Watch key moments from Dee & Moore
Watch some of the key moments heard in the podcast, as well as the original full-length documentaries related to the Dee and Moore investigation.
Summer in Mississippi (1965)
Director and producer Beryl Fox travelled to Mississippi after the bodies of the three civil rights workers working for the Mississippi Summer Project were found in August 1964. Fox produced the documentary for CBC, where it first aired on the TV news magazine program This Hour Has Seven Days. David Ridgen was first inspired to investigate the Dee and Moore case further after watching Summer in Mississippi.
Return to Mississippi (2004)
David Ridgen's 2004 documentary about the Mississippi Burning case and attempts to reopen the case against the mastermind behind the murders, "The Preacher" Edgar Ray Killen.
Seale confrontation
*SPOILER WARNING: If you haven't heard Episode 3 yet, we suggest listening to it before watching this video.
Thomas confronts James Seale at his home in Roxie, Mississippi.
Edwards approach at home
*SPOILER WARNING: If you haven't heard Episode 4 yet, we suggest listening to it before watching this video.
David confronts Charles Edwards at his home on Bunkley Rd.
Edwards approach at church
*SPOILER WARNING: If you haven't heard Episode 4 yet, we suggest listening to it before watching this video.
Thomas and David confront Charles Edwards at the Bunkley Baptist Church, handing him redacted FBI documents that detail the extent of evidence against the Klan.
Reconciliation in Mississippi (2011)
David Ridgen's 2011 film, Reconciliation in Mississippi, breaks incredible new ground in both spurring and documenting a process of reconciliation between Thomas Moore and Charles Edwards, a Ku Klux Klansman that was involved in the kidnapping and beating of Thomas's brother Charles and his friend Henry Dee in 1964.