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Scottsboro Boys Research Paper

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The trial of the Scottsboro boys has been one of the most infamous legal injustices in American History. Nine black teenage boys were convicted of a crime that they never committed. Two white women accused the boys of an alleged gang rape on a Southern Railroad freight run.
It all began on March 25, 1931 when a fight between white youths and a larger group of black youths broke out on the train. Eighteen year old, Haywood Patterson was hanging on the side of the train when a young white boy stepped on his hand while walking across the top of a tank car. Haywood had a few friends of his on the train. A stone-throwing fight erupted between a group of white youths and a larger group of black youth. Eventually, the blacks were able to force all …show more content…
For thirteen-year old Roy Wright a mistrial was declared when eleven of the jurors thought the death penalty was too harsh for his age. He was given the sentence of life imprisonment. The boys spent two years between the first round of trials and the second round of trials. While on death row, on the date originally set for their own executions, the watched another inmate as he was carried down to the death chamber that was not sound proof and listened to the sounds of his electrocution. A few times a week they were permitted to leave their tiny cells a few yards down to shower. When the second trial came about a few witnesses were brought to the stand. They all said that the defendants were guilty of committing rape to the two women. Later on Ruby Bates was under direct examination. Bates said that no rape occurred or that the boys never even touched her. She said the accusations were made after Price told her to frame up a story to avoid morals charges. There were many retrials and mistrials ahead of the Scottsboro Boys. One by one the boys were either released on parole or escaped. While Haywood Patterson was still in prison one of his jobs was to carry the bodies

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