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InflationOk300 OP t1_iwpzbhc wrote

BATON ROUGE - Governor John Bel Edwards signed an apology to Denver Smith and Leonard Brown who were shot and killed during a protest 50 years ago on the Southern University campus. 

Southern students were protesting for better funding for their school when the protest turned deadly and Smith and Brown were shot. 

"It's never too late to do the right thing. It certainly doesn't make up for it, but it is the best we can do as a state," Edwards said. 

Wednesday night, many gathered at the Old Capital to remember what happened to Smith and Brown. 

All these years later, nobody knows who killed the two men. Christopher Drew is a professor at LSU and has been investigating the killing with his students. 

"A shot came from a group of deputies, but nobody could ever figure out who the deputy was that fired the shot," Drew said. 

In attendance was Denver Terrance, the nephew of Denver Smith. 

He says Wednesday was an emotional day for his family, and he is still trying to find out who killed his uncle. 

"Recognizing what happened, someone taking accountability is important," Terrance said. "It's still a lot of loose ends and there is still work that needs to be done to get justice for Denver Smith and our family."

The Governor says even with the apology, there is no way to replace the loss of Smith and Brown. 

Terrance says that his family is still appreciative of it. 

"There's no way to fully recover the damage that has been done," Terrance said. "But I think it would be a good gesture."

John Bel Edwards hopes this apology will be an opportunity for everyone to remember what happened, so it doesn't happen again. 

"This is trying to do what we can to remember what happened, to apologize for it, but most important to make sure we never go back to it, that this is a chapter in our past," Edwards said. 

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Olliekitty t1_iwq15zv wrote

> "A shot came from a group of deputies, but nobody could ever figure out who the deputy was that fired the shot," Drew said. 

Weird. If a group of people I was in killed a couple of innocent people and we didn't oust the one that did it, I'd expect us all to be arrested.

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Mythosaurus t1_iwsd9l9 wrote

The police absolutely know who fired that shot, but they will not give up one of their own for free.

Which is why the public always has to be willing to leverage their outrage and (worse) their labor to force compliance from the state.

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