Friday, September 15, 2017

FBI Still Keeping Secrets on J.B. Stoner — Suspected Mastermind of 1963 Church Bombing in Birmingham That Killed 4 Girls



By Stuart Wexler

The conventional narrative for the tragedy that struck Birmingham a half century ago today is straightforward. On the morning of September 15, 1963, a bomb exploded at the 16th Street Baptist Church, wounding 22 parishioners and killing four young girls. The bombing conspirators escaped justice at the time because FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover feared that cooperating with local law enforcement would expose their sources and methods to a racist Birmingham police force, compromising the chance for a federal prosecution.

Years later, Alabama Attorney General William Baxley embarrassed the FBI in the press, eventually leading agents to share some of the files and helping convict one of the bombers, Robert “Dynamite Bob” Chambliss in 1977.

In the mid-1990s, the case was reopened, this time with the Feds leading the investigation. Tapes that Baxley never heard were used as evidence against two other conspirators, Tommy Blanton and Bobby Frank Cherry, who went to prison in the 2000s. It took 40 years, the story goes, but the case is now closed.

If only it were true. There is little doubt that the men who went to prison and their associates were guilty of the bombing, but newly obtained information suggests there is much more to the story.

It turns out the FBI has yet to reveal many of the documents regarding the white supremacist leader that authorities suspected masterminded the bombing, J.B. Stoner, despite him dying in 2005.

There were many reasons why Stoner became a suspect in the bombing. Stoner co-founded one of the most militant white supremacist organizations in the country, the National States Rights Party (NSRP), a group headquartered in Birmingham and connected to much of the violent pro-segregationist agitation in the city. Law enforcement officials suspected Stoner as having orchestrated a wave of coordinated bombings and attempted bombings against black and Jewish targets in the 1950s. This included the 1958 bombing of Birmingham civil rights activist Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth’s church — a bombing he was convicted of in 1980.

In 1963, Stoner was investigated in connection with several bombings, as the NSRP began to associate more and more with the violent Eastview Klavern number 13, whose members included Chambliss, Blanton and Cherry.

The FBI received reports that Stoner trained the Eastview group — who met secretly by a bridge near the Cahaba River — in bomb-making techniques. They also received information that Stoner met with Chambliss before and after the bombing. From the start, Stoner was a top suspect for both the Birmingham police and for the FBI. 

Click here for the full article. 

Source: Journey to Justice

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