News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Unique Way Of Solving Mystery - Win At All Costs |
Title: | US: Unique Way Of Solving Mystery - Win At All Costs |
Published On: | 1998-12-01 |
Source: | Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-06 19:00:30 |
UNIQUE WAY OF SOLVING MYSTERY
When three civil rights workers were reported missing and probably murdered
near Philadelphia, Miss., in 1964, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover sought out
an unusual person for help.
Gregory Scarpa Sr. was an up-and-coming New York City mobster whose
reputation as a ruthless hitman would eventually earn him the nickname The
Killing Machine.
Scarpa agreed to travel secretly to Mississippi after FBI agents had spent
several fruitless months searching for the bodies of the three young men,
and their killers.
When he arrived, FBI agents told him that an appliance store owner in
Philadelphia, Miss., reportedly a member of the Ku Klux Klan, had
information on where the three civil rights workers were buried, but he
refused to talk.
Conventional interview techniques had failed. So Scarpa decided to buy a TV.
When he stopped by the appliance store at closing time to pick it up, he
threw the store's owner into the trunk of his car. He then took him to a
shack and alternately beat him and threatened him for three days. Finally,
Scarpa placed a revolver in the man's mouth, and assured him that he'd blow
his head off if he didn't disclose where the bodies were buried.
The man talked.
A team of FBI agents using bulldozers dug up the decomposing bodies beneath
17 feet of red Mississippi clay in an earthen dam.
Seven men were eventually charged with federal civil rights violations
related to the murder.
This bizarre chapter in American crime-fighting didn't end with the
arrests. Scarpa returned to his life of crime in New York City and
eventually initiated a killing spree in a fight for control of the infamous
Colombo crime family in 1992.
Court papers related to that war show that, from the time he left
Mississippi, Scarpa maintained his close ties with the FBI.
Checked-by: Richard Lake
When three civil rights workers were reported missing and probably murdered
near Philadelphia, Miss., in 1964, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover sought out
an unusual person for help.
Gregory Scarpa Sr. was an up-and-coming New York City mobster whose
reputation as a ruthless hitman would eventually earn him the nickname The
Killing Machine.
Scarpa agreed to travel secretly to Mississippi after FBI agents had spent
several fruitless months searching for the bodies of the three young men,
and their killers.
When he arrived, FBI agents told him that an appliance store owner in
Philadelphia, Miss., reportedly a member of the Ku Klux Klan, had
information on where the three civil rights workers were buried, but he
refused to talk.
Conventional interview techniques had failed. So Scarpa decided to buy a TV.
When he stopped by the appliance store at closing time to pick it up, he
threw the store's owner into the trunk of his car. He then took him to a
shack and alternately beat him and threatened him for three days. Finally,
Scarpa placed a revolver in the man's mouth, and assured him that he'd blow
his head off if he didn't disclose where the bodies were buried.
The man talked.
A team of FBI agents using bulldozers dug up the decomposing bodies beneath
17 feet of red Mississippi clay in an earthen dam.
Seven men were eventually charged with federal civil rights violations
related to the murder.
This bizarre chapter in American crime-fighting didn't end with the
arrests. Scarpa returned to his life of crime in New York City and
eventually initiated a killing spree in a fight for control of the infamous
Colombo crime family in 1992.
Court papers related to that war show that, from the time he left
Mississippi, Scarpa maintained his close ties with the FBI.
Checked-by: Richard Lake
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