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In January 1949 a thirty-two-year-old white woman in Martinsville, Virginia, accused seven young black men of raping her. Within two days state and local police had rounded up all the suspects and extracted confessions from them. In a series of trials that lasted eleven days, all were found guilty and sentenced to death - a sentence that was carried out, amid a storm of protest from civil-rights advocates and death-penalty opponents, in February 1951.
Here is the first comprehensive treatment of the Martinsville case. Covering every aspect of the proceedings, from the commission of the crime through two sets of appeals, Eric Rise reexamines common assumptions about the administration of justice in the South. Although racial prejudice undeniably contributed to the outcome of the case, so did concerns for due process, crime control, community stability, judicial restraint, and domestic security.
The success of the due process campaign by groups such as the NAACP helped curb the most egregious abuses of authority, but it did little to help defendants who conceded their guilt but protested unusually severe sentences. The author focuses on the efforts of the attorneys for the Martinsville Seven, who, rather than citing procedural errors, directly attacked the discriminatory application of the death penalty.
It was the first case in which statistical evidence was used to substantiate systematic discrimination against blacks in capital cases.
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Previews available in: English
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1
The Martinsville Seven: Race, Rape, and Capital Punishment (Constitutionalism and Democracy)
August 1998, University of Virginia Press
Paperback
in English
- New Ed edition
0813918308 9780813918303
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2
The Martinsville Seven: race, rape, and capital punishment
1995, University Press of Virginia
in English
0813915678 9780813915678
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Includes bibliographical references (p. 192-205) and index.
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- Created April 1, 2008
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July 17, 2024 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
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