Race massacre survivors make case to Okla. Supreme Court as Tulsans look on

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Attorneys for the last two survivors of the 1921 Race Massacre presented oral arguments Tuesday to the Oklahoma Supreme Court in hopes of getting their reparations case back to trial. Viola Fletcher and Lessie Benningfield Randle are the two remaining survivors. They’re both 109 years old. Their attorneys argued the massacre, that was aided and abetted by the government, created an ongoing public nuisance in the historic neighborhood of Greenwood that lasts to this day. Attorney Keith Wilkes, representing the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office, told the state’s highest court that Greenwood was rebuilt after the massacre, arguing the nuisance is no longer relevant. “For the men and women who survived and stayed, the end of the massacre was also the beginning of another story,” Wilkes said. Attorneys for the city of Tulsa, the state of Oklahoma and the Tulsa Regional Chamber of Commerce also argued they shouldn’t be held liable for the racist attack that historians say left as many as 300 dead. The proceedings were livestreamed online and Tulsa residents organized watch parties to mark the pivotal moment. Jerica Wortham helped organize one such watch party at the Black Wall Street Liquid Lounge coffee shop along Greenwood Avenue. She...

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