Tuesday, August 02, 2022

The Woman Lead Emmett Till To His Death Is On Her Last Days!

Who took out the trash?

The woman who accused Emmett Till of hitting on her which led to her husband and his half-brother lynching him is seen for the first time in over 20 years.

88-year old Carolyn Bryant Donham is seen. She is living in a small apartment with her son in Kentucky. In her dying days, this woman claims she was the victim.

The Daily Mail has found the location of the original Karen. So expect protests.

The woman's name came back into the news when Mississippi officials unearthed a warrant for her arrest.

They were initially going to criminally charge her and those two for criminal murder but withheld the charges due to the state's racist legislature likely ruling that it self-defense.

Now legally blind, suffering from terminal cancer and is in hospice care was photographed by The Daily Mail walking her dog and her son Thomas was seen for the first time.

Then 21-years old, the woman claimed that Emmett whistled at her while she was maintain the cash register at her general store in Money, Mississippi. The woman told her then husband, Roy Bryant and his brother John Milam about it. They went into the town to search for Emmett. They dragged him out his bed, beat him severely, shot him multiple times, gouged his eyes out, mutilated his face and then tied it to a cotton gin and threw his body into the Tallahatchie River.

It was soon discovered by authorities. Mamie Till, the mother of Emmett was angry. She said that those killers should be criminally charged for her son's death. They were arrested and charged. But only a few hours in a courtroom with an all-white jury, acquitted the two and they walked.

So Mamie was allowed to take the body to Chicago. She held an open casket funeral in which it showed the body. The body was so messed up and disfigured. A photographer for Jet Magazine asked it he could take the picture. She allowed it. Soon it was published to the publication and it went viral.

It sparked the Civil Rights Movement. 

The two men would later move on with their lives. They ended up making money off their accusations.

They ended up dying without being charged by the feds. Mamie would end up dying in 2003 without ever getting an apology or even justice.

This woman lived her fucking life without a care in the world.

Just three weeks ago, crowds of angry protesters descended on three addresses in Raleigh, North Carolina in which they mistakenly believed her to be living.

Chanting black power slogans, they gathered outside two residential addresses and even stormed a nursing facility, unaware that she left the town and the state some months earlier.

No justice for Emmett Till. The protesters will find Carolyn Bryant Donham.

Their actions were spurred on by the discovery of an unserved warrant for Donham's arrest. 

It was found by a five-person search team led by Till's cousin Deborah Watts and her daughter Terri along with members from the Emmett Till Legacy Foundation.

They discovered the document inside a file folder that had been stored in a box in the basement of LeFlore County Circuit Court in Greenwood, Mississippi. Donham was identified only as "Mrs. Roy Bryant."

Watts said that when they found the warrant, she and her daughter, "cried and hugged each other."

"Justice," she said, "Has to be done."

Issued on August 29, 1955, the warrant was based on the Sheriff's belief that Donham played a part in the kidnapping of Till, that she drove around the town of Money, Mississippi seeking him out and ultimately identified the terrified teen when he was brought to her on the night of Sunday August 28 that year, dragged from his bed, to be tortured and murdered by Donham's husband Roy and half-brother, John Milam.

A police note on the back of the warrant says that she wasn't arrested because she was not in the county. 

Yet a local sheriff told reporters at the time that he didn't want to "other" her since she had two little boys to care for.

Law enforcement have not said if they plan to "bother" the woman who is now living out her final days in relative seclusion many miles away, but the smart money says it is unlikely despite the Till family's calls for her arrest.

Instead, she lives out her days visited by caregivers, hospice nurses, and a chaplain whom DailyMail.com observed carrying a bible as he entered Donham's home.

No comments:

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails