On September 15, 1963, Larry Joe Sims and Michael Lee Farley, both 16, had planned to attend a white supremacist rally and motorcade from the suburb of Midfield to the downtown of Birmingham. The event was canceled after the bombing at the urging of Jefferson County sheriff's deputies. They rode on Farley's motor scooter to the headquarters of the neo-fascist
National States' Rights Party where they purchased a Confederate battle flag, which they attached to the scooter before riding toward a Black neighborhood. Upon seeing Virgil and his brother James, who were unaware of the bombing and riding together on a single bicycle, Farley handed Sims a .22-caliber pistol that they had bought three days earlier and told Sims to shoot at them to scare them. It ended in Virgil being shot in the cheek and chest. An all-white jury convicted both youths of
second-degree manslaughter. The judge sentenced both of them to seven months of jail, but suspended their sentences in favor of two years of probation. The publicity around the scandal prompted Michael Farley, now 50, to contact the Ware family and privately apologize to them. In 2003, Sims, spurred by a recent
TIME article about Ware, also privately apologized to his family. Ware was buried in an unmarked grave on the side of the road until May 6, 2004, when he was moved to a burial place with a bronze marker thanks to the donations of the community. His family has become greatly involved in the civil rights movement as a result of his death. == Further reading ==