KILLEN'S HOSPITALIZED

September 6, 2010

Former Klansman Leaves Court on Stretcher

EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS
Associated Press Writer

PHILADELPHIA, Miss. (AP) -- One-time Klansman Edgar Ray Killen was removed from court on a stretcher and treated for high blood pressure Thursday, the opening day of testimony in his trial for the 1964 killings of three civil rights workers.

The court went into recess to await Killen's return, but not before courtroom observers wept as the widow of one of the slain men described her reaction when her husband's car was found, burned and abandoned, in the Mississippi countryside.

Killen, 80, was in court Thursday morning as the judge dealt with procedural matters. But he was taken out of the room after he reported feeling a ``smothering sensation,'' defense attorney James McIntyre said.

Testimony continued for about 45 minutes as Killen was examined elsewhere in the courthouse. But when an ambulance was summoned to take Killen to the hospital, Circuit Judge Marcus Gordon stopped the trial and told jurors court would remain in recess until later Thursday.

Killen came to court in a wheelchair and has been attended by a nurse because of his health. He broke both his legs in a wood cutting accident several months ago and has other ailments.

He was sitting up on the stretcher as he was loaded into the ambulance.

Killen is charged with killing James Chaney, a black man from Mississippi, and Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman, white men from New York, all of whom were beaten and shot to death in a case dramatized in the 1988 movie ``Mississippi Burning.'' Their bodies were found 44 days later, buried in an earthen dam.

On Thursday morning, Michael Schwerner's widow, Rita Schwerner Bender, led the jury through the events that sent her husband into the waiting arms of the Ku Klux Klan four decades ago.

The white-haired, composed Bender said she left Mississippi after working to register black voters, but that her husband returned to the state on June 20, 1964, after learning that a rural black Neshoba County church had been burned. She said he believed voter registration work in that area had triggered the attack.

Bender described her reaction when she learned that a blue station wagon the three men had been using when they disappeared had been found, burned and abandoned.

``I think it hit me for the first time that they were dead, that there was really no realistic possibility that they were alive,'' she said.

The courtroom, including about 60 spectators sprinkled among the media and law enforcement officers, was silent as she described her efforts to find her husband. A few wiped away tears.

The killings of the three young men during the ``Freedom Summer'' of 1964 galvanized the civil rights movement and helped win passage of the landmark Civil Rights Act that same year.

Killen's name has been associated with the slayings from the outset. FBI records and witnesses indicated he organized the carloads of men who followed Goodman, Chaney and Schwerner and stopped them in their station wagon.

Killen was tried along with several others in 1967 on federal charges of violating the victims' civil rights. The all-white jury deadlocked in Killen's case, but seven others were convicted. None served more than six years. Killen is the only person ever indicted on state murder charges in the case.

On Thursday morning, Judge Gordon ruled that testimony from the 1967 federal trial could be used in Killen's trial. Killen, a part-time preacher, could get life in prison if convicted.

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