NORFOLK, Va. -- The mystery of whether Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam was in the racist yearbook photo nearly destroying his career remains unsolved.
A months-long investigation ordered up by Eastern Virginia Medical School failed to determine whether Northam is in the picture published in 1984 of a man in blackface standing next to someone in a Ku Klux Klan hood and robe.
Investigators with a law firm hired by the school said Wednesday they couldn't conclusively establish the identities of either person in the 35-year-old photo on Northam's yearbook page alongside pictures of him.
They also said they couldn't determine how the photo ended up on Northam's page but found no evidence it was put there by mistake or as a prank.
When the picture came to light in February, the Democrat initially acknowledged he was in it and apologized without saying which costume he was in, then reversed course the next day, saying he was not in the photo. But he acknowledged he once wore blackface decades ago to look like Michael Jackson for a dance contest.
"No individual that we interviewed has told us from personal knowledge that the governor is in the photograph, and no individual with knowledge has come forward to us to report that the governor is in the photograph," said law firm McGuireWoods said.
In a statement Wednesday, Northam, a 59-year-old pediatric neurologist who went into politics late in life, repeated he is not in the photo and apologized again to the people of Virginia, admitting his handling of the episode "deepened pain and confusion."
The findings are unlikely to have a major effect on state politics or Northam, who managed to survive the furor and has been trying mightily since then to make amends with black leaders. They have shown a willingness to let it go.
Del. Lamont Bagby, chairman of the Virginia Legislature's black caucus, said the inconclusive report "doesn't change a thing as it relates to the challenges that we have to do," adding: "We've got 400 years of stuff to clean up."
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