civil rights

CIR responds to FBI decision to close unsolved civil rights cases

Over the past 20 years, every unsolved civil rights murder case that has been reopened and successfully prosecuted in the South was the direct result of an investigation initiated by a journalist.

So the FBI’s decision to close, without prosecution or further disclosure, all but a few of the 108 unsolved murder cases it began re-examining three years ago, only highlights the vital need for investigative reporting that can find the truth, tell the stories and fill in the gaps in our nation’s history.

Investigative reporter Jerry Mitchell breaking ground in Civil Rights-era cold cases

Today in the American South, scores of civil rights murders remain unsolved, uninvestigated, unprosecuted, and untold. Those two legacies of violence and silence still haunt the region and continue to damage race relations in the United States.

A Detainee's Story

CIR Fellow Shirin Sadeghi reports on the thousands of people from Middle Eastern and Muslim countries detained on immigration violations after September 11th. Civil rights advocates say most of the detainees were held in virtual isolation, processed in closed hearings and not provided any legal representation. This is the story of one detainee in San Francisco.

9-11 Detainee

CIR Fellow Shirin Sadeghi reports on the thousands of people from Middle Eastern and Muslim countries detained on immigration violations after September 11th. Civil rights advocates say most of the detainees were held in virtual isolation, processed in closed hearings and not provided any legal representation.

A Bad Gangsta Rap

Civil rights attorneys say that minority kids are being harassed for looking delinquent.






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