When the South lost to the Norht during the Civil War, lynching became a popular form of execution. The Ku Klux Klan and Knights of the White Camelia increased their number of followers after the South lost. The white supremacists were disgusted with the idea of having their former slaves walk free next to them; as a …show more content…
There were ventures to try and stop lynchings, but rarely did those “attempts” actually succeed ("The Negro Holocaust: Lynching and Race Riots in the U.S."79.02.04: The Negro Holocaust: Lynching and Race Riots in the United States,1880-1950. N.p., n.d. Web. 22 Jan. 2017). Lynchers were also rarely ever punished for their heinous acts. If they were “punished”, then it would result in them getting pardon from the judge, prosecutors,and jurors. A prime example of this would be Emmett Till’s killers. They were deemed as not guilty despite admitting to the killing of Bobo. Southern policemen barely protected African Americans against these hate crimes, and they would even support lynching events. Arthur Raper, an American Sociologist, noted that one-half of the lynchings were executed with policemen partaking in it. Nine-tenths of lynchings were also given the thumbs-up by police authority too. Whenever and wherever a lynching took place, it was noticeable that the ascendancy of the mob was too great for the police to overcome. Around the 1940s local police and the National Guard came to the resuce of blacks in the South. New rules were set out to put an end to lynching once and for