George Stinney Jr
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George Stinney Jr
It took 10 minutes to convict 14-year-old George Stinney Jr. It took 70 years after his execution to exonerate him
https://www.postandcourier.com/news/spe ... 5ba1c.html
https://calendar.eji.org/racial-injustice/jun/16
On June 16, 1944, George Stinney Jr., a ninety-pound, Black, fourteen-year-old boy, was executed in the electric chair in Columbia, South Carolina. Three months earlier, on March 24, George and his sister were playing in their yard when two young white girls briefly approached and asked where they could find flowers. Hours later, the girls failed to return home and a search party was organized to find them. George joined the search party and casually mentioned to a bystander that he had seen the girls earlier. The following morning, their dead bodies were found in a shallow ditch.
George was immediately arrested for the murders and subjected to hours of interrogation without his parents or an attorney. The sheriff later claimed that George confessed to the murders, though no written or signed statement was presented. George's father was fired from his job and his family forced to flee amidst threats on their lives. On March 26, a mob attempted to lynch George but he had already been moved to an out-of-town jail.
On April 24, George Stinney faced a sham trial virtually alone. No African Americans were allowed inside the courthouse and his court-appointed attorney, a tax lawyer with political aspirations, failed to call a single witness. The prosecution presented the sheriff's testimony regarding George's alleged confession as the only evidence of his guilt. An all-white jury deliberated for ten minutes before convicting George Stinney of rape and murder, and the judge promptly sentenced the fourteen-year-old to death. Despite appeals from Black advocacy groups, Governor Olin Johnston refused to intervene. George Stinney remains the youngest person executed in the United States in the twentieth century.
Seventy years later, a South Carolina judge held a two-day hearing, which included testimony from three of George’s surviving siblings, members of the search party, and several experts. The state argued at the hearing that -- despite all the unfairness in this case -- George’s conviction should stand. The trial court disagreed and vacated the conviction, finding that George Stinney was fundamentally deprived of due process throughout the proceedings against him, that the alleged confession “simply cannot be said to be known and voluntary,” that the court-appointed attorney “did little to nothing” to defend George, and that his representation was “the essence of being ineffective.” The judge concluded: “I can think of no greater injustice.” Learn more here.
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Re: George Stinney Jr
Horrific
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Re: George Stinney Jr
Yeah, our history on civil rights sucks balls
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Re: George Stinney Jr
I have never understood these kind of cases. Wouldn't the people rather know who actually committed the murder? I mean, even if they hated blacks so much that they wanted to kill one, that doesn't change the fact that there was still someone in the town that killed two girls.
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Re: George Stinney Jr
Its possible that Stinney was still the murderer. The court threw the conviction out on due process grounds, and rightfully soBigRedRetard wrote: ↑Wed Oct 21, 2020 2:45 pmI certainly would like to know who the real murder was.Flumper wrote: ↑Wed Oct 21, 2020 2:43 pm I have never understood these kind of cases. Wouldn't the people rather know who actually committed the murder? I mean, even if they hated blacks so much that they wanted to kill one, that doesn't change the fact that there was still someone in the town that killed two girls.
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Re: George Stinney Jr
Unfortunately true....however that was about the time that the conservative deep south Democrats would soon start to morph over to what would be the Republican party over distaste for the civil rights agenda of FDR and the newer more liberal democratic party.
"keep the Negro down and the price of cotton up"......
The Governor of the time was actually not as conservative as his southern counterparts but when it came to race he was opposed to any civil rights legislation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olin_D._Johnston
ohnston was not as conservative as most other Senators from the Deep South, retaining a populist position on many economic issues. In the Senate, Johnston was a staunch advocate of public power,[2] parity programs for farmers,[2] a broad strong social security program,[2] and the provision of lunches to needy school children.[2] He also generally opposed foreign aid, viewing it as support of foreign interests at the expense of American industry and consumers.[2] Unlike most Southern Democrats, Johnston opposed the anti-union Taft-Hartley labor law in 1947 and he voted for both the War on Poverty in 1964 and for Medicare shortly before his death in 1965. However, like virtually all other politicians from the Deep South during this period, Johnston was regionally orthodox on the "race question", opposing all civil rights legislation and signing the 1956 Southern Manifesto that opposed the desegregation of public schools ordered by the Supreme Court in Brown v. Board of Education.
He also denied clemency to George Stinney, a 14 year-old African American boy who was sentenced to execution by the electric chair in 1944.[12] Stinney had been wrongfully convicted for the murder of two girls aged 7 and 11 in his hometown of Alcolu, South Carolina. Johnston wrote in a response to one appeal for clemency that
It may be interesting for you to know that Stinney killed the smaller girl to rape the larger one. Then he killed the larger girl and raped her dead body. Twenty minutes later he returned and attempted to rape her again, but her body was too cold. All of this he admitted himself.
It is reported that these statements were merely rumours, and were contradicted at the time by the medical examination report on the girl's body.[13]
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Re: George Stinney Jr
BigRedRetard wrote: ↑Wed Oct 21, 2020 2:45 pmI certainly would like to know who the real murder was.Flumper wrote: ↑Wed Oct 21, 2020 2:43 pm I have never understood these kind of cases. Wouldn't the people rather know who actually committed the murder? I mean, even if they hated blacks so much that they wanted to kill one, that doesn't change the fact that there was still someone in the town that killed two girls.
One version of the story, the one George would soon die for, said he followed the girls and single-handedly bludgeoned them both to death with a railroad spike.
Another version, still whispered through Alcolu today, said the girls also stopped at the home of a prominent white family to see if the sweet wife of a lumber mill boss could join them. She begged off. Her son, however, drove up in his logging truck. He offered to take the girls to find their maypops while he unloaded.
They jumped in.
https://www.postandcourier.com/news/spe ... 5ba1c.html
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Re: George Stinney Jr
BigRedRetard wrote: ↑Wed Oct 21, 2020 2:57 pmYou realize there would not have been a Civil Rights Act without Republicans, right?Stapes wrote: ↑Wed Oct 21, 2020 2:55 pmUnfortunately true....however that was about the time that the conservative deep south Democrats would soon start to morph over to what would be the Republican party over distaste for the civil rights agenda of FDR and the newer more liberal democratic party.
"keep the Negro down and the price of cotton up"......
The Governor of the time was actually not as conservative as his southern counterparts but when it came to race he was opposed to any civil rights legislation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olin_D._Johnston
ohnston was not as conservative as most other Senators from the Deep South, retaining a populist position on many economic issues. In the Senate, Johnston was a staunch advocate of public power,[2] parity programs for farmers,[2] a broad strong social security program,[2] and the provision of lunches to needy school children.[2] He also generally opposed foreign aid, viewing it as support of foreign interests at the expense of American industry and consumers.[2] Unlike most Southern Democrats, Johnston opposed the anti-union Taft-Hartley labor law in 1947 and he voted for both the War on Poverty in 1964 and for Medicare shortly before his death in 1965. However, like virtually all other politicians from the Deep South during this period, Johnston was regionally orthodox on the "race question", opposing all civil rights legislation and signing the 1956 Southern Manifesto that opposed the desegregation of public schools ordered by the Supreme Court in Brown v. Board of Education.
He also denied clemency to George Stinney, a 14 year-old African American boy who was sentenced to execution by the electric chair in 1944.[12] Stinney had been wrongfully convicted for the murder of two girls aged 7 and 11 in his hometown of Alcolu, South Carolina. Johnston wrote in a response to one appeal for clemency that
It may be interesting for you to know that Stinney killed the smaller girl to rape the larger one. Then he killed the larger girl and raped her dead body. Twenty minutes later he returned and attempted to rape her again, but her body was too cold. All of this he admitted himself.
It is reported that these statements were merely rumours, and were contradicted at the time by the medical examination report on the girl's body.[13]
Quite true. The southern "Dixiecrats" were vehemently opposed and it took the help of Republican Senators to get it passed.
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Re: George Stinney Jr
Trivia factoid: The story of George Stinney Jr is where author Stephen King got the idea for his novel "The Green Mile".