According to WLTX, the victims' relatives and Third Circuit Solicitor Chip Finney argued that the Conviction should stand. ...This garbage is part of the new narrative by the liberal media that all young black men are victims of police brutality. Does anyone really think it's credible that Stinney's relatives, who were children 70 years ago, testified that he "was at home at the time of the murders and could not have committed the crime". What the liberal media isn't telling the reader is that Stinney revealed to the police the location of the bodies - a detail only the killer would know. The judge did not "exonerate" Stinney, but merely ruled he didn't get a fair trial.
Betty June Binnicker, 11, was murdered along
with her friend, Mary Emma Thames, 8. Both had received major blows to the
head. Stinney was charged with the crimes.
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INTERNET
SOURCE: http://www.berkeleyobserver.com/2014/03/01/goose-creek-woman-others-hope-george-stinney-murder-conviction-sticks/
Goose Creek woman, others hope George Stinney murder conviction sticks
March 1, 2014 10:55 pm by Nikki
Gaskins
MANNING, S.C.—The year was 1944. The U.S. was in
the midst of a second world war. Gasoline cost just 21 cents a gallon and
minimum wage was just 30 cents per hour.
During this same time, the small
community of Alcolu in Clarendon County was a bustling area, home to a
tight-knit community and a thriving lumber
mill. Here, neighbors trusted one another. Doors were never
locked. Strangers were welcomed with open arms. People simply felt
safe.
That all changed; however, on March
23, 1944. On this particular day, Betty June Binnicker, 11, and Mary Emma
Thames, 8, decided to go looking for wildflowers. Some time that very
day, the two girls came in contact with George Stinney, 14, and his sister who
were out walking the family cow named Lizzie. According to court
documents, the girls asked if they knew where they might find some “maypops.”
According to Stinney’s baby sister, Amie L. Ruffner, they told the girls ‘no’
and they ‘went on about their business.’
That very night, the two girls never
returned home. Their families became worried and a community search was
organized. At some point during the search, Stinney reportedly
acknowledged seeing the girls earlier in the day and quickly became a suspect
in the case.
Just one day after the girls vanished,
a group of lumbermen found their bodies in a water-filled ditch. Both had
been killed by blows to the head. Old reports indicated a railroad spike
was used as the murder weapon. Other reports indicate a large, blunt iron
was used. Nevertheless, Stinney, just a teen, was arrested and charged
with their murders.
According to one of Stinney’s sisters,
their father was fired from his job at the lumber mill and fearing for the
safety of the family, they were forced to move from Alcolu. Her parents,
she recalled, were also not allowed to speak or see her brother prior to the
trial or any time after.
On April 24, 1944—one month after the
murders, Stinney stood trial for the crimes. The trial was very brief,
taking a jury only about ten minutes to come back with a guilty verdict.
The teen was sentenced to die by electrocution. He was put to death two
months after the trial, 83 days after the murders, becoming the youngest person
ever electrocuted in the United States.
Depending on whom you ask, Stinney
never truly committed the crime. In fact, 70 years after the murders,
lawyers for the Stinney estate are determined to clear his name and have the
murder conviction reversed.
In January 2014, a hearing did take
place in Manning where lawyers for the Stinney family presented their case for
a new trial before a judge. It’s now up to that very judge to
decide if Stinney, despite the fact that he’s no longer alive, should be
granted a second trial. To this date, she has yet to make a decision.
Lawyers for the Stinney family argue
that the teen never had a fair shot at justice from the very start. After
all, he and his family lived during an era where racial tensions were high,
particularly in the south. Stinney was black and the girls were white.
The lawyers also claim that no
physical evidence ever linked Stinney to the crime and that it would have been
a “physical miracle” for the teen, who weighed only 95 pounds, to
singlehandedly overcome the two girls, murder both of them, and drag them from
their bicycle to the ditch where they were left. Stinney, they say, was
ultimately forced into a confession by law enforcement.
However, family of the victims and
others present during the time of the murder investigation say otherwise.
While the Internet, TV and newspapers
have been inundated with stories advocating for George Stinney’s
innocence—those representing the side of the two girls say Stinney does not
deserve a new trial and that the jury got it right the first time.
Below are their perspectives on the
case:
Frankie Bailey Dyches: “He had ample
time to tell the truth if he was coerced.”
Frankie Bailey Dyches of Goose Creek
never knew her aunt, Betty June. She was born two years after her aunt’s
murder. Dyches’ mother, who passed away at the age of 90, was ten years
older than her little sister.
To balance out previous media reports
about the case that have heavily questioned whether Stinney got a fair trial,
Dyches recently organized a meeting at a local restaurant in Manning.
“It’s always been one-sided.
They’re trying to make it about race, and it wasn’t,” she stressed. “It’s not
that we believe hearsay that we grew up with all these years. We’ve done
our research. We’ve talked to people that were actually there. The people
that read these articles in the newspaper don’t know the whole truth.”
Dyches’ husband once owned the
barbershop inside the Berkeley Motel in Moncks Corner before it was demolished
to make way for the Walgreens store that now stands there today.
A man by the name of S.J. Pratt was
one of her husband’s frequent customers. According to Dyches, shortly after Carolina
Skeletons was released, a 1991 movie loosely based on the Stinney case,
Pratt told her husband that he had been one of the arresting officers. That’s
when Dyches’ husband informed Pratt that his wife was actually the niece of one
of his victims.
“He then sought me out,” said
Dyches. “Pratt looked me dead in the eyes and said, ‘don’t you ever
believe that boy didn’t kill your aunt because from the time I became involved,
from the whole chain of events, there was not one link broken.’”
According to Dyches, Pratt had
questioned an elderly black man in the case if he might have known ‘who could
have been mean enough to do this?’ Pratt reportedly told Dyches that the
man automatically said ‘George Stinney.’
“That’s when he went down to the
Stinney house, and he (Pratt) said he heard them discussing it (the murders)
outside the open window,” she said.
Several people who were alive in Alcolu
during the murder investigation of the two girls in 1944 review old documents
and articles about the case at a restaurant in Manning.
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Dyches said Pratt placed George
Stinney and his half-brother, Johnny, in separate rooms and questioned them
individually.
“He said that George Stinney confessed
and told us exactly what happened,” said Dyches.
Johnny reportedly told Pratt the same
story George told officers about committing the crime.
“Pratt said he asked George, ‘can you
show me the murder weapon?’” said Dyches.
According to Dyches, George led Pratt
to a low end of the field where the bodies were found.
“He walked up and reached down twice,
and on the second time he reached down, he pulled up the iron spike and gave it
to him,” Dyches stated. “He had ample time to tell the truth if he was
coerced. We have talked to people.”
Right before George was electrocuted,
Pratt went to the penitentiary and reportedly asked if he knew why he was here.
“George replied ‘yes,’” said Dyches.
“‘Pratt then asked him, ‘did you commit this crime?’ He said, ‘yes,
sir.’ He said ‘did anybody make you say anything that you didn’t want to
say, and he said ‘no, sir.’”
According to Dyches, Pratt then asked
the boy if he knew that he was about to die.
“He said, ‘yes, sir’ and then Pratt
said, ‘goodbye, George.’ And he said, ‘goodbye sheriff,’ recalled Dyches.
Dyches’ grandfather attended the
electrocution.
“He said he wasn’t proud of it, but it
needed to get done what had been done to his baby,” said Dyches.
Dyches said her family and others have
tried to reach out to the surviving family members of the other victim, Mary
Emma Thames, without any luck. Dyches says she has a few cousins still in
the area—some believed to be in Berkeley County.
Ruth Hill Turner says Stinney once threatened
to kill her sister. After the bodies of the girls were found, she recalls
attending their wakes in Alcolu.
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Ruth Hill
Turner: “I’m sorry that they electrocuted him.”
Ruth
Hill Turner grew up in Alcolu and last spoke to Betty June the very day she
went missing.
“Betty
June came to our home after school that afternoon to find my sister,” she said.
“She wanted my sister to go with her to find flowers, so she could take
them to her teacher.”
Ruth,
just 13-years-old at the time, remembers telling Betty June that her sister
wasn’t home.
“My
sister, Violet, had gone home with somebody on the bus that afternoon and
hadn’t come home so Betty June left,” she said.
Later
that night she recalls getting a knock at the door to her parents’ home.
“The
men were gathering to go and look for them (the girls) because they hadn’t come
home,” she said. “The men searched until well over into the night and
came home. The next morning they went out again. They weren’t out
too long before they found them.”
The
following Sunday after church, Ruth says she and her family attended the girls’
wakes.
“At
that time, they brought the bodies back home. I went to the Binnicker
home and went to the Thames home,” she recalls. “I remember seeing the
little girls in the caskets and their faces were black and blue from where they
had been beaten in the face. We’d never seen anything like that
before. Their faces were just bruised terribly.”
Ruth
not only knew Betty June but she also knew George Stinney.
“I
had seen the Stinney boy out by the church with his cow and he would bring the
cow down there in the afternoon to eat the green grass there on the railroad
tracks,” she said.
Although
she doesn’t recall why, she said Stinney frightened her.
“I
don’t know if he had threatened me before or what,” she said. “If I saw
him, I would turn around and go to the Roberson house (a neighbor). I
wouldn’t go near him.”
Ruth’s
sister died in 2008, but says Violet had told her that before the girls were
killed he had threatened her.
“She
said if I had been at home and had gone with Betty June, he would have killed
me,” she recalls. “Even the black people knew that he had killed the
children. There was never any doubt about who killed them. We had black
people that worked in the house, and Daddy worked with black people at the
mill, and they all knew that he killed them. There was never any doubt
about it.”
According
to lawyers for the Stinney family, rumors have surfaced surrounding a deathbed
confession made years ago by a member of another white family—a man who claimed
to have been the culprit. This; however, has never been proven.
“The
first time that I ever heard that someone else was suspected of killing them
was about five or six years ago,” said Ruth.
She
believes in custody Stinney was safe; otherwise, she believes the community
would have lynched him. As for his death sentence, that’s one of the only
things she wishes had been done differently.
“I’m
sorry that they electrocuted him. I wish they had sent him to
prison. But that’s the way things were done back then. We didn’t
have any control over it. That’s the way the judicial system went.”
Robert Ridgeway, who was 13-years-old at the
time of the murders, says Stinney led his father and some of the other
searchers to the girls’ bodies.
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Robert
Ridgeway was a teenager when his father and some of the other men in Alcolu
spent hours searching for Betty June and Mary Emma.
“They
told the people in the search that if they were found, they would blow the
whistle at the mill,” he said. “One minute til’ seven the next morning,
the mill whistle went off. It was a long, long blast.”
Ridgeway
didn’t personally take part in the search but remembers his father keeping the
family informed about it.
“Dad
told us, and he had no reason to lie to us, that this black lady had told Mr.
Alderman, the owner of the lumber mill, that her grandson who was staying with
her had told her what he did,” Ridgeway recalled.
Ridgeway
says that day Alderman along with the other authorities went to the Stinney
house, picked him up, hid him in the back seat of the car, and covered him with
a coat so nobody would know he was in it.
“He
(George) carried them back to the location to where the little girls were found
and showed them where they were. The bicycle was in the ditch with them,”
Ridgeway recalls his father telling him.
After
the bodies were found, Ridgeway recalls a lot of sadness filled the small,
tight-knit community.
“I
saw no uprising or running people out of town. That may have been the
case, but I didn’t know it. I was 13-years-old at the time,” he
said. “I was saddened more for the little girls than I was for the kid
that was guilty. He admitted to the crime. No one questioned the
fact that he didn’t do it. He did it.”
According
to Ridgeway, his father told the family that Stinney had beat the girls to
death actually with a drift pin off of a freight car.
“Dad
said he (George) admitted using and, in fact, showed it to them,” said
Ridgeway. “I think he got exactly what he deserved. He just didn’t
get it soon enough.”
Sadie Duke said one day before the murders
Stinney threatened to kill her and her friend, Violent Freeman (the sister of
Ruth Hill Turner)
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Sadie
Duke remembers the day when Ruth’s sister, Violet Freeman, went home with her
after school.
“After
we got though eating, we went down to the church to get some water because we
had an open well. Moma didn’t like for us to drink that water, so we went
to get some water to take back to the house.”
While
getting water, the girls also started to play around the church.
“This
black boy came down there, pushing a tricycle. He came up to us and he
wanted to know what we were doing down there. I said, ‘we came to get
some water, and we just got to playing down here,” she recalled.
Duke,
he was just two months shy of turning 8-years-old, said that’s when Stinney
threatened her and her friend.
“He
said, ‘well, if you don’t get away from here, and if you come back, I will kill
you,” Duke stated.
The
following day Betty June and Mary Emma went missing. George Stinney was
named as their killer.
“I
got real upset because that could have been my friend and I,” she said. “ We
knew those girls. We went to school together. They were very
sweet girls.”
Duke
said the day the girls went missing her mother saw the girls talking to Stinney
at the church.
“She
started down there to the church because she saw those little girls talking to
the little black boy and knew that he had threatened us,” she said.
As
her mother made her way to the church, which was located close to her house,
Sadie says that’s when someone up in the yard.
“So
she turned around and went back to the house. She always regretted that
she didn’t go on down there,” Duke stated. “I can’t say that he
killed them, but I firmly believe that he did.”
Carolyn Geddings: “We are not racists.”
For
Carolyn Geddings, she and the rest of her family would prefer that the George
Stinney case be left in the past.
“I
think if they wanted to bring it up, they should have brought it up a long time
ago,” she said.
In
1944, her mother, who was also Betty June’s sister, testified during the trial.
“She
gave the girls some scissors to cut the flowers with, and they asked her to
identify them,” she said.
This
year, her family attended the hearing in Manning that will determine if Stinney
should be given a new trial. She says since the case has been put back
into the limelight, they have been the center of unpleasant comments.
“There’s
being a lot of things said about us, about the Binnicker family, people making
comments about us calling us racists and we’re not—never have been,” she said.
Geddings
believe Stinney did kill his aunt, but doesn’t believe he should have ever received
the death penalty.
“I
think because of his age, he shouldn’t have been electrocuted,” she said.
“I hope the Stinney family can get some peace because I’m sure it’s been hard
on them, and I feel for them. I feel bad for my family also.”
…Seventy years later
For
Dyches and the others who knew the murdered girls, they anxiously await a
judge’s decision on whether the case will be reopened.
Seventy
years later, the question has been asked over and over again– why now?
If
you ask family and friends of the girls, they believe the push for a new trial
is motivated by financial gain and publicity for a new movie in the works
called: 83 Days. It is
set to begin filming in the summer of 2014.
“We
(Pleroma Studios) are filing a wrongful death suit against the state of South
Carolina on behalf of the Stinney family, demanding his exoneration,” wrote
those associated with the film on their Facebook page back
in 2012.
The
attorneys for the Stinney family have since set up a defense
fund for the case—and hope to establish a scholarship as well.
“Our
goal is to clear the name of George Stinney, Jr., before this miscarriage of
justice becomes forever a glaring blemish upon the fabric of our nation’s
history,” wrote the attorneys on the website.
The problem I have is not whether he was guilty or not, but the way the case was handled. There was no way that the young man had any kind of a fair trial. He was unlawfully tried, convicted and executed without even an appeal. Because of the fast way the trial and conviction was handled would make me doubt he was guilty. Also how could this small boy been able to kill both of these girls by himself. There are so many questions that never were answered because he had no defense attorney considering how he handled the case. This should be a black mark on the state of SC. as well as the nation. This defiantly was an atrocity that should never happened.
ReplyDeleteThe problem you have is you aren’t paying attention to reality. He led the authorities to the bodies. He let them to the weapon. That’s why he was convicted so fast. You’re not using logic.
DeleteHe did not lead the authorities to the body he was only with the search party. So for 70 years the real killer was free. Image how the girls and George sprits feel with the mistake of their killer never being caught and your killing George
Deleteand your killing George.
thank you for doing this. i actually found a truthful reliable source. not some nonsense that i could find anywhere. i hate how the media feeds everyone nonsense.
ReplyDeleteVery informative. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThis case doesn’t appear to have been handled well in the slightest. Just a note when people make a comment like “I’m not racist” they usually are just saying.
ReplyDeletethis is absolutely bs. He was FOURTEEN!! plus he was black! back then white people would teach their children that black people are dangerous and were always thinking maliciously. This is a racist case because for one the jury was all white, two, his parents weren't even allowed in the court room. Police are known to beat confessions out of suspects. The fact that the prosecution brought up the fact that other black people believed he did it means jack shit. The girls literally told him where they were going! And don't you think that some of statements are biased? They immediately blame the little young black boy that happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time.
ReplyDeleteThe main reason is that evil is not interested in ridding the world of evil. Evil is simply interested in ignoring the problem at hand. Blame someone else by creating additional enemies to keep the sheep from paying attention to the wolves.
Delete– Walid Shoebat
Why don't you study the whole case from two sides of the coin. Read the court transcripts etc. Instead of blaming other things like racism, to prevent the public from paying attention to the wolves (the killer himself).
And where is the evidence was guilty? He did not lead them to the bodies. He did not lead them to the murder weapon. His "confession" was never recorded. Conviction does not mean guilt. As we see so often in the deep, racist South.
Delete