ATLANTA – It's among the more gruesome mass murders in Georgia history, one that raised the ire of a president and spawned multiple investigations by the FBI.
Now, nearly 68 years after two African-American couples were lynched on Moore's Ford Bridge in Walton County, Ga., local civil rights leaders who continue to investigate say they have unearthed credible information that could finally solve the case.
The source is a 55-year-old white Monroe native who claims his late uncle and at least another dozen locals, all members of the Ku Klux Klan, participated in the July 25, 1946, killings of Roger and Dorothy Malcom and George and Mae Murray Dorsey.
"All through my life I've heard them talk about it," Wayne Watkins said. A few years ago, Watkins got in touch with longtime Walton County civil rights activist Robert Howard.
The two men developed a relationship, and Howard said he trusts Watkins.
"He's been talking a long time, but no one's been listening," Howard said of Watkins.
Special prosecutor sought
Ed DuBose, former president of the Georgia State Conference of the NAACP, told the Walton Board of Commissioners Tuesday night he wants the commission to push for a special prosecutor based on the new information.
"I'm confident that we're closer to justice than we've ever been before," said DuBose.