plagiarism

399 America Shocked

Plagiarism World - 390 Nine America Shocked

With a gunshot, he fell.

At that moment, he was alone on the balcony, thinking about problems in the breeze.He has faced the fear of death countless times, but this time, he knows that the god of death has caught him.

At 1968:4 p.m. on April 4, 7, after more than an hour of rescue by the doctor, the doctor officially announced that Martin Luther King Jr. died suddenly because the bullet exploded the aorta and severed the cervical spine.Martin Luther King Jr. was under 5 when he died.

Just an hour later, television screens around the world watched the police and FBI agents investigate. In the early morning of April 4, the FBI officially announced that it had grasped the clues to solve the case, and listed incriminating evidence.

The shots came from the Bessie Brewer's apartment building across from the Lorraine Hotel.The landlord, Mrs. Brewer, recalled that at 4:4 pm on April 3, a man registered for accommodation under the name of John Villard and asked to arrange a room facing the Lorraine Hotel.She rented room 15 at the back of the teen's apartment for a week's rent, but the man disappeared just after 6pm.

The owner of the Canip Fairgrounds, a few doors down the road from Brewer's apartment, testified that he walked out immediately after the shots were fired, just in time to see a man in dark clothing running south down the street and leaving the rental apartment. A bundle was dropped on the pavement ten kilometers away.After a while, the man drove a white "Mustang" car in the opposite direction.

FBI agents picked up a bag and found it contained a Remington Model 760 "Hunting Expert" rifle, a telescope and a blue zip-up handbag.The bag contained toiletries, a pair of underpants, two cans of beer, a paper bag marked York Gun Company, Memphis, Tennessee, and a York Gun Company sales receipt dated April 1968, 4.Jensen, director of the Memphis Bureau of the FBI, immediately sent a plane to send the bag to Washington for laboratory identification.

For unknown reasons, the FBI did not mention the suspicious "ambulance" and several medical staff provided by several personnel at the scene.

Keleta in Atlanta quickly learned of the news, when she was told that King had been assassinated, but that he did not know whether he was dead or alive.She realized that another critical moment in her life with Kim was approaching.She was unusually calm, comforting crying children.Many friends gathered around her.But she knew that at this last moment, she must rush to her husband.What will happen this time?Can he escape death this time?Her heart was gripped by waves of fear.

The terminal hall of the Atlanta airport was in a panic. From Keleta’s point of view, everything seemed like an unreal dream. Suddenly she heard her name being called from the loudspeaker, and Keletta’s scalp went numb. It's news from Memphis.After a while, King's secretary, Dora Macdonald, rushed towards her in a hurry. From the expression on her face, Keletta knew that King was dead.The Baptist pastor, the black civil rights leader known as "The Dreamer" with many dreams, was killed in Memphis just a few months after his 39th birthday. A small town full of sin.All unfulfilled dreams are broken in a pool of blood.The whole world was shocked and mourned.

Many of Jin's former friends and comrades, acquaintances and strangers, came to Mrs. Jin's wife, Keleta, and her four young children.For Keletta, who fought side by side with Kim in pursuit of freedom, the night of April 4 was full of nightmares.Her heart is broken.

King's father, Martin Luther King Jr., was in tears when he heard the terrible news.Hugged and cried with Kim's mother. "I always thought I was going first," he murmured.God did not hold Jin's hand, and the feeling of death that accompanied Jin for many years finally came true.He knew that someone had to die for freedom, and he wasn't the first.

U.S. President Johnson personally called Mrs. King: "I want to tell you that Mrs. Johnson and I are deeply saddened by what happened to you and your family. I am going to make a statement on television. Draft a building block at a time when the nation needs unity." Constructive, not destructive, program of action."

King's killing shook a nation, and Attorney General Robert Kennedy gave a keynote speech on the event: "On this difficult day, in this difficult time for America, ask what kind of a nation we are, and where we are headed. Where, perhaps it would be beneficial...or we could—as Martin Luther King Jr. did—understand each other, and work with the same love and compassion to replace the violence that has stained our land Bloodstained." He said to Mrs. Jin: "As long as I can do it, I can help you in any way."

Kim's death also shocked the international community. Many governments and progressive organizations sent messages of condolence to Kim's family, expressing deep sympathy for the loss of an important leader in the civil rights movement; reveal the truth.

In the far east, the "People's Daily" published the "Statement of Supporting the Struggle of Black Americans Against Violence" written by the great leader and written specifically for Kim's assassination.

In the 60s, it was rare for a person to be highly praised and recognized by the leaders of China and the United States at the same time.It seems that Pastor Kim's justice and nobility have reached the realm of divinity.

This is how the terrorists shattered King's great dream and the new hope of black Americans with a single criminal bullet.However, it also ignited the flare of the largest black riot in the entire United States.Large-scale riots broke out in 1 cities in the United States at the same time.Black residents poured into the streets, fearlessly protesting the murder of their beloved leader. 46 houses were burned, countless display windows were smashed, and hundreds of shops were destroyed.Barricades were erected at the intersection of Seventh and No. 547th Streets in Washington.Police, the National Guard and the military have all intervened to quell protests and demonstrations.

Americans have become accustomed to seeing the Vietnam War as a distant, very distant war, and only realized its existence through the TV screen.And now, suddenly, the war was all around us, in the next town, on the next block, even in the house next door.Explosions, flames, gunshots, death—in newspapers and magazines, these words are not associated with distant Hue, Saigon, etc., but suddenly and horribly associated with cities such as New York, Chicago, and Washington.

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