, James Earl Chaney, and
Michael H. Schwerner at Mt. Nebo Missionary Baptist Church in
Philadelphia, Mississippi. Over the years, activists had called for the state to prosecute the murderers. The journalist
Jerry Mitchell, an award-winning investigative reporter for the
Jackson Clarion-Ledger, had discovered new evidence and written extensively about the case for six years. Mitchell had earned renown for helping secure convictions in several other high-profile Civil Rights Era murder cases, including the assassination of
Medgar Evers in Jackson, Mississippi, the
16th Street Baptist Church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama, and the murder of
Vernon Dahmer in his Mississippi home. He developed new evidence about the civil rights murders, found new witnesses, and pressured the State to prosecute. It began an investigation in the early years of the 2000s. in
New York City commemorating the three
civil rights activists murdered in
Mississippi in 1964 In 2004, Barry Bradford, an
Illinois high school teacher, and his three students, Allison Nichols, Sarah Siegel, and Brittany Saltiel, joined Mitchell's efforts in a special project. They conducted additional research and created a documentary about their work. Their documentary, produced for the
National History Day contest, presented important new evidence and compelling reasons for reopening the case. They obtained a taped interview with
Edgar Ray Killen, who had been acquitted in the first trial. He had been an outspoken
white supremacist nicknamed the "Preacher". The interview helped convince the State to reopen an investigation into the murders. In 2005, the state charged Killen in the murders of the three activists; he was the only one of six living suspects to be charged. When the trial opened on January 7, 2005, Killen pleaded "
Not guilty". Evidence was presented that he had supervised the murders. Not sure that Killen intended in advance for the activists to be killed by the Klan, the jury found him guilty of three counts of
manslaughter on June 20, 2005, and he was sentenced to 60 years in prison—20 years for each count, to be served consecutively. Believing there are other men involved in his brother's death who should be charged as accomplices to murder, as Killen was, Ben Chaney has said: "I'm not as sad as I was. But I'm still angry". ==Legacy and honors==