Ward and Anderson-experience of racism
The two contrasting FBI agents Ward and Anderson keep trying to understand each other while conducting their investigation of the three missing civil rights workers. Ward is an idealist, whereas Anderson is realist. He has seen racism and the corrosive effect it has on both black and white people. He tells Ward the story of his father who poisoned the mule of a black farmer who was prospering.
Anderson states that his father ashamed of what he done. He was unable to separate poverty from his own racism. Anderson is a Southerner who knows the mentality of Southern racists, as he has lived amongst them.