Emmett Louis Till was a 14-year-old African-American who was lynched in Mississippi in 1955, after being accused of offending a White woman in her family’s grocery store. Photo: MGN Online

JACKSON, Miss.—A team searching a Mississippi courthouse basement for evidence about the lynching of Black youth Emmett Till, has found the unserved warrant charging a White woman in his 1955 kidnapping, and relatives of the victim want authorities to finally arrest her nearly 70 years later.

A warrant for the arrest of Carolyn Bryant Donham—identified as “Mrs. Roy Bryant” on the document—was discovered by searchers inside a file folder that had been placed in a box, Leflore County Circuit Clerk Elmus Stockstill told The Associated Press on June 29.

Deborah Watts, of Minneapolis, speaks on Aug. 27, 2015, in Jackson, Miss., about the slaying of her cousin, Emmett Till. Evidence about the lynching of Black teenager Emmett Till found the unserved warrant in June, charging a White woman in his kidnapping in 1955, and relatives of the victim want authorities to finally arrest her nearly 70 years later. Photo: Rogelio V. Solis, File/AP

Documents are kept inside boxes by decade, he said, but there was nothing else to indicate where the warrant, dated Aug. 29, 1955, might have been.

“They narrowed it down between the ‘50s and ’60s and got lucky,” said Mr. Stockstill, who certified the warrant as genuine.

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The search group included members of the Emmett Till Legacy Foundation and two Till relatives: cousin Deborah Watts, head of the foundation; and her daughter, Teri Watts. Relatives want authorities to use the warrant to arrest Ms. Donham, who at the time of the slaying was married to one of two White men tried and acquitted just weeks after Emmett Till was abducted from a relative’s home, killed and dumped into a river.

“Serve it and charge her,” Teri Watts told the AP in an interview.

Keith Beauchamp, whose documentary film “The Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till,” preceded a renewed Justice Department probe that ended without charges in 2007, was also part of the search. He said there’s enough new evidence to prosecute Ms. Donham.

Donham set off the case in August 1955 by accusing the 14-year-old Till of making improper advances at a family store in Money, Mississippi. A cousin of Till who was there has said Till whistled at the woman, an act that flew in the face of Mississippi’s racist social codes of the era.

In this 1955 file photo, Carolyn Bryant poses for a photo. Carolyn Donham, known as Carolyn Bryant, who was at the center of the trial of Emmett Till’s alleged killers, has acknowledged that she falsely testified he made physical and verbal threats, according to a new book. Till was a 14-year-old Black tortured and killed in 1955 in Mississippi after allegedly whistling at a White woman, then known as Carolyn Bryant. Photo: Gene Herrick, File/AP

Evidence indicates a woman, possibly Ms. Donham, identified Till to the men who later killed him. The arrest warrant against Donham was publicized at the time, but the Leflore County sheriff told reporters he did not want to “bother” the woman since she had two young children to care for.

Now in her 80s and most recently living in North Carolina, Ms. Donham has not commented publicly on calls for her prosecution. But Teri Watts said the Till family believes the warrant accusing Donham of kidnapping amounts to new evidence.

“This is what the state of Mississippi needs to go ahead,” she said.

District Attorney Dewayne Richardson, whose office would prosecute a case, declined comment on the warrant but cited a December report about the Till case from the Justice Department, which said no prosecution was possible.

Emmett Till, who was from Chicago, was visiting relatives in Mississippi when he entered the store where Donham, then 21, was working on Aug. 24, 1955. A Till relative who was there, Wheeler Parker, told AP that Till whistled at the woman. Donham testified in court that Till also grabbed her and made a lewd comment.

Two nights later, Donham’s then-husband, Roy Bryant, and his half-brother, J.W. Milam, showed up armed at the rural Leflore County home of Till’s great-uncle, Mose Wright, looking for the youth. Emmett Till’s brutalized body, weighed down by a fan, was pulled from a river days later in another county. His mother’s decision to open the casket so mourners in Chicago could see what had happened helped galvanize the building civil rights movement of the time.

Bryant and Milam were acquitted of murder but later admitted the killing in a magazine interview. While both men were named in the same warrant that accused Donham of kidnapping, authorities did not pursue the case following their acquittal.  (AP)