At one minute past six on the evening of 4 April 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. stepped out onto the balcony of room 306 at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. He had come to the city to support striking Black sanitation workers, and the night before had delivered, as if in premonition, his haunting 'I've Been to the Mountaintop' speech. Now, standing at the railing chatting with colleagues in the parking lot below, he was struck in the face by a single high-powered rifle bullet fired from a rooming house across the street. He fell mortally wounded and was pronounced dead an hour later. He was thirty-nine years old, and with his death the United States lost the most eloquent, disciplined, and morally commanding leader its long struggle for racial justice had produced. A petty criminal and escaped convict named James Earl Ray was identified as the assassin, captured after a two-month international manhunt, and convicted on his own guilty plea. Yet within days Ray recanted, insisting he had been a pawn in a larger plot; he spent the rest of his life seeking the trial he never got; and King's own widow and children came to believe he was not the lone gunman — or not the gunman at all. Set against the documented fact that the FBI had waged a vicious secret campaign to destroy King, the questions have proved impossible to lay fully to rest. This is the story of the assassination at the Lorraine Motel, and of the doubts that outlived the man convicted of it.
State & Intelligence Operations
1968