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Emmett Till casket moved from Burr Oak

CHICAGO, July 14 (UPI) -- The casket of slain civil rights icon Emmett Till has been moved from Burr Oak Cemetery to a police building in Chicago for safe keeping, authorities said.

The glass-topped viewing casket was found rusting in a shed full of trash, housing possums, earlier this month. The cemetery has become a crime scene, with police alleging at least 300 bodies were dug up and discarded so grave sites could be resold.

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Till's body was exhumed in 2005 and reburied in Burr Oak in a different casket. The viewing casket was supposed to become part of a memorial to Till. An undetermined amount of money was raised for the memorial by Carolyn Towns, the Burr Oak manager now charged with re-selling grave sites, The Chicago Southtown Star reported Tuesday.

At the request of Till's family, the viewing casket has been moved to a police building on Chicago's South Side, sheriff's spokesman Steve Patterson said.

"It's a safe place to store it until we hear from the family -- ultimately it's up to them what they want to do with it," Patterson said.

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The 14-year-old Till was kidnapped from a cousin's home in Mississippi in 1955 and killed for allegedly whistling at a white woman. The two white men charged with his death were acquitted, sparking protests that became a catalyst for the civil rights movement.

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