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Hung With His Dog's Leash

In 2003 Nick Naylor left his home in Kemper County, Mississippi to walk his dogs. When he didn't return, his family searched for him, particularly on a dirt road that ran through the land of an all-white deer hunting club. They soon discovered hi ...

Playlists

(1 - 4 of 4)
  • Play The Injustice Files Sneak Peek
    9 Clips Playlist The Injustice Files Sneak...

    (20:42)

    Keith Beauchamp and Cynthia Deitle, Unit Chief for the Civil Rights Unit of the FBI, Shine A Light On FBI Civil Rights-Era Cold Cases. For Investigation Discovery's new show, The Injustice Files. Check out these two sneak peek clips.
  • Play The Injustice Files: He Walked Alone
    2 Clips Playlist The William Lewis Moore Murder

    The Injustice Files (04:52)

    William Lewis Moore was known as a loner, introvert and a quiet activist who fought silently for the rights of others. On April 21, 1963, Moore embarked on what he thought would be a peaceful protest, a one man Freedom Walk through the Deep South. That all changed when he was gunned down.
  • Play The Oneal Moore Case
    3 Clips Playlist The Oneal Moore Murder

    The Injustice Files (08:05)

    Oneal Moore was the first black deputy sheriff for the Washington Parish Sheriff'sOffice in Varnado, Louisiana. He was murdered by alleged members of the Ku Klux Klan in a drive-by shooting on Wednesday, June 2, 1965.
  • Play The Injustice Files: The Wharlest Jackson Case
    3 Clips Playlist The Wharlest Jackson Case

    (06:54)

    After taking a promotion at the Armstrong Tire and Rubber Factory in Natchez, Mississippi, Wharlest Jackson, father of five and treasurer for the local chapter of the NAACP, was murdered with a car bomb. Hearing the explosion, Wharlest Jackson's son rode his bike to the scene of the crime and unfortunately witnessed the results of this sophisticated murder plot.

Investigation Discovery Clips

  • Play The Injustice Files: Autopsy Denied On Alleged Suicide
    Autopsy Denied On Alleged...

    The Injustice Files (02:20)

    Keith Warren left his house in Silver Spring, Maryland and didn't return. Two days later, he was found hanging from a nearby tree. The local coroner determined his death was a suicide without even ordering an autopsy. Suicide or something far mor ...
  • Play The Injustice Files: Hung With His Dog's Leash
    Hung With His Dog's Leash

    The Injustice Files (02:14)

    In 2003 Nick Naylor left his home in Kemper County, Mississippi to walk his dogs. When he didn't return, his family searched for him, particularly on a dirt road that ran through the land of an all-white deer hunting club. They soon discovered hi ...
  • Play The Injustice Files: Hung By His Belt
    Hung By His Belt

    The Injustice Files (04:36)

    A rush to judgment around the death of Raynard Johnson brings up some suspicious details about the crime. The police ruled it as a suicide, but without an autopsy and any obvious "suicide" red flags from Raynard, could it be possible that the pol ...
  • Play The Injustice Files: Hanging Ruled a Suicide
    Hanging Ruled a Suicide

    The Injustice Files (02:38)

    61-year-old chef Izell Parrott disappeared from Glens Falls, New York. The local sheriff's office believed he'd left town. But more than a year later, a surveying crew found his wallet in the woods and his body hanging from a tree, more than 30 f ...
  • Play The Injustice Files Webisodes: The Wharlest Jackson Case
    The Wharlest Jackson Case

    The Injustice Files Webisodes (02:33)

    The murder of Wharlest Jackson launched one of the biggest FBI civil rights investigations. Forty-three later the case remains unsolved. Keith Beauchamp and the FBI are now working to solve the case.
  • Play The Injustice Files Webisodes: Life in Natchez, Mississippi 1960s
    Life in Natchez, Mississippi...

    The Injustice Files Webisodes (01:58)

    Today, the Civil Rights movement is a profound moment in history. To those who lived in Natchez, Mississippi during 1965, the Civil Rights movement had a different meaning.
  • Play The Injustice Files Webisodes: Who Was Wharlest Jackson?
    Who Was Wharlest Jackson?

    The Injustice Files Webisodes (02:23)

    Recently promoted to a "whites only" position and given a 17-cent raise in 1967, Wharlest Jackson is murdered a block away from his home in Natchez, MS. More than 40 years later, his family remains haunted by the mystery.
  • Play The Injustice Files: An Eyewitness In The Oneal Moore Case
    An Eyewitness In The Oneal...

    The Injustice Files (02:40)

    45 years after the murder of Oneal Moore, an eyewitness comes forward providing a major break in the case.
  • Play The Injustice Files: The Oneal Moore Murder
    The Oneal Moore Murder

    The Injustice Files (02:50)

    In 1965 Oneal Moore and Creed Rodgers were the first black Sheriff's deputies to patrol Bogalusa, LA. On a hot June night, Moore and Rodgers were ambushed.
  • Play The Injustice Files: The Klans Neutralization
    The Klans Neutralization

    The Injustice Files (02:35)

    In the 1960s blacks in the South lived in fear, determined to keep things the same, the Ku Klux Klan begins their plan of neutralization.
  • Play The Injustice Files: The Murder of William Lewis Moore
    The Murder of William Lewis...

    The Injustice Files (01:44)

    In the Spring of 1963, while on a mission to deliver a letter to the Governor of Mississippi fighting for the rights of African-Americans, William L. Moore a white man, is gunned down in cold blood.
  • Play The Injustice Files: The Dangers Of Southern Activism
    The Dangers Of Southern...

    The Injustice Files (03:08)

    Like many others, William Lewis Moore believed in equal rights for African Americans. For those that survived, there were many dangers to Civil Rights activism in the deep South during the 1960s.
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Documentary filmmaker, Keith Beauchamp, investigates murders of 1970 Civil Rights-Era cold cases in order to expose the truth and bring justice and peace to the families that have had to live with the unrest for years.

 
 

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