CHAPTER 35
THEN EASTER COMES
555 Coretta Scott King wore a bittersweet smile: My account of the April 8 march in Memphis is adapted primarily from page-one articles in the
556 'The people were kind': Dexter Scott King,
557 'We gave Dr. King what he came here for':
558 'Each of you is on trial today': Flyer prepared by Lawson, quoted in Honey,
559 'once you reach Main Street': Ibid., p. 478.
560 'the spilling of one man's blood': Abernathy,
561 'I guess it was my mother':
562 Now the agents pulled their bureau sedan: This passage about the FBI's initial investigations at the New Rebel Motel is based largely on my own interview with the former FBI agent Stephen Darlington, May 15, 2009. I also relied on FD-302 reports of the interview Agents Darlington and Bauer conducted at the New Rebel on April 8, 1968, Hughes Collection.
563 made his way down to the offices: My depiction of Galt's efforts to gather aliases in the reading room of the
564 'I'd read somewhere': Ray,
565 'Teenagers are adopting': Royal Canadian Mounted Police Files, a compendium of police investigations into Galt's movements while in Toronto, Hughes Collection.
566 brief expeditionary detour: See Posner,
567 'Until we have justice':
568 'Mayor Loeb will somehow be dragged': Reuther, quoted in Beifuss,
569 'It's not the quantity': The entire text of Coretta Scott King's speech in Memphis is reprinted in her memoir,
570 'If Mrs. King had cried': Honey,
571 'When Good Friday': Coretta Scott King,
572 Neil Shanahan and William Saucier: This passage is drawn from the FD-302 report of the April 8, 1968, interview that Shanahan and Saucier conducted with the rooming house proprietor, Peter Cherpes, Hughes Collection.
CHAPTER 36
THE MAN FURTHEST DOWN
573 For three and a half miles: My depiction of King's funeral in Atlanta is drawn primarily from newspaper coverage in the
574 had suggested that King arranged: See Risen,
575 'leaning toward each other':
576 'There was a powerful mood': Ibid.
577 'I believed in your father': A letter I viewed in January 2009 from a collection of correspondence on exhibit at the King National Historic Site in Atlanta.
578 'if they catch the guy': Ibid.
579 'There were many fingers':
580 Galt was in his room on Ossington Avenue: My account of what Galt did in his room on April 9 is primarily drawn from newspaper and magazine interviews with the landlady, Mrs. Feliksa Szpakowski. See especially O'Neil, 'Ray, Sirhan--What Possessed Them?'
581 nightclub called the Silver Dollar: Ibid.
582 'time to play detective': Ray,
583 'Yes, hello': My account of the telephone conversation between Ray and Bridgman is derived both from Ray's own recollection in his memoirs and from Toronto police interviews with Bridgman in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Files, Hughes Collection.
584 Paisley's place of work: This passage is drawn primarily from the FD- 302 report of the interview that Shanahan and Barrett conducted with Paisley on April 9, 1968.
585 'If you are going to do something illegal': James Earl Ray statement to investigators, House Select Committee on Assassinations,
586 'I make bold to assert': King eulogy by Benjamin Mays, quoted in the