ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 2月9日 13時00分


No one would tell The Reverend Victor White how his youngest son died. Everyone seemed to know — but no one would tell him. When a detective from the Louisiana State Police spoke to him, she wouldn’t say much; she said his son was dead and his body transported to a hospital. That morning, during the 2-hour drive to New Iberia, where his son and his son’s infant daughter lived, Victor and his wife didn’t speak. At the morgue, he was allowed to view the corpse only from the neck up, but that was enough; he could see that his son had been beaten. New Iberia, a small city 100 miles west of New Orleans, is bisected by railroad tracks, where @ruddyroye made this #portrait of Victor for @nytmag. North of the tracks, most residents are white, and most believed that Victor White III committed suicide. In the largely black neighborhoods south of the tracks, most residents shared the Whites’ conviction that their son was executed by the cops. Visit the link in our profile to read Nathaniel Rich’s account of how a Baptist minister was pitted against the most powerful man in a small Louisiana city.


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