OCOEE, Fla. – Ocoee city leaders signed an apology letter Wednesday more than 100 years after Black people were killed in the Ocoee Massacre fighting for their right to vote.The city’s mayor and other city leaders acknowledged and recognized the tragic day which happened in on Election Day in 1920, when dozens of Black men were killed by a white mob after Moses Norman tried to legally cast his ballot in the city.It’s still unclear just how many Black men were killed in total, with reports as high as 60 men, when they tried to exercise their right to vote.“My theory is it’s something that should have never happened.