The Death of Jimmie Lee Jackson
A look into the Civil Rights-era shooting death of Jimmie Lee Jackson
Decades later, the quest for justice
On Wednesday, a grand jury in Marion took two hours to return an indictment in a case that is 42 years old. James Bonard Fowler, from Geneva, stands accused of murder in the death of Jimmie Lee Jackson. A trial date has yet to be set.
May 13, 2007 |  0 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend
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Witnesses recall the events of violent night
The incident in Marion that led to the shooting of Jimmie Lee Jackson is well documented in history books. Most accounts say a peaceful nighttime march turned into a melee when street lights went dark, and law enforcement and local thugs waded into the crowd, beating people with fists and billy clubs.
May 17, 2007 |  0 comments | 18 18 recommendations | email to a friend
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Hospital logbook offers a glimpse of history
In sterile language used amid the chaos of an emergency room, the truncated story of a violent night that eventually ended Jimmie Lee Jackson's life is written in red ink.
May 17, 2007 |  0 comments | 24 24 recommendations | email to a friend
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Attending doctor: Jackson killed by anesthesia dosage
The physician who attended to Jimmie Lee Jackson after he was shot by an Alabama state trooper during an historic 1965 civil rights-era melee said in a 27-year-old interview that Jackson died as a result of an overdose of anesthesia.
May 25, 2007 |  0 comments | 21 21 recommendations | email to a friend
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1964 slayings headed to trial in Mississippi
James Ford Seale, 71, has pleaded not guilty to charges of kidnapping and conspiracy in connection with the 1964 abduction and slaying of 19-year-olds Charles Moore and Henry Dee. His federal trial is set to begin today in Jackson, Miss.
May 30, 2007 |  0 comments | 21 21 recommendations | email to a friend
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Crime Bulletin for June 18, 2013
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Anniston Middle School
Anniston Middle School
slideshow
Editorial: The shattered world of Anniston Middle School
by The editorial board of The Anniston Star
Jun 18, 2013 | 391 views |  0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Anniston Middle School
Anniston Middle School
slideshow
Any cocoon of stability that may have surrounded Anniston Middle School is now shattered.
Last month, after decades of debate, the Anniston Board of Education voted to close the school on Alabama 21 and move its students to other campuses as part of a system-wide reorganization and cost-cutting measure.

Last week, Superintendent Joan Frazier announced her retirement for June 2014, meaning someone else -- possibly from outside the system hierarchy -- will shepherd the system through the middle school’s closure.

And Tuesday, the state Board of Education included Anniston Middle on its list of “failing” schools that, as part of the Alabama Accountability Act, will allow parents zoned for AMS to receive tax credits if they transfer elsewhere.

For the Anniston Board of Education, the state board’s list of 78 “failing” schools represents two different headlines -- both significant. No other Anniston schools made the list. (For that matter, Anniston Middle was the only school in Calhoun County to be deemed “failing” by the state board.)

Anniston High School, whose dropout and graduation rates have long been serious civic concerns, and the system’s five elementary schools are free of both the stigma and the practicality of being considered “failing” institutions. We are glad that’s the case.

But the other headline didn’t bring a sigh of relief to a city desperate to use public education in its efforts to reinvent the city’s outlook on vital matters such as job creation, economic growth and crime reduction. A city without vibrant and well-supported public schools is a city that struggles to educate its children and sustain its future. A city without successful public schools is a city that faces stagnation and decline, not prosperity.

That is Anniston’s struggle today.

Our advice is to consider Anniston Middle School’s label as a “failing” school as part old news and part opportunity. Don’t overreact.

Instead, see Anniston Middle as what it is -- a school already destined for closure. That’s not a rationalization; it’s a fact. What’s important now is the system’s still-developing reorganization that, once completed, is expected to lessen the system’s fiscal concerns.

More important, still, is this community’s understanding that the education of the children within Anniston’s public schools must be a grade-A priority. It is not the priority solely of the city’s educators or its black community, whose children are overwhelmingly the majority of the city’s schools. It must be a priority for all who want Anniston to prosper.

Make no mistake: We are disappointed that the state considers Anniston Middle School a “failing” school. But we cannot lose focus on the larger, vital picture -- the reinvention of Anniston’s school system and the improvement of its public education. The ailments are well known. Repairing them with hard work and rational decisions is the key.
The Jacksonville News - 06/18/13
Jun 18, 2013 | 77 views |  0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
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