What does George’s story inform us concerning the US justice system and the methods it continues to fail African-Individuals?
In 1944, amid the tough glare of Jim Crow, 14-year-old George Stinney Jr. was strapped into South Carolina’s electrical chair after a trial that lasted only a single day. With no bodily proof, no protection witnesses, and an all-white jury that deliberated for ten minutes, he was convicted of murdering two white women. Practically seven a long time later, a decide threw out the decision.
On this episode:
– Matthew Burgess, Legal Defence Lawyer
– Dr Melanie Holmes, Assistant Professor of African American Research