Whether the results of this trial will lead to other prosecutions in the case remains to be seen. As I opined earlier, this was probably the prosecution's best case against the remaining living suspects. And they did not get the conspiracy murder charge that they ulitmately wanted.
If there is not enough evidence to get an indictment against the others, then this may very well be the end of the matter. That would be a shame, IMO, but it may be the reality of the state of the evidence after 40 years.
Chaney's family may be going off on a tangent, eluding to social issues unrelated to the murder charges. However, please remember that this is a family that has lived with this injustice for over 40 years. The fact that one of them has not taken the law into their own hands and whacked one or more of the perpetrators demonstrates the level of fear that existed in the 60s and early 70s, and shows a level of restraint that I admittedly probably would not have been able to do had I been in the same situation.
He and his family, IMO, deserve to be cut a little slack in this situation for not resorting to violence.
Hell, if I had been born black and lived as an adult through the 60s in Mississippi, I probably would have been a militant member of the "black panthers", with Malcolm X as my mentor. Those klansmen would have been in the crosshairs of my rifle scope.
