Contact Us

Advertising

Comics

Crossword

The Arizona Daily Wildcat Online

Catcalls

Policebeat

Search

Archives

News Sports Opinions Arts Classifieds

Monday April 30, 2001

Reader Survey
Crazy Town Photos
Basketball site
Tucson Riots
Ice T Photos

 

PoliceBeat
Catcalls
Restaurant and Bar Guide
Daily Wildcat Alumni Site

 

Student KAMP Radio and TV 3

Former KKK member on trial for murder

By The Associated Press

BIRMINGHAM - Attorneys for a former Ku Klux Klansman accused of murder in a 1963 church bombing that killed four black girls begin their defense today by arguing that prosecutors have not proven their case.

"Is that all they've got?" defense attorney John Robbins asked.

Robbins said before he calls his first witness he will ask Circuit Judge James Garrett to dismiss the case on the grounds that the prosecution did not offer enough evidence to convict Thomas Blanton Jr.

Prosecutors rested Saturday after playing jurors an FBI recording in which Blanton said he wouldn't be caught "when I bomb my next church."

The comment by Blanton was among dozens recorded more than 35 years ago by Mitchell Burns, a Klansman turned paid FBI informant.

Robbins said the tapes were often taken out of context and do not prove Blanton had anything to do with the church bombing. Burns agreed with the defense that Blanton never explicitly claimed responsibility for the bombing.

The case has also included testimony from relatives of the dead girls, including the sister of one of the victims. She described being badly injured in the bombing.

"We're pleased with the evidence at this point and feel we laid out a case against Tommy Blanton that shows he's guilty," said U.S. Attorney Doug Jones, who is prosecuting the state case under a special arrangement.

If Garrett rules against the dismissal motion, Robbins said he will call witnesses to attempt to show inconsistencies in the state's case.

Blanton is charged in the deaths of Denise McNair, 11, and 14-year-olds Addie Mae Collins, Cynthia Wesley and Carole Robertson on Sept. 15, 1963 at Sixteenth Street Baptist Church.

He is the second former Klansman tried in the bombing. Robert "Dynamite Bob" Chambliss was convicted of murder in 1977 and died in prison.

Former Klansman Bobby Frank Cherry was indicted last year with Blanton, but the judge delayed his trial after his mental competency was questioned by medical evaluations.