Robert Edward Chambliss Explained

Robert Edward Chambliss
Birth Date:14 January 1904
Birth Place:Pratt City, Alabama, U.S.
Death Place:Birmingham, Alabama, U.S.
Resting Place:Elmwood Cemetery (Birmingham, Alabama)
Nationality:American
Other Names:"Dynamite Bob"
Known For:Participant in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing
Penalty:Life imprisonment
Motive:White supremacy
Conviction:First degree murder
Criminal Status:Deceased

Robert Edward Chambliss (January 14, 1904 – October 29, 1985), also known as Dynamite Bob, was a white supremacist terrorist convicted in 1977 of murder for his role as conspirator in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in 1963. A member of the United Klans of America, Chambliss also firebombed the houses of several African American families in Alabama.

Investigation and conviction

A May 13, 1965 memo to Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) director J. Edgar Hoover identified Chambliss, Bobby Frank Cherry, Herman Frank Cash and Thomas Edwin Blanton Jr. as suspects in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing that killed four young African-American girls.[1]

The investigation was originally closed in 1968; no charges were filed. Years later it was found that the FBI had accumulated evidence against the named suspects that had not been revealed to the prosecutors by order of J. Edgar Hoover. Edgar Hoover stopped and shut down the investigation in 1968. The files were used by Alabama attorney general Bill Baxley to reopen the case in 1971. In 1977, Chambliss was convicted of first degree murder for the bombing in the death of Carol Denise McNair. He was sentenced to life imprisonment. Chambliss died in Lloyd Noland Hospital and Health Center in Birmingham on October 29, 1985,[2] still proclaiming his innocence. He was 81.[3]

Chambliss served his sentence in a prison near Montgomery, Alabama.[4]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: Clary. Mike. Birmingham's Painful Past Reopened. 21 June 2014. Los Angeles Times. 14 April 2001.
  2. News: Robert E. Chambliss, Figure in '63 Bombing. 21 June 2014. The New York Times. 30 October 1985.
  3. Web site: Chambliss v. State . 2023-08-15 . Justia Law . en.
  4. News: Raines. Howell. Alabama Presses the Klan to Answer for Its Most Heinous Bombing. 21 June 2014. The New York Times. 20 May 2000.