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“How To Sue The Klan” - In Conversation With A Student At UTC

Poster for “How to Sue the Klan.”
"How to Sue the Klan"

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.

Nicole Brown, Ray Bassett, Alfred Bolden and John Beder at WUTC.
Nicole Brown
Nicole Brown, Ray Bassett, Alfred Bolden and John Beder at WUTC.

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Ray is the host and producer of Scenic Roots, Mondays - Thursdays at 3 PM on WUTC.
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  • Year two for Chattanooga’s United for Working Families Summit. Chattanooga Civics: Outdoor Chattanooga. ETC’s “Southbridge.” “How to Sue the Klan” - in conversation with a student at UTC. These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
  • Near the end of this month, the United for Working Families Summit returns for a second year - on Tuesday, August 27th starting at 8:30 AM at The Westin in downtown Chattanooga. Terran Anderson is vice president of community and corporate engagement at United Way.
  • Outdoor Chattanooga is celebrating twenty years of serving residents of - and visitors to - this city. Nathan Bird recently profiled the division of the City of Chattanooga’s Department of Parks and Outdoors on his podcast, Chattanooga Civics.
  • “Southbridge” is the latest production at Ensemble Theatre of Chattanooga. The play by Reginald Edmund premieres Saturday at Rivermont Presbyterian Church - 3319 Hixson Pike in Chattanooga - at 7:30 PM. Garry Posey is artistic director of ETC - and the director of “Southbridge.”