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Miss. judge upholds Kennard exoneration

CHICAGO, Aug. 24 (UPI) -- The Mississippi Supreme Court has rejected an appeal by a white supremacist group challenging the exoneration of a man wrongly imprisoned during the 1960s.

Former University of Chicago student Clyde Kennard was sentenced to seven years hard labor for stealing a bag of chicken feed in 1960, but he died in 1963 after developing cancer that went untreated while he was in prison.

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However, many critics have defended Kennard, stating he was framed for trying to integrate what is now the University of Southern Mississippi.

Two years ago, a Northwestern University professor and a group of high school history students began working to clear his name, the Chicago Tribune reported Friday.

In May 2006, a judge declared Kennard innocent, agreeing he was prosecuted because of his integration efforts.

Almost immediately, Richard Barrett, head of the segregationist Nationalist Movement in Learned, Miss., filed a motion to intervene to "redress an erroneous application of law."

However, the state's top court last week said Barrett, as a private citizen, had no standing to challenge the decision.

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