News
Best of 2020: Philadelphia's deadly MOVE bombing and me Our 2020 retrospective continues with this essay by a child of MOVE activists about why apologies aren't enough ...
The partial remains of victims of a 1985 bombing that were thought to have been improperly cremated and destroyed have been found, Philadelphia’s mayor said.
On May 13, 1985, the Philadelphia Police Department dropped a bomb on the home of a group of African-American activists who were disrupting a neighborhood, killing 11 people.
A dark period in Philadelphia is the inspiration of an opera being screened for free during the O18 opera festival in the City of Brotherly Love.
Credit: Max Mester After a yearlong investigation on the handling of the remains of the 1985 MOVE Bombing victims, investigators remain unable to explain how a box of victims’ remains managed to lay ...
The book reveals the untold stories of the bombing of Philadelphia's residential Cobbs Creek neighborhood, which housed Black-led civil liberties organization MOVE.
The brother of two of the victims in the 1985 MOVE bombing has filed a lawsuit against the city of Philadelphia and UPenn.
The brother of two Black teenagers killed in Philadelphia’s 1985 MOVE bombings is suing the city and the trustees of the University of Pennsylvania, claiming his sisters’ remains were ...
Hosted on MSN2mon
40 Years After the MOVE Bombing, the Scars Remain - MSNActivism / StudentNation / Mike Africa Jr. was only 6 years old when Philadelphia police dropped a bomb on 6221 Osage Avenue. But he remembers everything. Hannah Epstein This story was produced ...
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Additional human remains from a 1985 police bombing on the headquarters of a Black liberation group in Philadelphia have been found at the University of Pennsylvania.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results