In a stunning decision, an Oklahoma district court judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed in 2020 seeking reparations for the devastating 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. The lawsuit aimed to provide long-awaited justice for the remaining three survivors of the horrific attack before their passing.
According to the Associated Press, Judge Caroline Wall dismissed the legal suit with prejudice, effectively halting the effort to hold the City of Tulsa and other parties accountable for the damages inflicted upon Greenwood, the once-vibrant Black district. The three surviving individuals who endured the massacre, namely Lessie Benningfield Randle, Viola Fletcher, and Hughes Van Ellis, initiated the lawsuit in 2020.
Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum expressed the city’s commitment to various initiatives related to the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. These include locating the graves of the victims, promoting economic growth in the Greenwood District, educating future generations about this dark chapter in the community’s history, and building a city where everyone has equal opportunities for success. However, city officials have yet to receive the complete court order regarding the dismissal.
Judge Wall cited arguments presented by the city, the regional chamber of commerce, and other state and local agencies as grounds for dismissing the case. It is worth noting that last year, the judge had denied a motion from the defendants to dismiss the case, allowing it to proceed at that time.
In response to the dismissal, a group called Justice for Greenwood, which supports the lawsuit, issued a statement expressing disappointment and asserting that the decision essentially condemned the three remaining survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre to experience further delays in achieving justice.
The Tulsa Race Massacre commenced on May 31, 1921, after a Black man, accused of assaulting a white woman, was arrested and detained at the Tulsa County Courthouse. Fearing that the accused man would be lynched, a sizable group of armed Black men rushed to the courthouse to defend him. The situation escalated, resulting in tragic consequences. The lawsuit filed by survivors and descendants argues that by June 1, 1921, a large and enraged white mob, which included some members of the Tulsa Police Department, the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Department, and the National Guard, overran the 35-square-block Greenwood District. Their violent actions claimed the lives of hundreds of Black residents, injured thousands more, destroyed over a thousand homes and businesses, and resulted in the theft of residents’ personal belongings.
The lawsuit named seven defendants, including the city of Tulsa, current Tulsa County Sheriff Vic Regalado, and the Oklahoma Military Department. It relied on the state’s public nuisance law, asserting that city and county officials actively hindered the community’s efforts to rebuild after the massacre. The lawsuit further claimed that officials neglected the Greenwood District and the predominantly Black community of north Tulsa, demonstrating a preference for predominantly white areas of the city.
This ruling represents a significant setback for those seeking reparations and acknowledgment of the historical injustices inflicted upon the Black community in Tulsa. The decision reverberates within the ongoing discourse surrounding racial equity and the need to address historical atrocities in a comprehensive and just manner.
