FERRIDAY, Louisiana (CNN) -- The blaze engulfed Frank Morris' shoe repair shop in minutes, bright orange flames stretching 60 feet into the air. Morris was so severely burned, only the soles of his feet were spared.
He clung to life for a few days, before dying in a hospital. It was December 1964. Morris, a 40-year-old African-American, repaired shoes for blacks and whites in Ferriday, Louisiana, a small town near the Mississippi border terrorized by the Ku Klux Klan at the time.
On his deathbed, he never named his killers, but he said two "white friends" carried out the attack, according to the Rev. Robert Lee Jr.
"He thought they were his friends and he said, 'Yes, I thought they were my friends,' " Lee recently told CNN.
Lee, now 94, said Morris was sprawled out on the hospital bed. "The doctors wondered why he survived those two or three days. You never seen something so dreadful looking."
Yet nearly 44 years later, not a single person has been charged in the killing of Morris. The Justice Department last year made investigating about 100 civil rights era killings, including Morris', a top priority after urging from the Urban League, the NAACP, the Southern Poverty Law Center and other groups.
Time is of the essence -- witnesses are dying, as are the possible perpetrators.
"The average age we believe of those who would have carried out these crimes is probably going to be in his mid-70s if he is alive," said U.S. Attorney Donald Washington, whose district includes Ferriday. "We are concerned about whether there are live witnesses and live subjects."
Washington hopes publicity will help move the Morris case forward. He wants people to think, "Do I know someone or do I know personally any information that can help these federal prosecutors?"
It was in the early morning hours of December 10, 1964, when the front window of Morris' store was shattered. Someone poured gas in the cluttered building and torched it. Morris was sleeping in a back room and tried to run through the inferno, according to authorities.
Jake Davis was a young teen back then. He often played with Morris' son, and had begun working at the store a few weeks before the killing. He's still haunted by what happened.
"It bothers me to this day and I'm 56. It's a thing constantly on my mind," he told CNN.
Today, Davis wears cowboy boots and jeans with a crease so sharp it looks like it would cut your fingers. He spends his time working on old cars and playing Zydeco music. Davis recently shared his story with the FBI after years of silence. He said he was simply too scared to talk about the incident at the time it happened.
He says he remembers three white men coming into the store the day before it was torched.
"I was hearing a whole lot of talking, loud talking, cursing," Davis said. "After a while, [Morris] came back up front and told me and my brother to leave and come back tomorrow. That's what we done.
"We didn't ask no questions. I had an eerie feeling, but I left and went home and told my mom, 'Some white folks and Mr. Frank, they arguing and cussing, what could we do?' She said, 'Ain't none of our business.' "
The next morning, the storefront was still smoldering when Davis stopped by. He later visited his boss in the hospital -- what he described as a wretched sight.
"He was burned all the way from his head all the way to his feet," Davis said. "When I saw him -- actually saw him -- I just turned around and walked out."
As the years passed, he sometimes regretted not speaking up about the incident.
But growing up black in rural Louisiana meant living in fear of being tortured or killed for looking the wrong way.
"When you [saw] a white person, you couldn't look them in the eye. You had to look down. You couldn't walk on the same side of the street," he said. "Our life hung in the balance of keeping your mouth closed."
Davis added, "As I got older, I wondered, 'Should I say something?' I had no one I could turn to to talk about this."
Washington, the prosecutor, has read through the case files and says the FBI had about a dozen agents on the Morris killing in the 1960s. He says the order came from the very top, President Lyndon Johnson and FBI director J. Edgar Hoover.
"It was handled in very professional, very aggressive manner," Washington said.
But they came up empty.
"Maybe they couldn't make the proof at the time. Maybe there were other cases that required that they not take down this one case in order to go forward on another case," Washington said.
Morris' old friend, the Rev. Lee, whose grandfather was a slave, is glad the case has been reopened, but laments, "Why did they wait so long?"
"Most people who knew about that is gone. But the few that's left feel like, if justice could be achieved there would be a sense of satisfaction."
Whether that is still possible remains to be seen
http://www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/07/16/civilrights.killi
ng/index.html
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