Civil Rights Report Cites 70 Suspected 'Modern‑Day Lynchings' Misclassified as Suicides in the South
A new report by Mississippi‑based civil rights group JULIAN claims that at least 70 deaths of Black Americans across seven Southern states from 2000 to 2025 were likely 'modern‑day lynchings' that local authorities ruled suicides or accidents, potentially cutting off homicide investigations and masking racist violence. The Crimson Record, released last month, catalogs cases in Mississippi, Georgia, Texas, Louisiana, Florida, Tennessee and Alabama and says the total could exceed 100 when other suspicious deaths are included, with Mississippi alone accounting for 20. JULIAN founder Jill Collen Jefferson argues that once a death is labeled a suicide, police almost never pursue it as a possible killing and families lose avenues for justice, pointing to hangings such as Jermaine Carter in Greenwood, Miss., and Rodney Thompson in Memphis that families have long disputed. The report is being applied to recent cases like that of Kyle Bassinga, found hanging in a Cobb County, Georgia park in February; police there say they see 'no indicators' of another person’s involvement and are treating it as a suicide while warning about online misinformation, but Jefferson says the physical circumstances demand a homicide lens from the outset. Outside experts quoted note that disputes over classification of Black deaths go back to the era of documented racial‑terror lynchings, arguing that while the forms of violence change, the dynamics of terror and institutional blind spots can persist into the present.
📌 Key Facts
- Civil rights group JULIAN’s report The Crimson Record identifies 70 alleged 'modern‑day lynchings' of Black people across seven Southern states between 2000 and 2025, with Mississippi accounting for 20 cases.
- The group argues many hangings and other suspicious deaths have been prematurely ruled suicides or accidents, effectively ending homicide investigations and obscuring potential racist violence.
- Current disputes include the February 2026 death of Kyle Bassinga in Cobb County, Georgia, where police say they have found 'no indicators' of foul play and are treating the case as a suicide while awaiting autopsy results.
- Historical‑lynching scholar Amy Kate Bailey says there is a 'conceptual thread' linking earlier campaigns of racial terror to modern patterns in how Black deaths are classified.
📊 Relevant Data
The age-adjusted rate of suicide by suffocation (including hanging) in 2021 was 2.0 per 100,000 for Black persons, compared to 4.6 for White persons and 3.1 for Hispanic persons.
QuickStats: Age-Adjusted Suicide Rates for the Three Leading Methods, by Race and Hispanic Origin — National Vital Statistics System, United States, 2021 — Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
From 2018 to 2021, age-adjusted suicide rates increased by 19.2% among non-Hispanic Black persons, from 7.3 to 8.7 per 100,000.
Recent Changes in Suicide Rates, by Race and Ethnicity and Age Group — United States, 2021 — Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Homicide rates for Black males aged 15-34 are approximately 20 times higher than for White males in the same age group, contributing significantly to mortality disparities.
External factors, including homicide, drive death rate disparity in US black and white young adults — University of Oxford
Approximately 93% of Black homicide victims are killed by Black offenders, indicating a high rate of intra-racial homicides.
Murder Rate by Race in the US 2025 | Statistics & Facts — The Global Statistics
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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