A 14-year-old black boy executed nearly 70 years ago is finally getting another day in court, and his lawyers plan to argue Tuesday for a new trial, saying his conviction was tainted by the segregationist-era justice system and scant evidence.
George Stinney
was found guilty in 1944 of killing two white girls, ages 7 and 11. The
trial lasted less than a day in the tiny Southern mill town of Alcolu,
separated, as most were in those days, by race.
Nearly
all the evidence, including a confession that was central to the case
against Stinney, has disappeared, along with the transcript of the
trial. Lawyers working on behalf of Stinney's family have gathered new
evidence, including sworn statements from his relatives accounting for
his whereabouts the day the girls were killed and from a pathologist
disputing the autopsy findings.
The
novel decision of whether to give someone executed a new trial will be
in the hands of Circuit Judge Carmen Mullen. Experts say it is a
longshot. South Carolina law has a high bar to grant new trials. Also,
the legal system in the state before segregation often found defendants
guilty with evidence that would be considered scant today. If Mullen
finds in favor of Stinney, it could open the door for hundreds of other
appeals.
But the Stinney case is unique.
At 14, he's the youngest person executed in the United States in the
past 100 years. Even in 1944, there was an outcry over putting someone
so young in the electric chair. Newspaper accounts said the straps in
the chair didn't fit around his 95-pound body and an electrode was too
big for his leg.
Stinney's
supporters said racism, common in the Jim Crow era South, meant deputies
in Clarendon County did little investigation after they decided Stinney
was the prime suspect. They said he was pulled from his parents and
interrogated without a lawyer.
School
board member George Frierson heard stories about Stinney growing up in
the same mill town he did, and he has spent a decade fighting to get him
exonerated. He swallowed hard as he said he hardly slept Monday night.
"Somebody that didn't kill someone is finally getting his day in court," Frierson said.
In
1944, Stinney was likely the only black in the courtroom. On Tuesday,
the prosecutor arguing against him will be Ernest "Chip" Finney III, the
son of South Carolina's first black chief justice. Finney argued
Tuesday there shouldn't be a new trial because the evidence was lost
with the passage of time, not destroyed.
"Back in 1944, we should have known better, but we didn't," Finney said.
Finney has said he will conduct
an investigation if a new trial is granted, but what that might find is
not known. South Carolina did not have a statewide law enforcement unit
to help smaller jurisdictions until 1947. Newspaper stories about
Stinney's trial offer little clue whether any evidence was introduced
beyond the teen's confession and an autopsy report. Some people around
Alcolu said bloody clothes were taken from Stinney's home, but never
introduced at trial because of his confession. No record of those
clothes exists.
Relatives of
one of the girls killed, 11-year-old Betty Binnicker, have recently
spoke out as well, saying Stinney was known around town as a bully who
threatened to fight or kill people who came too close to the grass where
he grazed the family cow.
It
isn't known if the judge will rule Tuesday, or take time to come to her
decision. Stinney's supporters said if the motion for a new trial fails,
they will ask the state to pardon him.
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