Three weeks ago Gaffney teenager,
Isaiah Clyburn, says five white teenagers called him a racial slur and
then almost beat him to death all because he is African American.
Gaffney Sheriff’s Deputies charged the teens with second degree
lynching but now the federal government is also looking into whether
those teens violated his civil rights. Under South Carolina law
lynching is defined as an act of violence by two or more people against
a person but civil rights leaders and people we spoke to say the
lynching charge is simply not enough. Calling for a federal
investigation, Civil Rights leader Jesse Jackson believes the beating
of sixteen year old Clyburn by five white teenagers is nothing more
than a hate crime. “We can not blame all while people for that but
those who do must face the law. None of us have a right to violate each
other physically and brutally. We must learn to live together.”
Investigators say sixteen year old Luke Brice, seventeen year old
Christopher Cates, seventeen year old Kenneth Millers, eighteen year
old Justin Phillips, and seventeen year old Jerry Tony jumped out of
three trucks waving the Confederate flag and called Clyburn the N-word.
Clyburn’s aunt, Roxann Clyburn, believes their motive was pure hate but
says that doesn’t mean her family feels the same. “I told Isaiah don’t
hate them, that was spirit of the devil that led them to turn around
call you that name and them came back to get out.” South Carolina is
one of nine states that do not have any hate crime laws on the books.
People we spoke who have been following the story agreed that the
beating calls for a much stiffer penalty. Amanda Kent says, “You don’t
go around beating people up because of the color of their skin.” Eric
Thomas agreed. He says, “This is not 1955, this is not 1960, this is
the new millennium. There’s no room or place for that whatsoever. They
should get a really harsh punishment for this. [more