'James Byrd, Jr.' (
May 2,
1949 -
June 7,
1998) was an
African-American murdered in
1998 by
Shawn Allen Berry,
Lawrence Russell Brewer, and
John William King, in
Jasper,
Texas.
His life
Byrd was born and raised in Jasper, the third of seven children born to James and Stella Byrd. In
1967, Byrd was in the last
segregated class to graduate from Jasper's Rowe High School. He married Thelma Adams in
1970 and relocated to
Houston and later
Dallas; the couple had three children before divorcing in
1993.
From
1969 to
1995 he had been in and out of prison seven times on charges of
theft,
forgery and
parole violations. Byrd "wasn't a bad guy, just one of those people who seems to get into trouble," former Jasper Police Chief Harlan Alexander would later comment.
[1]
Unemployed after an arm injury, Byrd, formerly a vacuum cleaner salesman, lived on monthly disability checks and resided in a rent-
subsidized apartment. Byrd was well-known around Jasper, and could frequently be seen walking about town, as he did not own a car.
The Murder
On
June 7,
1998, Byrd, 49, accepted a ride from Shawn Allen Berry, Lawrence Russel Brewer, and John William King. Instead of taking him home, however, the three men beat Byrd, tied him to their pickup truck with a chain, and dragged him about three
miles. It is not known whether or not he was alive during the dragging. Although Lawrence Russell Brewer claimed that Byrd's throat had been slashed before he was dragged, forensic evidence suggests that Byrd had been attempting to keep his head up, and an
autopsy suggested that Byrd was alive for much of the dragging and died only after his right
arm and
head were severed when his body hit a
culvert.
[2]
King, Berry, and Brewer dumped their victim's mutilated remains in the town's segregated black
cemetery, and then went to a barbecue.
[3]
State law enforcement officials and Jasper’s
District Attorney determined that since King and Brewer were well-known
white supremacists, the murder was a
hate crime, and decided to bring in the
FBI less than 24 hours after the discovery of Byrd’s brutalized remains.
[4]
One of Byrd's murderers, John King, had a tattoo depicting a black man hanging from a tree, and other tattoos such as
Nazi symbols, the words "
Aryan Pride," and the patch for the
Confederate Knights of America, a gang of white supremacist inmates.
[5] In a jailhouse letter to Brewer which was intercepted by jail officials, King expressed pride in the crime and said he realized he might have to die for committing it. "Regardless of the outcome of this, we have made history. Death before dishonor.
Sieg Heil!", King wrote.
[6]
Brewer and King were
sentenced to
death. Berry received
life in prison.
Numerous aspects of the Byrd murder echo
lynching traditions, including
mutilation or
decapitation, and revelry, such as a barbecue or a picnic, during or after.
The Perpetrators
'John King' - accused of beating Byrd with a bat and then dragging him behind a
truck until he died. The testimony phase of his trial started in
Jasper,
Texas on
February 16,
1999. He was found guilty of kidnapping and murder on
February 23 and was sentenced to death on
February 25.
'Lawrence Russell Brewer' - another white supremacist convicted of the murdering Byrd. Prior to the Byrd murder, Brewer had served a prison sentence for drug possession and burglary, and he was paroled in 1991. After violating the parole in 1994, he was sent back to prison. According to his court testimony, he joined a white supremacist gang with King in order to safeguard himself from other prisoners.
[1] A state psychiatrist testified that Brewer did not appear repentant for his crimes. In the end, Brewer was also
sentenced to death.
'Shawn Allen Berry' - The driver of the truck, Berry was the most difficult to convict of the three defendants because there was a lack of evidence to suggest that he himself was a racist. He had also claimed that his two companions were entirely responsible for the crime. King testified that it was Berry who cut Byrd's throat before he was tied to the truck, but the court decided that there was little evidence to indicate this.
[2] As a result, Berry was spared the death penalty and given a life sentence in prison.
Reactions to the murder
King had previously been
gang-raped in prison by black prisoners
[3] and, although he had no previous record of racism, had joined a white-supremacist prison gang, allegedly for self-protection. While in this group he was involved with many drug deals and prison gang murders/hazings. It may be that the killing of James Byrd Jr was seen as "revenge" by King.
Byrd's murder was strongly condemned by
Jesse Jackson and the
Martin Luther King Center as an act of vicious
racism and focused national attention on the prevalence of
white supremacist prison gangs. The three defendants, who were later tried and convicted for the murder, had allegedly joined such gangs while imprisoned in Texas.
The victim's family created the James Byrd Foundation for Racial Healing after his death. In
2003, a movie about the crime, called ''Jasper, Texas'', was produced and shown on
Showtime. The same year, a documentary called
''Two Towns of Jasper'', made by filmmakers Marco Williams and Whitney Dow, premiered on PBS's
P.O.V. series.
Basketball star
Dennis Rodman offered to pay for Byrd's funeral. Although Byrd's family declined this offer, they accepted a $25,000 donation by Rodman to a fund started to support Byrd's family.
While at the CBS-owned WARW radio station in Washington, D.C.,
Doug Tracht (AKA The Greaseman) made a comment about James Byrd. after playing a song by
Lauryn Hill. Tracht stated, as a reference to the quality of her music, "and they wonder why we drag them behind trucks." This incident in February 1999 proved catastrophic to his radio career, igniting a firestorm of protest from black and white listeners alike, including
Donnie Simpson, who ravaged Tracht on his morning show on sister station WPGC-FM. Not only was Tracht quickly fired from WARW, he lost his position as a volunteer deputy sheriff in Falls Church, Virginia.
| List of compositions written about or dedicated to James Byrd Jr. |
|---|
| Artist | Composition title | Work | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Michael Gott | Matthew and James | ''Love Can Move The World'' | 2002 | "Matthew" refers to hate crime victim Matthew Shepard (listen to song here) |
A campaign issue
Some advocacy groups made an issue of this case during
George W. Bush's presidential campaign in
2000. They accused him of implicit racism, since as governor, he opposed special
hate crime legislation. Because two of the three murderers were sentenced to death and the third to a life term in prison (all charged with and convicted of capital murder, the highest felony level in Texas), Governor Bush maintained that "we don't need ''tougher'' laws."
After
Governor Rick Perry inherited the rest of
George W. Bush's unexpired term, the 77th Texas Legislature passed the James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Act on
May 11,
2001.
References
1. "Court TV Online"
2. "Texas NAACP
3. "Justice Fellowship"
See also
★
Dragging death
★ King, Joyce. ''Hate Crime: The Story of a Dragging in Jasper, Texas.'' Pantheon, 2002.
External links
★
James Byrd Jr at findagrave
★
Texas NAACP, James Byrd Jr at texasnaacp.org
★
cnn.com Co-defendant Shawn Berry led police to the chain used to drag James Byrd Jr to death
★
Jasper, Texas - ''
Houston Chronicle'' feature coverage of the murder
★
InnerVIEWS with Ernie Manouse: Stella Byrd television interview with Byrd's mother
★
Jasper, Texas television movie
★
Politically Correct Murder and Media Bias by
Larry Elder, compares media coverage of the Byrd case to the murder of
Ken Tillery
★
Court TV Online
★
Texas NAACP