Copyright 1989 St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Inc.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
December 21, 1989, THURSDAY, THREE STAR Edition
SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 13A
LENGTH: 707 words
HEADLINE: 700 PACK SERVICE FOR JUDGE
SOURCE: The Associated Press
BODY:
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Ala. (AP) -
Bomb-sniffing dogs and squadrons of police provided tight security Wednesday as
mourners paid their respects to a federal appeals judge killed by the first in
a series of mail
bombs. St. Luke's Episcopal Church was filled to overflowing with more than 700
people, who were urged to put aside their anger over the killing long enough to
remember the work of U.S. Court of Appeals Judge
Robert Vance. Dogs searched the church before the service, and dozens of officers kept
watch during the 35-minute program of scripture, hymns and a eulogy. Vance,
58, a member of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court and a former chairman of the
Alabama Democratic Party, was killed instantly Saturday when the
Bomb exploded in his home, propelling nails into his lower abdomen. His wife,
Helen, was injured in the
bombing and remained hospitalized Wednesday. A similar
Bomb two days later killed a civil rights lawyer in Savannah, Ga., city Alderman
Robert Robinson. A package
Bomb was found in the Atlanta courthouse including the 11th Circuit on Monday, and
a fourth mailed
Bomb was removed Tuesday from the headquarters in Jacksonville, Fla., of the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The FBI said
Wednesday that all four
bombs had Georgia postmarks or return addresses. pN hJ Ca All four targets can be
linked to school desegregation efforts by the NAACP, leading investigators to
speculate that a white racist group may be responsible.
These factors were being considered: The 11th Circuit hears federal appeals
from Georgia, Florida and Alabama, including desegregation cases. Vance wrote
a decision in September in which the appeals court ruled in favor of the
Jacksonville NAACP in its desegregation suit against Jacksonville schools.
Robinson was the Savannah NAACP's local counsel and had helped with an NAACP
suit against the Savannah schools. The NAACP lost that case at the 11th
Circuit; the three-judge panel that heard the case did not include Vance.
Robinson had also advised the Jacksonville NAACP chapter in its desegregation
case, according to a Jacksonville activist, the Rev. Fred Newbill. At Vance's
service, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Clifford Fulford of Birmingham, a close friend
of Vance, delivered the eulogy, asking the mourners to ''put aside our outrage
for a while'' to honor Vance. ''The
assassins were cheated if they thought that Bob Vance was afraid to die,''
Fulford said. He described Vance as a strong believer in the law and a man
''who stood up for the underdog and the oppressed.'' Among those who attended
the service were FBI Director William S. Sessions, Attorney General Dick
Thornburgh and Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, the justice who oversees
the operations of the 11th Circuit.
GRAPHIC: Photo; AP Photo - NAACP officials and other local black leaders holding a
press conference in Jacksonville, Fla., on Wednesday. A
Bomb was received in the mail at the local office on Tuesday.