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Revision as of 21:59, 22 November 2006 by 71.247.97.151 (talk) (→History)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)The case of the Scottsboro Boys arose in Scottsboro, Alabama during the 1930s, when nine black youths ranging in age from thirteen to nineteen, were accused of raping two white women, one of whom would later recant. The trials (around the Great Depression time), in which the boys were convicted and sentenced to death by all-white juries despite the weak and contradictory testimonies of the witnesses, are regarded as one of the many travesties of the United States justice system. The case quickly became an international cause célebre and the boys were represented by the Communist Party's legal defense organization. The death sentences, originally scheduled to be carried out quickly, were postponed pending appeals that took the case all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, where the sentences were overturned. Despite the fact that one of the women later denied being raped, the retrials resulted in convictions. All of the defendants were eventually acquitted, paroled, or pardoned (besides one who simply escaped), some after serving years in prison. The Scottsboro case later inspired Harper Lee's famous work, To Kill a Mockingbird.
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In July, 1937, Clarence Norris was convicted of rape and sexual assault and sentenced to death, Andy Wright was convicted of rape and sentenced to 99 years(Life sentence), and Charlie Weems was convicted and sentenced to 75 years in prison. Ozie Powell pleaded guilty to assaulting the sheriff and was sentenced to 20 years. Four of the boys were released after all charges against them were dropped: Roy Wright and Eugene Williams who had been twelve and thirteen at the time of the alleged crime; Olen Montgomery, who was nearly blind and had been found alone in a car at the end of the train; and Willie Roberson, who when accused was suffering from a severe venereal disease that would have made sex extremely painful.
Later, Governor of Alabama Bibb Graves reduced Clarence Norris' death sentence to life in prison. Norris was later pardoned by Governor George Wallace. All of the Scottsboro Boys were eventually paroled, freed or pardoned, except for Haywood Patterson, who had been tried and convicted of rape and given the death penalty four times. He escaped north to Detroit, Michigan. When he was arrested more than 20 years later by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the 1950s, Governor of Michigan G. Mennen Williams would not allow him to be extradited back to Alabama.
In 1976, NBC aired a tv movie called "Judge Horton and the Scottsboro Boys," apparently under the impression that Victoria Price was no longer living. Price emerged to file a defamation and invasion of privacy suit against the network. The case was dismissed. Price died in 1982.
After escaping from prison, Haywood Patterson wrote a book about his experiences, Scottsboro Boys.
The Scottsboro boys
- Olen Montgomery
- Clarence Norris
- Haywood Patterson
- Ozie Powell
- Willie Roberson
- Charles Weems
- Eugene Williams
- Andrew Wright
- Leroy "Beefy" Wright
See also
External links
- Biographies of Key Figures in "The Scottsboro Boys" Trials
- Bienen, Leigh & Gilbert Geis. Crimes of the Century: From Leopold and Loeb to O. J. Simpson. Boston: Northeastern Univ. Press, 1998.