George Stinney, Jr. and his alleged victims, Betty June Binnicker and Mary Emma Thames. |
The
slender 14 year old was led to the execution
chamber at South Carolina’s Central
Correctional Institution in Columbia on June 16, 1944. He was so small that he did not fit well into
the adult size electric chair. The Bible he had carried with him to his
doom was taken from him and used as
an impromptu booster seat. Officials struggled with the straps that held him down because they
could not be properly tightened down
to his scrawny arms and legs.
The face mask hung
loosely. With the first jolt of 2,400 Volts the mask was
knocked off of his face revealing his wide open, tear filled eyes, contorted features,
and frothy drool. One wrist broke free of the restraints as
his body spasmed violently. Two more jolts were administered before George Junius Stinney, Jr. was finally declared dead after four minutes.
By
the way, Stinney was Black. But you probably knew that even if you never
heard this story before.
South Carolina's often used electric chair. |
He
was killed just 83 days after two white
girls, 11 year old Betty June Binnicker, and 8 year old Mary Emma Thames were found murdered in Alcolu, South Carolina, a
timber mill company town. Shortly before the girls were last seen,
witnesses said they saw Stinney chatting with them. That encounter was the only evidence linking
the boy with the crime. There were no
witnesses to the murder and no physical evidence of any kind. Three police officers would testify that he confessed the crime to them, which
Stinney would deny making at the trial.
His alibi was summarily
dismissed as a “lie Niggers tell”
and no effort was made to confirm it.
The
sketchy known facts of the case were that the two girls set off on their bicycles on Thursday, March 24 to pick
flowers. It was Easter break. On their way
they passed the Stinney house where George was in the yard with his sister and
asked him if he knew where they could find maypops,
an early blooming purple vine flower in the passion flower family. In
the small town of just a few hundred residents,
almost all of them employed directly
or indirectly by the Alderman mill and
related companies, and Black and White residents separated only by the railroad tracks, the children knew each
other, at least by sight. The girls rode
off and were not seen alive again.
When
the girls did not return home by evening, an intense search was launched. Their bodies were found the next morning in a
shallow ditch partially covered by
water. Both had received blunt force trauma to the head and face smashing their skulls. Although no weapon was found the coroner later concluded that a hammer was the likely cudgel. It had to have been wielded with great
force. June Binnicker suffered bruising around the vagina and was
probably raped.
Police
quickly zeroed in on Stinney who was arrested within hours. Some time elapsed between the arrest and when
he was brought to county jail during
which time the arresting officer claimed he had confessed. No further investigation of the crime was
conducted.
A
Coroner’s inquest quickly concluded
that Stinney was the likely culprit. He was indicted and brought to trial with
dizzying speed. The trial itself,
conducted, of course, before an all-White
jury lasted only a day. The prosecution
called the police to testify about the alleged confession despite the fact that
no written record of the confession had ever been made. The appointed
defense counsel, a tax commissioner who was running for higher office, did not challenge the testimony or present any
evidence or witnesses himself. The whole
trial took less than two and a half hours.
The Jury formally retired and
returned in less than 10 minutes with a verdict
of guilty of first degree murder. The judge
wasted no time in passing sentence.
George Stinney, Jr. and 21 year old Bruce Hamilton convicted in a separate case enter the South Carolina death house together. |
The South Carolina press and even many of the state’s beleaguered liberals proclaimed satisfaction that “justice
has been allowed to run its course” and that the boy had not been dragged from
jail and lynched. But it was rough justice and pretty much just
a lynching under cover of law.
The boy’s father, George, Sr. had immediately been fired
from his job in the mill when his son was arrested and the family was so
threatened that they fled town and went into hiding. George Jr. never saw any of them again. They dared not attend the trial or even visit
him in jail. The boy had to endure his
ordeal utterly alone.
The case quickly faded from
public awareness and was tucked away in that pocket of convenient amnesia that was a characteristic of
the Jim Crow South and the decedents
of the perpetrators.
In 1988 interest in the case
was revived by David Stout’s Roman a clef novel Carolina Skeletons, which won the Edgar Alan Poe Award for Best First Novel. A TV
movie adaptation was made in 1991 with Lou
Gossett and Kenny Blank as the
boy seen in flashbacks. Blank was nominated for an award as Best Young Actor in a TV Movie. In both the book and the movie and
investigation made by a family member years after the crime and execution
suggest that the boy was innocent and that powerful local forces were out to
prevent the truth from being told.
George Frierson, who began the investigation that led to the verdict being over turned. |
That theory began to have some
support in 2004 when local historian
George Frierson began an investigation with the assistance of volunteer lawyers.
Eventually Frierson claimed “there has been a person that has been
named as being the culprit, who is now deceased. And it was said by the family
that there was a deathbed confession.”
The alleged culprit was a member of a prominent but unnamed local family
and at least one of his relatives was on the initial Coroner’s Jury. Although
that person and family have not been publicly identified because of threatened legal action, it is said that many old
timers can figure it out from Frierson’s description.
In 2013 lawyers who had worked
with Frierson, Steve McKinzie, Matt Burgges, and Ray Chandler filed an appeal
for a new trial after attempts to get relief through the state’s Pardon and Parole Board were rebuffed.
In December 2014 despite a
vigorous defense of the original prosecution and verdict by South Carolina’s
Black Solicitor General Ernest A. Finney
III Circuit Court Judge Carmen Mullen vacated
the original conviction. She found
that no defense was offered the jury and in the absence of corroboratory evidence the confession was likely coerced and inadmissible.
The late ruling for justice was
not universally accepted. Surviving relatives of the girls and of the
police officer involved all publicly stand by the original verdict. Generally favorable press coverage resulted
in waves of racist howls anguish and
some not-so-veiled-threats in the on-line comments on newspaper and TV news web pages.
woooow that is so messed up how they lied on his name like that and he was 14!! OMG
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