Name: Class: "7 'Scottsboro Boys' Win: 1932" by Washington Area Spark is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0. The other defendants waited in the Jefferson County jail in Birmingham for the outcome of the appeals. Price testified again that a dozen armed negro men entered the gondola car. "[56], Anderson noted that, as the punishment for rape ranged between ten years and death, some of the teenagers should have been found "less culpable than others", and therefore should have received lighter sentences. Price and Bates may have told the police that they were raped to divert police attention from themselves. "[45], The NAACP hesitated to take on the rape case. The landmark set of legal cases from this incident dealt with racism and the right to a fair trial. (Credit: Wikipedia) The case unfolded with astounding rapidity. [86], According to one account, juror Irwin Craig held out against the imposition of the death penalty, because he thought that Patterson was innocent.[87]. "[109] He instructed the jury that if Patterson was so much as present for the "purpose of aiding, encouraging, assisting or abetting" the rapes "in any way", he was as guilty as the person who committed the rapes. The trial was set for April 6. And now they come over here and try to convince you that that sort of thing happened in your neighboring county. [66] When asked if the model in front of her was like the train where she claimed she was raped, Price cracked, "It was bigger. [32], After the outburst, the defense of Patterson moved for a mistrial, but Judge Hawkins denied the motion and testimony continued. Rape charges against him were dropped. Michigans governor refused to extradite him. When the train stopped at Scottsboro. At this trial, Victoria Price testified that two of her alleged assailants had pistols, that they threw off the white teenagers, that she tried to jump off but was grabbed, thrown onto the gravel in the gondola, one of them held her legs, and one held a knife on her, and one raped both her and Ruby Bates. The Scottsboro Boys were nine African American teenagers who were falsely accused of raping two white women on a train in Alabama in 1931. "[55] Justice Anderson also pointed out the failure of the defense to make closing arguments as an example of under zealous defense representation. defined not by what they are but by what they can never be.. Thomas Knight, Jr. by now (May 1935) Lieutenant Governor, was appointed a special prosecutor to the cases.[126]. But others believed they were victims of Jim Crow justice, and the case was covered by numerous national newspapers. After Roberson and Wright died in 1959, he told Norris he planned on returning to the south. The group of jurors who on Thursday convicted Alex Murdaugh of killing his wife and son had a day earlier visited the sprawling Islandton, South Carolina, property where the 2021 murders took place. Leibowitz put on the testimony of Chattanooga gynecologist, Dr. Edward A. Reisman, who testified that after a woman had been raped by six men, it was impossible that she would have only a trace of semen, as was found in this case. She said none of the defendants had touched her or even spoken to her. Patterson replied, "I told myself to say it. [80][citation needed], By the time Leibowitz closed, the prosecution had employed anti-semitic remarks to discredit him. . The fight is said to have started when a young white man stepped on the hand of one of the Scottsboro Boys. All but 13-year-old Roy Wright were convicted of rape and sentenced to death (the common sentence in Alabama at the time for black men convicted of raping white women), even though there was no medical evidence indicating that rape had taken place. He also notes that they are dressed well beyond their economic status. "[85], The jury began deliberating Saturday afternoon and announced it had a verdict at ten the next morning, while many residents of Decatur were in church. An attorney picked up the newly freed men and drove them to New York City, where they appeared on stage in Harlem as performers and as curiosities. (Apparently because of this ruling, Horton was voted out of office the following year.) I appreciate the Pardons and Parole Board for continuing our progress today and officially granting these pardons. [120], The case went to the United States Supreme Court for a second time as Norris v. Alabama. were the scottsboro 9 killed. [65] The jury was selected by the end of the day on Friday and sequestered in the Lyons Hotel. '"[131], Sheila Washington founded the Scottsboro Boys Museum & Cultural Center in 2010 in Scottsboro. Patterson pointed at H.G. "[3] This conclusion did not find the Scottsboro defendants innocent but ruled that the procedures violated their rights to due process under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. "Scottsboro: An American Tragedy", PBS.org, CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (, "A wing of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the United States, devoted to the defense of people it perceived as victims of a class war. As to representation, the Court found "that the defendants were represented by counsel who thoroughly cross examined the state's witnesses, and presented such evidence as was available. At least six people were killed in tornadoes that knocked out power lines, downed trees and damaged homes in Alabama and Georgia, officials said Friday. There has been a myth of black predation on white women when the reality was the polar opposite. Bates explained that Price had said, "she didn't care if all the Negroes in Alabama were put in jail." The jury foreman, Eugene Bailey, handed the handwritten verdict to Judge Horton. Looking at the photo, Gardullo says, I think the most obvious thing to understand is the fact that the world called them the Scottsboro Boys, and these were young men. It started a fight between the whites and the blacks. "[70] Threats of violence came from the North as well. Jim Morrison, outlaw, ca. Knight questioned them extensively about instances in which their testimony supposedly differed from their testimony at their trial in Scottsboro. What you can do now is to make sure that it doesn't happen to some other woman." He admitted under questioning that Price told him that she had had sex with her husband and that Bates had earlier had intercourse as well, before the alleged rape events.[41]. One letter from Chicago read, "When those Boys are dead, within six months your state will lose 500 lives. Put on your case. As to the "newly discovered evidence", the Court ruled: "There is no contention on the part of the defendants, that they had sexual intercourse with the alleged victim with her consent so the defendants would not be granted a new trial."[53]. The Scottsboro Boys were nine black teenagers falsely accused of raping two white women aboard a train near Scottsboro, Alabama, in 1931. . Chief Justice John C. Anderson dissented, agreeing with the defense in many of its motions. [80], With his eye turned to the southern jury, Knight cross-examined her. That is a toy. The accused, ranging in age from 13 to 19, faced allegations of raping Ruby Bates, 17, and Victoria Price, 21. . Scottsboro Boy was published in June 1950. Dobbins insisted he had seen the girls wearing women's clothing, but other witnesses had testified they were in overalls. Weems, who was tear-gassed and stabbed in prison and contracted tuberculosis, was paroled in 1943. "[84] He called Price's testimony "a foul, contemptible, outrageous lie. National Guard members in plain clothes mingled in the crowd, looking for any sign of trouble. The Justices examined the items closely with a magnifying glass. [14] He removed his belt and handed his gun to one of his deputies. During the five days of unrest, there were more than 50 riot-related deaths including 10 people who were shot and killed by LAPD officers and National Guardsmen. The Scottsboro Boys were nine black teenagers falsely accused of raping two white women aboard a train near Scottsboro, Alabama, in 1931. [citation needed], Defendant Clarence Norris stunned the courtroom by implicating the other defendants. Knight thundered, "Who told you to say that?" The Alabama Supreme Court affirmed seven of the eight convictions, and granted 13-year-old Eugene Williams a new trial because he was a minor. After a demonstration in Harlem, the Communist Party USA took an interest in the Scottsboro case. Bates died in 1976 in Washington state, where she lived with her carpenter husband, and her case was not heard. Only four of the young African American men knew each other prior to the incident on the freight train, but as the trials drew increasing regional and national attention they became known as the Scottsboro Boys. [103] Patterson explained contradictions in his testimony: "We was scared and I don't know what I said. [55], Anderson criticized how the defendants were represented. She had had surgery in New York, and at one point Leibowitz requested that her deposition be taken as a dying declaration. On cross-examination Knight confronted him with previous testimony from his Scottsboro trial that he had not touched the women, but that he had seen the other five defendants rape them. Price repeated her testimony, adding that the black teenagers split into two groups of six to rape her and Ruby Bates. A fight broke out and the train was stopped near the town of Scottsboro. Knight agreed that it was an appeal to passion, and Callahan overruled the motion. SCOTTSBORO, Alabama -- As the process gets underway to pardon the Scottsboro Boys, nine black young men unjustly accused in 1931 of raping two white women, their unusual case is being. Judge Callahan arraigned all the defendants except the two juveniles in Decatur; they all pleaded not guilty. [104] Although the defense needed her testimony, by the time a deposition arrived, the case had gone to the jury and they did not hear it at all. It was the basis for the court's finding in Norris v. Alabama (1935), that exclusion of African-American grand jurors had occurred, violating the due process clause of the Constitution. The Attorney General of Alabama, Thomas E. Knight, represented the State. He called the jury commissioner to the stand, asking if there were any blacks on the juror rolls, and when told yes, suggested his answer was not honest. When she responded that the Communist Party had paid for her clothes, any credibility she had with the jury was destroyed. The defense moved for another change of venue, submitting affidavits in which hundreds of residents stated their intense dislike for the defendants, to show there was "overwhelming prejudice" against them. "[103] Bailey attacked the defense case. 1861-1895. [21][22] Local circuit judge Alfred E. Hawkins[23] found that the crowd was curious and not hostile. He had testified in the first Decatur trial that Price and Bates had had sex with him and Gilley in the hobo jungle in Chattanooga prior to the alleged rapes, which could account for the semen found in the women. Two men escaped, were later charged with other crimes and convicted, and sent back to prison. They were charged of raped because they were black in the 1930s it was a lot of racism between blacks and whites What happened to the scottsboro boys? The Court concluded, "the motion to quash should have been granted. In an opinion written by Associate Justice George Sutherland, the Court found the defendants had been denied effective counsel. "'Exploding the Myth of the Black Rapist': Collective Memory and the Scottsboro Nine" in, This page was last edited on 1 February 2023, at 21:51. Leibowitz recognized that he was viewed by Southerners as an outsider, and allowed the local attorney Charles Watts to be the lead attorney; he assisted from the sidelines. He had never lost a murder trial and was a registered Democrat, with no connection to the Communist Party. In 2013, the state of Alabama issued posthumous pardons for Patterson, Weems, and Andy Wright. [98] He denied being a "bought witness", repeating his testimony about armed blacks ordering the white teenagers off the train. Seven months after the Alabama House of Representatives voted unanimously in favor of creating legislation to posthumously pardon nine black teens who were wrongfully convicted of raping two white women in 1931, this morning the Alabama parole board approved posthumous pardons for three of the men known collectively as the Scottsboro Boys. The jury began deliberating at four in the afternoon. He also imposed a strict three-day time limit on each trial, running them into the evening. Did brother Hill frame them? Within a month, one man was found guilty and sentenced . "[82] One author describes Wright's closing argument as "the now-famous Jew-baiting summary to the jury. Judge Callahan said he was giving them two forms one for conviction and one for acquittal, but he supplied the jury with only a form to convict. March 30: The nine "Scottsboro Boys" are indicted by a grand jury . [64] Now, two guardsmen with bayonets opened the courtroom doors, and Bates entered, "in stylish clothes, eyes downcast. Once when Leibowitz confronted her with a contradiction in her testimony, she exclaimed, sticking a finger in the direction of defendant Patterson, "One thing I will never forget is that one sitting right there raped me. These were poor people. Furthermore, the photograph masks the fact that they are incarcerated. At the National Museum of American Historys Archives Center, another photo shows mothers of the defendants alongside Bates, who traveled internationally with them following her recantation, to draw attention to the case, in what Gardullo calls an early act of truth and reconciliation. A notable pastel 1935 portrait of Norris and Patterson by Aaron Douglas also resides in the National Portrait Gallery along with another dated 1950 of Patterson.