4.4 • 696 Ratings
🗓️ 10 May 2023
⏱️ 40 minutes
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The Moore's Ford lynchings, or the 1946 Georgia lynching, refer to the brutal murders of four young African Americans by a mob of white men on July 25, 1946.
The incident took place near Moore's Ford Bridge in Walton and Oconee counties, Georgia. The victims were two married couples: George W. and Mae Murray Dorsey, and Roger and Dorothy Malcolm.
The case attracted national attention, prompting large protests in Washington, D.C., and New York City. President Harry Truman created the President's Committee on Civil Rights and introduced anti-lynching legislation in Congress, but it was blocked by the Southern Democratic bloc.
The FBI investigated the case in 1946 but could not find sufficient evidence to charge anyone. The cold case was reopened in the 1990s, but the state of Georgia and the FBI closed their cases in December 2017 without any prosecution.
In this episode of "Zone 7," Crime Scene Investigator, Sheryl McCollum, talks with clinical therapist Janice Duncan as they dive deep into the chilling Moore's Ford Lynching case. Together they explore the psychological impact of lynching on the Black community. They also discuss their emotional experiences at the crime scene, including a tense encounter with a truck, and the significance of the evidence found.
The duo also reveals their interactions with a former imperial wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, shedding light on the complex historical context of the case.
Show Notes:
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Sheryl “Mac” McCollum is an Emmy Award-winning CSI, a writer for CrimeOnline, a forensic and crime scene expert for “Crime Stories with Nancy Grace,” and a CSI for a metro-area Atlanta Police Department. She is the co-author of the textbook, “Cold Case: Pathways to Justice.”
McCollum is also the founder and director of the Cold Case Investigative Research Institute, a collaboration between universities and colleges that brings researchers, practitioners, students, and the criminal justice community. They come together to advance techniques in solving cold cases and assist families and law enforcement with solvability factors for unsolved homicides, missing persons, and kidnapping cases.
You can connect and learn more about McCollum’s work by visiting the CCIRI website https://coldcasecrimes.org
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0:00.0 | My parents took me to see the Bonnie and Clyde death car when I was eight years old. |
0:14.4 | The man that owned it let me sit in it. |
0:18.3 | Now, I, of course, was not a criminologist at that time, but I was, I thought, |
0:23.3 | a Bonnie and Clyde expert. And what I realized in that moment when he let me sit in that car, |
0:29.9 | there was nowhere I could move. There wasn't bullet holes. There was 160 bullet holes in that car. |
0:39.5 | And as small as I was at the time, I couldn't hide from any of them. |
0:43.7 | So that told me the magnitude of what happened at that scene. |
0:47.8 | The importance of that event taught me, you've got to go to the scene. |
0:56.8 | You've got to go to the source. You've got to walk it. |
1:03.6 | You've got to understand it. And I never forgot that. Even years later, when I wanted to learn more about the FBI, I wanted to go to Washington, D.C., to the FBI building and take the tour. I wanted |
1:09.8 | to see it myself. |
1:12.1 | I will tell you, as a Cold Case investigator, |
1:16.2 | you cannot overstate the importance of going to the scene and understanding it. |
1:21.6 | With the Bonnie and Clyde vehicle, |
1:23.8 | there were three or four fake Bonnie and Clyde cars, people that actually took similar vehicles |
1:31.9 | and shot them up so that they could make money with these cars. Ted Hinton put a stop to that |
1:39.2 | because he, at the time in 1934, marked that car in a place only he knew, in a way that only he knew, |
1:49.0 | so that when it literally went to trial, he was able to pinpoint which vehicle was the authentic Bonnie and Clyde death car. |
1:57.0 | 50 miles east of Atlanta, on a small farm, jealousy brewed as hot as the Georgia sun. On |
2:06.7 | July 14, 1946, a sharecropper named Roger Malcolm was accused of stabbing a farmer named |
2:16.1 | Barnett Hester with an ice pick. |
2:19.9 | Mr. Malcolm tried to run, but was captured by the Hester family and held until |
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