Sunday, November 02, 2025

STANLEY NELSON-ONE OF LOUISIANA’S BEST!



Monday, October 27th, 2025

Baton Rouge, Louisiana

STANLEY NELSON-ONE OF LOUISIANA’S BEST!

A Pulitzer Prize nominee, one of Louisiana’s best and brightest, was honored this week in Baton Rouge at the Old State Capital. His name was Stanley Nelson, and he was a journalistic giant in rooting out the Ku Klux Klan activity in Louisiana.

Here is what best-selling author Greg Iles had to say about his friend Stanley Nelson, who he patterned one of his books after. “The South lost a quiet crusader. Not a fictional super-hero from the cineplex, but a genuine hero, a knight-errant for truth and justice..”

After 60 years, the FBI opened widespread murder investigations into what was left of the Ku Klux Klan. The Klan had once held a significant presence statewide throughout the first half of the 20th century. But following the enactment of 1964 Civil Rights Act, the FBI was given the authority to crack down on what used to be unevenly enforced state violations, and Klan activity in the Bayou State slowed to a trickle.

Not so in my old hometown of Ferriday, as well as across the river in Natchez, Mississippi. As many as 20 local black citizens were reportedly killed by the Ku Klux Klan in the 60s, and there were ties to Klan members to one of the busiest houses of ill repute in the South.

Few arrests were made, and a number of cases ended up on the back burner as years went by. But sparked by the dogged reporting of Stanley Nelson with the Concordia Sentinel, whose series of articles on the Klan won him a nomination for the Pulitzer Prize, the FBI began taking a look at what happened just about the time I landed in Ferriday, Louisiana with a new law degree.

In 1964, worldwide attention was focused on the deaths of three civil rights workers in Philadelphia, Mississippi. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover ordered several hundred agents to fan out and investigate all over the state, as well as into Louisiana. The widespread investigation quickly focused on the Silver Dollar Group, an offshoot of the Klan based in Natchez, but terrorizing a number of black males on both sides of the river.

In late December of that year, the KKK burned down a local shoe shop in Ferriday with the owner, Frank Morris, in it at the time. Morris was severely burned, and died a few days later. Why was he targeted? Apparently because he was black, ran a successful business, and had a number of white customers.

Another major fire attributed to the local Klan was the burning of Haney’s Big House, one the best known black music nightclubs in the Deep South. Every black jazz great in New Orleans, from Louis Armstrong to Fats Domino, played at Haney’s. And local cousins Jerry Lee Lewis, Mickey Gilley and Jimmy Swaggart were known to sneak into Haney’s by the back door. When white fans started to come to Haney’s, it was quickly burned to the ground.

One of the busiest establishments in lower Concordia was the Morville Lounge, a popular house of ill repute and illegal gambling establishment. Morville was located some 15 miles south of the bridge that connects Natchez and Ferriday, and customers from as far away as Baton Rouge and Jackson, Mississippi usually filled up the parking lot over the levee. The girls of Morville travelled a regular route from Atlanta then Birmingham, on to Jackson, down to Morville and on into New Orleans. That’s how popular this small rural lounge off the beaten path had become. And the local Klan was reportedly active in the running of this red-light stop.

The notorious Jim Leslie murder that took place in Baton Rouge in 1976 had ties to Concordia Parish and the Klan. Leslie ran a successful public relations agency, and had been a key player in the passage of Right to Work legislation at the state capitol in Baton Rouge. He was killed in a motel parking lot a few hours after the legislation was successfully adopted. 

The purported triggerman, Rusty Griffith, was gunned down in a lower Concordia wildlife refuge a few months after the Leslie killing. The Dixie Mafia tied to Shreveport’s top law officer at the time, the Public Safety Commissioner named George D’Artois, supposedly hired Griffith. The assassination money, some $100,000, was allegedly funneled via the local Natchez-Concordia Klan to Griffith and his accomplices. When Griffith got greedy and wanted more money, so the rumors go, he too was gunned down.

When the gang that bumped off Griffith was arrested, yours truly was appointed by the court in Concordia Parish to represent Clay Kimble, one of the ringleaders involved in the Leslie and Griffin murders. So I’m well aware of all the gory details, and where the skeletons are buried. Well, maybe not literally (or at least I’m not sayin’ nothin’).

When I ran for Louisiana State Senator in 1971, Klan activities had moved north towards Franklin Parish. One of my opponents had strong support from the local Klan, and I received my share of threats that I, perhaps foolishly at the time, did not take that seriously. But signs and billboards in support of my campaign rarely lasted the night after they were put up. Fortunately for me, the local white knights were fairly old guys by then, and had little support in the local community.

Now, after 60 years, and thanks to Stanley Nelson, renewed pressure was put on the FBI to aggressively pursue those Klansmen still living who may have been accomplices in these Louisiana murders. Old wounds have opened back up, and many older folks who were there at the time seem to be pleased that some justice may eventually come to some of the families who suffered the loss of loved ones.

A number of Klansmen, particularly in the North Louisiana area, got away with murder. At least up until now. Thanks to Stanley Nelson, a few less got away.

Peace and Justice.

Jim Brown

Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com

 

 

 

 

THERE’S A MELTDOWN AT LSU AND CHAPEL HILL!



Monday, November 3rd, 2025

Baton Rouge, Louisiana

 

THERE’S A MELTDOWN AT LSU AND CHAPEL HILL!

I’m getting deluged with calls, texts and emails. What the heck is going on with my two favorite teams in college football? Of course they’re talking about the deluge of criticism taking place at LSU and the University of North Carolina. I have followed both of these college teams for years, but cannot remember so much well-earned criticism.

First come the Tar Heels. I love my alma mater at Chapel Hill. I had the privilege of having an athletic scholarship (basketball and track) at a school  that is, year and in year out, ranked as one of the top public universities in the nation. While at Carolina, I received a great education, competed in track meets all over the world, and dated a number of really pretty coeds.  I couldn’t ask for more. But Carolina is a basketball school. Sure, I attended football games. I went  with my fellow fraternity brothers just for fun. But you never expected a winner there.

I did have high hopes when Mac Brown took over as football coach. He had spent time coaching at LSU and Tulane, and we became good friends when I was Louisiana Secretary of State.  Coach Brown called me when he applied for the North Carolina job and asked me to contact basketball Coach Dean Smith, who ruled the roost and called the shots for all Athletics at Carolina. Coach Brown had a number of winning seasons, but never was in contention for a national championship.

Mack called me a few years later to tell me he was going to the University of Texas. “I love my life at Carolina, but I’ll never win a national championship here. It’s a basketball school. I’ll retire back here, and my kids are going to school here. But I’m going to Texas to win it all.”  He did, winning a national championship for Texas in 2005.

But the powers that be in Chapel Hill did want to win it all. Who, they thought, better than the NFL’s winningest coach? The problem was, Bill Belichick was a has-been. Once quarterback Tom Brady, probably the best that ever was, left Belichick’s team, his program crashed and burned.  He was a bust. A mediocre coach at best. But the Board that governs the University at North Carolina were blinded of his mistakes in later years, and were so hungry for a winner, that they jumped at the chance to get Belichick. It was a huge mistake.

There was more than his poor coaching of football. He was diverted in his attention by his 24 year-old girlfriend. When the Tar Heels had an off-week, he vacationed on the beach rather than developing a closer relationship with his players and their families.

He will never be a winner at North Carolina. He’s over the hill. Now Carolina is doing the same reckless thing that LSU is doing and that’s hoping for a contract buyout.

Then there are the Fighting Tigers. I know LSU football is a way of life for many Louisianans. The athletic director said it best. There are three priorities at LSU. Number one is football, number two is football and number three- football. They had a coach a few years back that won a  national championship with a team that many said was the best football college team ever to play. But he didn’t perform up to expectations the following year, so they ran him off.

LSU stopped at nothing to win it all. Progressive colleges today hire young coaches in their 30s.  But the powers that be in Baton Rouge hired an older coach from a big name school that had done OK, but never won a national championship. What do they pay him? $100 million. What? You’ve got to be kidding!  What Board overseeing any major university, especially one that is ranked mediocre at best, would authorize such an enormous contract that undermines the purpose of what is supposed to be the flagship school?

Now LSU is licking its wounds, has fired the football coach and the athletic director, and is putting on a questionable face in dealing with an untenable situation.

Both colleges need to review their historic missions of educating their young people with the mission of developing their leaders and their workforce for the future of their states. Right now, both schools are traveling a really a rocky road.

Peace and Justice.

Jim Brown

Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com