The Department of Justice on Friday said there is no evidence of foul play in the death of a black man found hanging from a tree in Mississippi in March.
The discovery of the body of Otis James Byrd, 54, in rural Claiborne County evoked old images of Mississippi's history of race-based violence and prompted local authorities to call in the FBI.
"After a careful and thorough review, a team of experienced federal prosecutors and FBI agents determined that there was no evidence to prove that Byrd's death was a homicide," the Department of Justice said in a statement Friday that also announced its investigation is closed.
Byrd went missing on March 2, and local officials began searching for him a few days later. His body was found hanging from a tree about a half-mile from his home on March 19.
"It was ruled a suicide and we've accepted what they said, and we are on our own and asking God to strengthen us and lead us in the direction we should go," a relative of Byrd's, Florence Byrd, told NBC affiliate WLBT Friday. "That's that. Maybe suicide, we don't know."