Copyright 1989 Gannett Company Inc.
USA TODAY
December 21, 1989, Thursday, FINAL EDITION
SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 3A
LENGTH: 223 words
HEADLINE:Victims of letter bombs mourned
BYLINE: Andrea Stone
BODY:
In Savannah, Ga., about 60 people gathered at St. James AME Church to pay
tribute to city Alderman Robert Robinson, who was killed by a mail
Bomb at his law office Monday.
Meanwhile, the FBI probed new clues linking the
bombs:
- All had Georgia return addresses or postmarks.
- They may be connected to four anonymous letters sent last August declaring
war on the 11th Circuit Court. A tear-gas canister injured eight people at the
NAACP's Atlanta office shortly after.
The circuit, which includes Georgia, Alabama and Florida and in the 1960s also
encompassed Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas, was the site of most civil rights
movement cases. It was ''where most of the confrontations and bloodbaths
were,'' said NAACP Executive Director Benjamin Hooks.
- All are linked to school desegregation efforts.
Vance wrote an opinion won by the NAACP against Jacksonville, Fla., schools.
Robinson represented the NAACP in a separate case.
The 11th Circuit's headquarters in Atlanta and the Jacksonville NAACP
headquarters also received
bombs this week. Both were disarmed.
While black leaders said the mail
bombs renewed their determination, Hooks said the
bombs are ''something brand new.'' Instead of attacks on churches and homes, ''This
new breed of terrorist strikes through the mail. ... it is so randomly
directed.''
GRAPHIC: EAR PHOTO; color, USA TODAY (Benjamin Hooks); PHOTO; b/w, Ric Feld, AP (Robert Vance funeral)
CUTLINE: HOOKS: Mail
bombs are 'something new.' CUTLINE: MEMORIAL SERVICE: Police officers guard a
Birmingham, Ala., church where services were held for Judge
Robert Vance.