In January 1957, Henry Alexander offered an innocent black man, Willie Edwards, a terrible choice while he looked down the barrel of a gun.  Either run or jump from a bridge north of Montgomery, Alabama.  He leapt into the Alabama River 50 feet below.  Some fishermen found his body  three months later. 

Edwards’ wife, Sarah, was left with two children.  She was pregnant with another.  They never knew what happened to their father.

Before Diane Alexander’s husband died, he gave her his guilt.  Clippings from his Ku Klux Klan days.  The pattern for his hood.  His pistol.  A whip.  And a stunning confession.  

“He said, ‘My problem is Willie Edwards.  I caused (his death.)”