The case was decided in 1966. Guilty verdicts were returned against: •
Cecil Price, the chief deputy sheriff of
Neshoba County, Mississippi •
Sam H. Bowers Jr., of
Laurel, the Imperial Wizard of the
White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan •
Horace Doyle Barnette, a one-time Meridian salesman •
Jimmy Arledge, a Meridian truck driver •
Billy Wayne Posey, a
Williamsville service station operator •
Jimmy Snowden, a Meridian laundry truck driver •
Alton W. Roberts, a Meridian salesman who shot two of the three civil rights workers Not guilty verdicts were returned for: •
Lawrence A. Rainey, the
sheriff of Neshoba County •
Bernard L. Akin, a Meridian housetrailer dealer •
Travis M. Barnette, a Meridian mechanic and half-brother of Horace Doyle Barnette •
James T. Harris, a Meridian truck driver •
Frank J. Herndon, the operator of a Meridian drive-in restaurant •
Olen Lovell Burrage, the owner of the farm on which the bodies of Schwerner, Chaney, and Goodman were buried •
Herman Tucker, the builder of the dam in which the bodies were found •
Richard A. Willis, a one-time
Philadelphia policeman No verdict was reached for: •
Ethel Glen Barnett, the
Democratic nominee for Neshoba County sheriff •
Jerry McGrew Sharpe, a
pulpwood hauler •
Edgar Ray Killen, a fundamentalist minister and sawmill operator. In the case of Killen, the jury deadlocked after a lone juror stated she "could never convict a preacher". The case against Killen was reopened in 1999, and on June 21, 2005, he was found guilty of three counts in state court of
manslaughter for orchestrating the killings. Killen was sentenced to 60 years in prison, and died in prison in 2018. ==Jury==