The FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force is investigating an explosion that was detonated near a Colorado Springs NAACP office on Tuesday. The explosion was detonated
outside Mr. G’s Hair Design Studio which is next door to the NAACP
office. Investigators are not yet certain whether the NAACP office, or
the hair salon, was the intended target. The salon caters to a mostly
African-American clientele. Investigators have identified a person of
interest wanted for questioning regarding the incident. The person of
interest is identified as a balding white male in his 40s who drives a dirty, older model pickup truck.
Fortunately, nobody was injured in the blast. Property damage was minor. A gas can
left near the detonation failed to ignite or the consequences could
have been far more serious. Sandra Young, Denver chapter president of
the NAACP, declared the explosion
an “act of domestic terrorism”. Colorado Springs chapter president
Henry Allen Jr was reluctant to speculate about whether or not the
bombing was a hate crime, but he did say his organization would not be deterred by the explosion.
Investigators have not determined if the NAACP was
the intended target, but they do believe the bombing was deliberate. The
NAACP is no stranger to violence and intimidation. On December 25, 1951
a bomb exploded underneath
the bedroom floor of Florida NAACP founder Harry T Moore and his wife,
Harriette. The bombing killed both of them. Not only was the explosion
on Christmas Day, but it was also the Moores’ 25th wedding anniversary.
On June 12, 1963, NAACP Field Secretary Medgar Evers was murdered
in his Jackson, Mississippi driveway by Ku Klux Klan member Byron De La
Beckwith. Outrage over Evers’ assassination helped galvanize the civil
rights movement. The following year the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was
signed into law.
Luckily, the Colorado Springs bombing did not result
in any injuries to members of the NAACP or to patrons and employees of
Mr. G’s Hair Design Studio. As more information about the case becomes
available, we may gain insight about the motives of the perpetrator. The
NAACP was a frequent target of hate crimes in the 20th century.
Hopefully, we are not witnessing a rebirth of violent bigots
who fought the civil rights movement with bombs and bullets, leaving
their bloody imprint on the American landscape in the 20th century.
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