Friday, December 19, 2014

Judge finally tossed out homicide conviction of a 14yr old boy executed in South Carolina in 1944

70 years after 14 year old George Stinney Jnr. was executed for supposedly beating two youthful white young ladies to death in Alcolu, South Carolina, a judge yesterday Wednesday Dec seventeenth tossed out his homicide conviction.
30485 Judge finally tossed out homicide conviction of a 14yr old boy executed in South Carolina in 1944


At the point when George was executed in 1944, he was so little he needed to seat on a telephone directory in the hot seat. He’s formally the most youthful individual to be executed in the U.s. in the twentieth century.


George was discovered blameworthy of beating the young ladies, 11 and 8 years of age with a railroad spike. His trial lasted just three hours and it took a jury of all white individuals only 10 minutes to find him guilty- this was only 3 months after the young ladies were discovered dead. This was back when there was a great deal of segregation in America.


George was captured after he admitted to the wrongdoing, however his more established sister constantly kept up that George was forced into admitting and couldn’t have committed the homicide on the grounds that he was with her the day of the homicide.


Social liberties supporters have been striving for a considerable length of time to demonstrate George Stinney Jr’s innocence. They figured out how to get the case revived and yesterday morning, Judge Carmen Mullins tossed the homicide conviction.



Judge finally tossed out homicide conviction of a 14yr old boy executed in South Carolina in 1944

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