It happened here in Chattanooga forty-four years ago down the road from our studios today here at WUTC.
In 1980, four Black women were waiting for a cab on Ninth St. - now Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard.
A car driven by a local leader of the Ku Klux Klan passed them.
His passengers in the car - also Klansmen - fired shotgun blasts from an open window of the car at the four women.
They were wounded - and a fifth woman was struck by flying glass as the Klansmen traveled up the road, firing more shots.
In criminal court, an all-white jury acquitted two of the Klansmen, sentencing the third to just nine months.
Days of unrest followed here in Chattanooga - and the national attention set the stage for a civil case that successfully used a new legal strategy against the Klan and other hate groups in civil court.
That story is told in the documentary - “How to Sue the Klan” - which has been screened here in Chattanooga and elsewhere.
The documentary is directed by John Beder, an Emmy-nominated filmmaker and resident of this city.
Nicole Brown, one of the film’s co-producers, grew up here and remembers what happened in 1980.
Alfred Bolden - a communication student here on our campus, the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga - spoke this summer with John and Nicole, as part of his internship at WUTC.