be the Roxie, Miss., home of former deputy James Ford Seale.

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