Home / Full timeline / Federal agents arrest three Black men in Columbus, Georgia, and charges them with possessing firebombs. White police officers urge Mayor J. R. Allen not to give in to Black demands, prompted by Black charges of racial discrimination in the city’s police department.
Federal agents arrest three Black men in Columbus, Georgia, and charges them with possessing firebombs. White police officers urge Mayor J. R. Allen not to give in to Black demands, prompted by Black charges of racial discrimination in the city’s police department.
1971 (Jun 25)
Agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms arrested three Black men in Columbus, Georgia, and charged them with possessing firebombs in the racially tense city. The agents said they confiscated enough material at the People's Panther Party headquarters to make more than fifty firebombs. Two of the three arrested men were soldiers stationed at nearby Fort Benning, and the third was a former army private. The agents arrested William Craig Garr, Jesse Reed, Jr., and Anthony L. Brewer less than a week after the outburst of new racial disorders, which included fire bombings. Garr was identified as the President of the People's Panther Party, an organization described by a federal official as a training group for the Black Panther Party. Meanwhile, white police officers in Columbus presented a petition to Mayor J. R. Allen urging him not to give in to Black demands. The petition was prompted by Black charges of racial discrimination in the city's police department and a subsequent announcement by the mayor that the department would be investigated. Earlier, Black police officers had told the mayor, in response to his plea to them to help cool the Black community, that they would protect the Black community from the white police.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.