Snowden was born in
Lauderdale County,
Mississippi, as the second youngest child to William D. Snowden and Essie A. Snowden. He had two sisters, Myrtle E. Snowden and Mary H. Snowden and two brothers William E. Snowden and John C. Snowden. At the time of the murders, aged 31, Snowden lived in
Meridian, where he worked for Meridian Laundry.[2]
Crime
Klansman James Jordan testified Snowden was among the men who gathered at Akin’s Mobile Homes in
Meridian, Mississippi to meet
Edgar Ray Killen, who had instructed them about the three civil rights workers in jail in Philadelphia and needed to hurry before they were released. Klansman Horace Doyle Barnette said Snowden traveled with him to Philadelphia, where Killen showed the jail where the trio were being held and instructed them on where they should wait behind an old warehouse. After the three civil rights workers were released from jail at 10 p.m., the Klansmen pursued them in a high-speed chase. The trio pulled the station wagon over, and
Sheriff's DeputyCecil Price ordered them into his patrol car. Barnette identified Snowden as the one who then drove the station wagon to a remote road, where the trio were executed. Jordan identified Snowden as one of those present at the murder scene. Barnette said Snowden rode with him in his car to the dam, where the bodies were buried. Snowden was still with them at about 2 a.m. when fellow Klansman and alleged co-conspirator
Lawrence A. Rainey, who was
Sheriff of
Neshoba County at the time, warned the others not to talk. Barnette said he drove back to Meridian and dropped Snowden off at Akin’s Mobile Homes.[3]
Conviction
Snowden was indicted on February 28, 1967. He was later convicted of violating the civil rights of
James Chaney,
Andrew Goodman and
Michael Schwerner on October 20, 1967.[6] On December 29, 1967, Judge
William Harold Cox sentenced Snowden to three years in federal prison.[7][8][9][10] However, only two of the three years were spent with Snowden behind bars: he was at
FCI Texarkana until December 1971[11] and then transferred to
FCI Lompoc until his release on 29 August, 1972.[12] Snowden was reportedly "roughed up" in prison by black inmates.[10]
Personal life
Snowden was a
truck driver.[8][9][10] In fact, when he was released from prison, Snowden returned to trucking jobs in Meridian.[10] Snowden resided in
Hickory, Mississippi, during the last years of his life.[3][8][9] Snowden was married to Mary Joyce Green (1936-2013).[13] They had one son, Davie Snowden (b. 1963) and two daughters, Vicky L Snowden and Brenda Faye Snowden.[14] Davie Snowden was arrested for shoplifting in July 2013.[15] Snowden's grandson, Thomas Davie Snowden (b. 1991) was arrested October 2012 in
Mobile,
Alabama, as a fugitive.[16]
While reporting about the death of fellow trial defendant
Olen Lovell Burrage on March 18, 2013, New York Times journalist Douglas Martin claimed that James T. Harris was the only surviving defendant who was tried for the murders,[17] thus implying that Snowden had died by this point in time.