SELMA, Ala. (AP) — Someone broke into the National Voting Rights Museum and destroyed more than 30 photographs of the 1965 Bloody Sunday clash.

It was second break-in in less than two weeks at the museum, which President Clinton visited earlier this year to mark the 35th anniversary of the landmark civil rights confrontation.

Police Chief E.L. Tate discounted the possibility that the vandalism was racially motivated and said he suspects juveniles in both cases.

"We'll have something in a few days," he said Friday. "We've got a good lead."

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Thirty to 40 photographs were ripped up late Wednesday or early Thursday, museum administrator Felicia Pettway said.

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