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Published: October 24, 2007
ATLANTA - Civil rights leaders called Tuesday for a march on the Justice Department and an economic boycott next month because they think the federal government has been sluggish in dealing with hate crimes.
They called for Americans not to spend any money Nov. 2 as an economic boycott of the federal government's handling of hate crimes.
They also announced initial plans for a Nov. 16 march on Justice Department headquarters in Washington.
The Rev. Al Sharpton, Martin Luther King III and other activists at a news conference outside the federal courthouse in Atlanta cited the uproar in Jena, La., surrounding three white teens accused of hanging nooses outside a school and the six black teens charged in the beating of a white student.
Five were initially charged with attempted murder, but that charge was reduced.
The civil rights leaders think the federal government should prosecute the noose hanging as a hate crime.
'A spokesman for the Justice Department said federal, state and local officials are aggressively investigating numerous noose hanging reports around the country.
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