After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on displayNew Foto - After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on display

The weapon used to kill Black teenagerEmmett Tillin one of the most notorious lynchings that helped ignite the civil rights movement is nowon displayat a museum in the Deep South. Emmett was just 14 when he was kidnapped from his great-uncle's house by two White men who later admitted to beating and torturing the teen before shooting him in the head and throwing his body into the Tallahatchie River, weighed down by a 75-pound cotton gin fan. The .45-caliber pistol and worn saddle-brown holster, marked with the initials J.M., are part of an exhibit at the state's Two Mississippi Museums – the interconnected Museum of Mississippi History and Mississippi Civil Rights Museum – that aims to tell"the whole story"70 years after Emmett's murder. Emmett's murder in the Jim Crow South, and his mother's decision to hold a public open-casket funeral where thousands saw Emmett's mangled body, sparked global outrage and accelerated the civil rights movement in America. Writer Wright Thompson, who wrote an account of Emmett's death in his book "The Barn: The Secret History of a Murder in Mississippi," said inan article in The Atlantiche was tipped off about the gun and found it "sitting in a safe-deposit box" in a Mississippi bank. CNN reached out to Thompson for comment but did not immediately hear back. A spokesperson for the Mississippi Department of Archives and History confirmed Thompson's account of the events. The gun and its holster had been in the private ownership of a Mississippi family "that is not connected to the case," the state's Department of Archives and History said. TheFoundation for Mississippi Historynegotiated with the family and was able to acquire the weapon and holster under the condition that the family remain anonymous, Two Mississippi Museums Director Michael Morris said. "It wasn't until earlier this year that I fully understood that he (Emmettl) was shot," Morris said at a news conference about the artifacts on Thursday. "Most people know about the fact that he was brutally beaten and tortured, but it's important to know that he was shot as well, and so that gun being on display is going to help us tell that story." The weapon was authenticated through its serial number, which matches information from FBI records, according to Morris. The FBI and the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division closed their investigations into the infamous killing without filing federal charges, due to thestatute of limitationsand because they could not prove a key witnesslied to federal investigatorsabout her story. Deborah Watts, Emmett's cousin and the co-founder of theEmmett Till Legacy Foundation, said the family is "wrestling with an intellectual and spiritual conundrum" over the recovery and display of the gun. "The gun that was used in Emmett's heinous murder is in fact evidence in a case that, while closed, is one in which we still seek justice," Watts said in a statement to CNN. But in the absence of charges and with most people involved in the case now dead, the family said the exhibit honoring Emmett has special bearing. "We also understand the importance of the gun as an artifact for education so that current and future generations are able to reflect and grasp the importance in resisting erasure or the changing of historical facts," Watts said. TheChicago teenwas visiting family in Money, Mississippi, in thesummer of 1955when he had his fateful encounter withCarolyn Bryant Donham, who was 21 at the time. Accounts from that day differbut witnesses alleged Emmettwhistledat Bryant Donham after purchasing somebubble gumfrom the store she owned with her then-husband. Emmett wasfalsely accusedof flirting and making advances at Bryant Donham. Four days later, Bryant Donham's husband at the time, Roy Bryant, and his half-brother, J.W. Milam, rousted Emmett from his bed in the middle of the night, ordered him into the bed of a pickup and eventually beat him viciously before shooting him in the head. Both the gun and the holster originally belonged to Milam, who along with Bryant, admitted to the killing in a 1956 interview withLook Magazine, about four months after an all-White jurydeliberated for underan hour before acquitting the two, despiteeyewitnesses identifying the defendantsand the men confessing to kidnapping the teen. Morris said the Mississippi Department of Archives and History told Emmett's family that the artifacts would be on permanent display in a theater where a narrative film describes what happened "from the teen's entry into Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market to his murder." Rev. Wheeler Parker, whowitnessed his cousin Emmett's abduction, said displaying the murder weapon and holster is "good because it brings closure," according to theMississippi Department of Archives and History. "This weapon has affected me more so than any other artifact that I've encountered in my 30-year museum career," said Nan Prince, the director of collections for Mississippi's Department of Archives and History. "The emotions that are centered around it are hard. It's a hard thing to see and a hard thing to convey." To mark the 70th anniversary of Emmett's kidnapping and murder, the Emmett Till Interpretative Center this past week held a multi-daycommemoration programwhere national and civil rights leaders met to reflect on "the life and legacy of Emmett Till and advance the ongoing movement for racial justice." Commemorative events included a train ride from Chicago to Mississippi that echoed the one Emmett and his family took 70 years ago, "linking together sites that are important to the Emmett Till tragedy." The new exhibit comes as museums across the country face increased federal scrutiny, afterPresident Donald Trump allegedmuseums were too focused on highlighting negative aspects of American history, including "how bad slavery was." That announcement prompted the American Alliance of Museums, which represents 35,000 professionals in the sector, tospeak out against"growing threats of censorship against US museums." "These pressures can create a chilling effect across the entire museum sector," the group said. When asked about the current national debates about how to teach difficult history, Morris said his museum will continue doing public history work. "One of the reasons why the Civil Rights Museum was created is to tell the unvarnished truth about what happened in terms of the civil rights movement here in Mississippi, and that's our mission," he said. "And I think the acquisition of this artifact is a part of our mission, and so we're just going to continue doing public history work. And for us, you know, we're just doing our jobs." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on display

After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on display The weapon used to kill Black teenagerEmmett Ti...
As U.S. fleet steams toward coast, Venezuelans face uncertainty, fear and, for some, hopeNew Foto - As U.S. fleet steams toward coast, Venezuelans face uncertainty, fear and, for some, hope

U.S. warships steam toward the southern Caribbean. The Trump administration denounces embattled "narco-president" Nicolás Maduro and doubles a bounty on his head to $50 million. Rumors of an invasion, coup or other form of U.S. intervention flood social media. For the beleaguered people of Venezuela, mired in more than a decade of crisis — hyperinflation, food shortages, authoritarian rule and rigged elections — a new phase of anxiety is once again rattling nerves. Even so, Venezuelans are trying to soldier on. "We try to keep up our activities, our schedules despite the uncertainty," said Leisy Torcatt, 44, a mother of three who heads a baseball school in a nation where a passion for sports helps fend off despair. "Our daily problems continue, but we cannot become paralyzed. ... We keep on going forward trying to work out our differences," she said. There is an inescapable sense here that matters are largely out of people's control. The massive anti-Maduro street protests of past years did little to dislodge, or undermine, Maduro, and the opposition has long been deeply divided. Authorities have jailed dissenters and broken up coup attempts. And now, once again, Venezuela appears to be in Washington's crosshairs. "We have already seen it all," said Mauricio Castillo, 28, a journalist. "It's not that we have lost faith in the possibility of real change. But we are fed up. We cannot just stop our lives, put them on hold waiting for 'something' to happen." Here in the capital, Venezuelans are accustomed to the enhanced martial ritual: more blockaded avenues, more troops on the streets, more barricades shielding the presidential palace of Miraflores, where Maduro launches diatribes against the "imperialist" would-be invaders. Yet, despite the current naval buildup in the Caribbean, the Trump administration has given very mixed signals on Venezuela. During Trump's first presidency, his administration recognized a shadow opposition president, indicted Maduro on drug-trafficking charges and imposed draconian sanctions on the oil and financial sectors. The sanctions effectively collapsed an already shaky economy in what was once South America's wealthiest nation. The economic meltdown led to an exodus of some 8 million Venezuelans, almost a third of the population. Most ended up elsewhere in South America, but hundreds of thousands made it to the United States. Trump has signaled emphatically that they are not welcome, ending Biden administration-era protections and stepping up deportations. During the presidential campaign — and since returning to the White House — Trump has repeatedly said, without evidence, that Venezuela had emptied its prisons and sent the worst offenders to the U.S. But shortly after taking office for his current term, Trump dispatched a special envoy, Richard Grenell, to meet with Maduro, generating hopes of improved relations. Washington later granted Chevron, the U.S. oil giant, a license to continue operating in Venezuela — home to the globe's largest oil reserves — in a move that provided much-needed hard cash for Caracas, and oil for the U.S. market. Then, in July, the Trump administrationhailed the releaseof 10 U.S. citizens and permanent residents being held in Venezuela in exchange for the return of hundreds of Venezuelan nationals who had beendeported to El Salvador. Meantime, the United States has regularly been sending other deportees back to Venezuela in another sign of bilateral cooperation. "So far we've seen President Trump very clearly endorse a policy of engagement with Venezuela," said Geoff Ramsey, senior fellow with the Atlantic Council, a Washington-based research group. "The U.S. is not going to invade Venezuela anytime soon." Others say they're not so sure, despite Trump's stated aversion to getting involved in more wars — and the likely negative blowback in much of Latin America, where the prospect of U.S. intervention inevitably revives memories of past invasions, land grabs and support for right-wing dictators. In the view of U.S. officials, Maduro and drug trafficking are inextricably entwined. The White House labels Maduro the head of the "Cartel of the Suns," a smuggling network allegedly tied to the Venezuelan government and military. And Trump has reportedlydirected the Pentagonto plan possible military action against Latin America cartels. (Maduro denies the drug charges, dismissing them as a U.S. disinformation campaign.) The massive scope of the U.S. naval employment seems to reflect the policy viewpoint of hawks such as Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who has long championed a hard-line stance against Venezuela. The buildup reportedly includes more than ahalf-dozen warships, including at least one submarine, and thousands of Marines and sailors. The White House says it's meant to deter maritime narcotics trafficking, not topple Maduro. "This is a lot of effort to put into something that's performance, no?" said Laura Cristina Dib, who heads Venezuelan research at the Washington Office on Latin America, a research group. In response, Maduro has bolstered militia sign-ups, deployed 15,000 troops to the border with Colombia and insisted there's "no way" U.S. forces can enter Venezuela. He scoffs at the U.S. contention that the naval buildup is an anti-smuggling effort, noting — correctly — that most cocaine is produced in neighboring Colombia and enters the United States via Mexico. "It's ridiculous to say they are fighting drug trafficking with nuclear submarines," Samuel Moncada, Venezuela's U.N. ambassador, told reporters Thursday. By most independent accounts, Maduro likely lost last year's election — monitors disputed his claimed victory — but his many backers are making a high-profile show of support given the U.S. saber-rattling. The government has orchestrated public sign-ups of militia members demonstrating their eagerness to fight for the socialist legacy of the late Hugo Chávez, Maduro's mentor and predecessor in Miraflores Palace. "None of us will be afraid when the moment comes to defend our country from foreign aggression," said Orlando López, 54, a grandfather and proud militiaman. "It's not justified that the president of some other country wants to impose his will." He rejected the notion of a pervasive sense of nervousness. "The climate in the city is one of tranquility, of peace," said López, who is part of a more-than-1-million civilian militia force backing Maduro. On a recent Sunday at Santo Domingo de Guzmán Roman Catholic Church in the capital's Baruta district, Father Leonardo Marius urged parishioners to ignore the drumbeat of war pounding the airwaves and internet. Venezuelans, he said, should focus on more basic concerns. "In Venezuela, a half a million children don't have enough to eat — no one talks about that," Marius told parishioners in his sermon. "But we love the Hollywood stories of boats and aircraft carriers, the show. ... 'They are coming! They are are disembarking!' Please! Hollywood has done a lot of damage. Let the stories be." Across town, at an upscale sports club, Javier Martín, a businessman, said the noise was hard to ignore. "The atmosphere across the country, but especially here in Caracas, is one of fear, distress, uncertainty," said Martín. "You see hooded officials on the streets and it makes you feel fear, like you are in a war." Venezuelans, he explained, live a kind of "surreal" existence, struggling to maintain their lives and families while always anticipating improvements, and changes, that never seem to come. "We live cornered every day," he said. "It's not sustainable." What's next? "Everyone expects something to happen," Martín said. "I just hope it's positive." Special correspondent Mogollón reported from Caracas and Times staff writer McDonnell from Mexico City. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

As U.S. fleet steams toward coast, Venezuelans face uncertainty, fear and, for some, hope

As U.S. fleet steams toward coast, Venezuelans face uncertainty, fear and, for some, hope U.S. warships steam toward the southern Caribbean....
Josh Duhamel Says 'There's Always Something New' Happening as a Dad to 2 Sons — and Reveals If He Wants a Daughter (Exclusive)New Foto - Josh Duhamel Says 'There's Always Something New' Happening as a Dad to 2 Sons — and Reveals If He Wants a Daughter (Exclusive)

Josh Duhamel/Instagram Josh Duhamel tells PEOPLE in an exclusive interview that "there's always something new" happening in his life as a dad to two boys The actor shares toddler son Shepherd with wife Audra Mari and 12-year-old Axl with ex Fergie Duhamel also reveals if he wants to one day have a daughter Josh Duhamelloves dad life! The actor, 52, tells PEOPLE in an exclusive interview that being afather to two sons—Axl, 12, andShepherd, 19 months — brings him joy like no other. "There's always something new," Duhamel, who has partnered withCarGurusfor the company's new video series,The Big Deal Show, says. "I just love being a dad. I love every single milestone," Duhamel, who shares Shepherd with wifeAudra Mariand Axl with exFergie, adds. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Josh Duhamel/Instagram According to Duhamel, both of his sons are different in their own unique ways. "My wife's father is a big car guy and a collector of cars, and I think that Shepherd is very much like his grandfather," he says. "He just loves cars, ... and all he wants to do is get up in the seat and just pretend like he's driving. Even if it's a little tricycle, he wants to get in there and pretend." Axl, meanwhile, "doesn't really care so much" about cars in the same way his other family members do, Duhamel says. "He's more about soccer and basketball stats," he continues, adding: "But that's the beauty of genetics. They all come out a little bit different." Josh Duhamel/Instagram And while theOff the Gridstar enjoys being a boy dad — he'd love having a little girl of his own just as much. Speaking about wife Mari, 31, and how she is "a great mom," Duhamel admits, "She's a great role model, and hopefully we have another one. Hopefully a girl, maybe another boy. We'll see." Read the original article onPeople

Josh Duhamel Says 'There's Always Something New' Happening as a Dad to 2 Sons — and Reveals If He Wants a Daughter (Exclusive)

Josh Duhamel Says 'There's Always Something New' Happening as a Dad to 2 Sons — and Reveals If He Wants a Daughter (Exclusive) J...
Snoop Dogg Says 'My Bad' For Comments About Gay Couple in Pixar's 'Lightyear': 'Teach Me How to Learn'New Foto - Snoop Dogg Says 'My Bad' For Comments About Gay Couple in Pixar's 'Lightyear': 'Teach Me How to Learn'

Snoop Dogg has responded to the backlash surrounding his comments about LGBTQ+ representation in Disney and Pixar's "Lightyear." On Wednesday,Hollywood Unlockedreposted an interview with media personality TS Madison on Instagram, in which she discussed Snoop Dogg's push back on "Lightyear's" inclusion of a gay couple. The 16-time Grammy winner later took to the comments to explain he was just "caught off guard" at the time, and that he hopes his friends in the LGBTQ+ community can "teach me how to learn." More from Variety Snoop Dogg Says 'I'm Scared to Go to the Movies' After Pixar's Gay Couple in 'Lightyear' Led to Questions From His Grandson: 'These Are Kids. We Have to Show That at This Age?' 'Outer Banks' Alum Jonathan Daviss to Play Snoop Dogg in Upcoming Biopic Snoop Dogg to Host New Year's Eve Special for NBC and Peacock "I was just caught off guard and had no answer for my grandsons," he wrote. "All my gay friends [know] what's up, they been calling me with love. My bad for not knowing the answers for a 6 yr old. Teach me how to learn. I'm not perfect." During an appearance on the "It's Giving" podcast, Snoop Dogg said he is "scared to go to the movies" after he brought his grandson to "Lightyear" and had to field questions about the film's same-sex couple. "It fucked me up," he said. "I'm like, scared to go to the movies. Y'all throwing me in the middle of shit that I don't have an answer for… It threw me for a loop. I'm like, 'What part of the movie was this?' These are kids. We have to show that at this age? They're going to ask questions. I don't have the answer." "Lightyear" screenwriter Lauren Gunderson also issued a response on Instagram.In a post on Wednesday, she defended her decision to write a same-sex relationship into the film. "I'm proud of it. To infinity. Love is love," Gunderson wrote. "I was one of a few writers they had on it over the years, which is very common for screenwriting of course. I had very little to do with the final script. But I was proud to see a happy queer couple (even for a few seconds) onscreen. I know they got a lot of shit for this inclusion, but stuff like this matters because beautiful love like this exists." Not only did "Lightyear" feature one of Disney and Pixar's most prominent LGBTQ+ characters, it also depicted the first same-sex kiss in a movie. Asreported byVariety, the moment was met with controversy internally at Pixar after the studio considered cutting the scene. Employees and allies at Pixar sent a joint statement to Walt Disney Company leadership claiming executives had censored "overtly gay affection" in Disney films. The kiss was kept as a result. Best of Variety Best Labor Day Deals on Samsung, Bose, Criterion Collection and More What's Coming to Disney+ in September 2025 New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Snoop Dogg Says ‘My Bad’ For Comments About Gay Couple in Pixar’s ‘Lightyear’: ‘Teach Me How to Learn’

Snoop Dogg Says 'My Bad' For Comments About Gay Couple in Pixar's 'Lightyear': 'Teach Me How to Learn' Snoop Dog...
Orlando Bloom recalls being 'ordered around and screamed at' while filming "Black Hawk Down"

Columbia Pictures/ Everett Orlando Bloomgot quite the military experience while making the war filmBlack Hawk Down. While speaking at Fan Expo Chicago 2025 recently, Bloom told the audience that, for him as a then up-and-coming actor, the 2002 film "was like from the frying pan into the fire" and involved a lot of "being ordered around and screamed at." Inspired by real-life events of the Battle of Mogadishu in Somalia in 1993,Black Hawk Downfollows 160 elite U.S. soldiers who are dropped into the country to capture an enemy warlord's two top lieutenants, but instead find themselves in a desperate battle with a contingent of armed Somalis. The massive cast also includes Josh Hartnett, Ewan McGregor, Eric Bana, Tom Sizemore, William Fichtner, Jason Isaacs, Sam Shepard, Jeremy Piven, Ioan Gruffudd, Ewen Bremner, Hugh Dancy, and Tom Hardy in his first film role, among others. Chris Cosgrove for EW According to Bloom, because the film was produced byJerry Bruckheimerand directed byRidley Scott, and "Jerry doesn't do anything in half measures nor does Ridley," the experience was "pretty epic" but also brutal. "We went to Fort Benning. It was so brutal. I mean it was like, I think I almost tore... I slightly tore my meniscus in my knee, but I managed to strap it and get through it," he said. Bloom then recalled how fellow actorBen Fosterwasn't so lucky. "I think Ben properly tore his groin muscle, because everyone was really trying to go for it. And I think he had to be recast, so that was really serious." He continued, "Yeah, it was intense. We were in the bunks and being ordered around and screamed at and yelled at, and really it was an intense thing." In addition to the trial-by-fire experience it gave the young star, it also allowed Bloom the opportunity to explore a new country. "We spent six months in Morocco and we were sporadic in filming — and I'm really only in the beginning bit and then fall from the helicopter and then I'm there — it's sporadic, but I felt like I was there forever because you're a young actor and they can pay you to be there, which was great," he said. "I actually had a great time in Morocco as well. I had a friend, and we'd go to different parts of the country and check it out, which was cool as well. I love to travel, love to experience different cultures, and there's an amazing culture in Morocco," he added. Chris Cosgrove for EW Want more movie news? Sign up forEntertainment Weekly's free newsletterto get the latest trailers, celebrity interviews, film reviews, and more. So, all in all, despite the physical demands and all the yelling, was it worth it? "Yeah, I love that movie," Bloom gushed. "I'm very proud — and the soundtrack to that movie is awesome." When the moderator pointed out the film also "still holds up to today," Bloom concluded, "Yeah, it's one of those good war films." Bloom'sBlack Hawk DowncostarEwan McGregorhad a panel of his own at Fan Expo Chicago, where the Obi-Wan Kenobi actor andHayden Christensenpicked up their lightsabers once morefor an epicStar Warsreunion duel. Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Orlando Bloom recalls being 'ordered around and screamed at' while filming “Black Hawk Down”

Orlando Bloom recalls being 'ordered around and screamed at' while filming "Black Hawk Down" Columbia Pictures/ Everett Or...
Multi-vehicle crash injures 17 and shuts down major interstate in East TexasNew Foto - Multi-vehicle crash injures 17 and shuts down major interstate in East Texas

LINDALE, Texas (AP) — A multi-vehicle crash Saturday on an East Texas interstate sent 17 injured people to area hospitals and shut down a major interstate for hours. None of the injuries appeared to be life threatening after the crash along Interstate 20 involving two tractor-trailers and six passenger vehicles, Lindale, Texas, Fire Chief Jeremy LaRue said. The crash happened about 4 p.m. Saturday near Lindale, which is about 90 miles (144 kilometers) east of Dallas. The westbound lanes of Interstate 20 were still shut down more than two hours after the accident while crews cleaned oil and diesel fuel left on the roadway, LaRue said. A message was left Saturday with the Texas Department of Public Safety, which was investigating the cause of the accident.

Multi-vehicle crash injures 17 and shuts down major interstate in East Texas

Multi-vehicle crash injures 17 and shuts down major interstate in East Texas LINDALE, Texas (AP) — A multi-vehicle crash Saturday on an East...
Kremlin says Europe is hindering Trump's peace efforts on UkraineNew Foto - Kremlin says Europe is hindering Trump's peace efforts on Ukraine

MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Kremlin said that European powers were hindering U.S. President Donald Trump's efforts to achieve peace in Ukraine and that Russia would continue its operation in Ukraine until Moscow saw real signs that Kyiv was ready for peace. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Russian state media reporters that the "European party of war" was continuing to hinder U.S. and Russian efforts on Ukraine. "We are ready to resolve the problem by political and diplomatic means," Peskov said. "But so far we do not see reciprocity from Kyiv in this. So we shall continue the special military operation." Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered tens of thousands of troops to invade Ukraine in February 2022 after eight years of fighting in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian troops. The United States says over 1.2 million people have been killed and injured in the war since 2022. Russia currently controls a little under one fifth of Ukraine. European powers say that they do not believe Putin wants peace in Ukraine. Putin has repeatedly said he is ready to discuss peace but that Russia will not give up any of the land that it has taken in Ukraine. Russian Defence Minister Andrei Belousov said on Friday that the Russian army had sped up its rate of advance in Ukraine and was taking control of 600-700 square km (502 square miles) a month compared to 300-400 square km at the start of the year. (Reporting by Reuters; editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

Kremlin says Europe is hindering Trump's peace efforts on Ukraine

Kremlin says Europe is hindering Trump's peace efforts on Ukraine MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Kremlin said that European powers were hindering...

 

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