Joseph Sullivan (FBI)

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Joseph Aloysius Sullivan (February 17, 1917 - August 2, 2002 was a Major Case Inspector for the FBI. He was involved in a number of highly publicized cases in the sixties and seventies including the Martin Luther King, Jr. assassination, the murder of United Mine Workers reformer Joseph "Jock" Yablonski, the Sterling Hall bombing at the University of Wisconsin, and the Kent State massacre. Despite his involvement in such high profile cases, Sullivan is best known for his relentless search to track down the killers of three civil rights workers, who were brutally slain in Mississippi in 1964. The character played by Gene Hackman in the movie Mississippi Burning is loosely based on Sullivan.

Upon Sullivan's passing in 2002, author Tom Clancy is quoted as referring to him as "the greatest lawman America ever produced." [1]

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