On April 24, 1944, just one month after his arrest, Stinney went
on trial for his life. The trial would take place at the county seat
in the City of Manning. Since angry residents already ran the
Stinney family out of town, George had virtually no one on his side.
The county court appointed a local attorney to assist in his
defense. He was a 30-year-old aspiring politician named
Charles Plowden. His goal in the case was simple: to provide a bare
bones defense that would fulfill his responsibilities as a defense
attorney and, at the same time, not anger the local residents. Since
Stinney already confessed to the police and his guilt was firmly
established, there was a general feeling that a trial was only a
formal requirement.
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Clarendon County Courthouse |
By the time the trial began on April 24 at the Clarendon County
Courthouse, the case was well known throughout the region, though
outside the county, it was not widely reported. Outside South
Carolina, it was virtually unknown. At the courthouse, it was
standing room only, for well over 1,500 people had come to witness
the spectacle. The stairways and hallways were filled to capacity.
At 10 AM that morning, jury selection began. The State,
published in Columbia, reported that “the state rejected four and
the defense eight jurors before the jury was impounded at 12:30”
(Rowe, p. 1). Even more ominous, however, was the jury composite.
The panel consisted of 12 white men: no blacks and no women. Of
course, racial make-up of a jury does not guarantee nor prevent
justice. The only standard, in 1944 as well as now, is that a juror
must be able to maintain a degree of fairness and objectivity that
displays no bias to either side. Given the publicity of the murders
and the nature of the crime, the defense would certainly have been
better served by a change of venue. Defense Attorney Charles
Plowden, however, made no such motion. After a brief lunch,
testimony began. “The trial began at 2:30 PM after eight minor
cases had been disposed of in the morning” (The Daily Item,
April 25, 1944). |
Prosecutor Frank McLeod introduced Stinney’s statements of
March 25 into evidence. In his initial statement to Deputy Sheriff
Newman, Stinney explained that he was near his own home outside
Alcolu when the oldest girl came along and asked him where she could
pick some flowers. As he attempted to show the girls where the
flowers grew, he said, the younger girl accidentally fell into a
ditch. As he tried to help Mary Emma, both girls suddenly attacked
him. Stinney admitted to hitting the girls with the railroad spike
but claimed he did so in self-defense.
In the second statement, also given to Deputy Newman and Officer
Pratt, Stinney gave a different version of the event. He told police
he was indeed at his own home when he first saw the girls go by. He
stated that he then followed the girls into the woods. Stinney said
that he was interested in the older one, Betty June. In order to
have Betty June to himself, he killed Mary Emma first by hitting her
with the railroad spike. Betty June then attempted to run away and
Stinney chased and caught her. When she continued to resist his
sexual advances, he battered her with the same railroad spike. The
State reported that Judge P. Stoll, who was from Kingstree, just
15 miles from Alcolu, halted the testimony to give women in the
courtroom a chance to leave prior to “morbid details” (Rowe,
p.1).
Scott Lowden, who found the dead girls, was called to the stand.
He testified as to the condition of the bodies when they were found.
He described a broken bicycle, which lay over the girls. The bodies
were entangled with each other and lay submerged in the water where
Stinney had dumped them. Betty June’s sister testified that it was
she who gave the scissors to the girls to cut flowers.
The prosecution then called Dr. R. F. Baker to testify. It was
Dr. Baker and Dr. A. C. Bozard of the Tuomey Hospital in Sumter who
performed the post mortem examination of the dead girls. The autopsy
reports were read into testimony: “We examined the body of eleven
year old white girl. There was evidence of at least seven blows on
the head of the child that seemed to have been made by a blunt
instrument with a small round head about the size of a hammer. Some
of these have only cracked the skull while two have punched definite
holes in the skull” (Dr. Bozard’s autopsy report). Although Dr.
Baker was unable to positively state that a rape or sexual assault
had occurred, he did say that it was possible (Rowe, p. 1). Stinney,
dressed in blue Junes, maintained a calm demeanor throughout the
afternoon; “He remained calm and apparently little concerned”
(Rowe, p. 1).
The presentation of the case, led by McLeod, moved quickly. Too
fast, some say. Plowden and his assistant, attorney J.W. Wireman of
Manning, presented no witnesses or evidence for the defense of
Stinney. Instead, Plowden attempted to portray Stinney as a child
who was too young, by law, to be held responsible for his crimes. In
retaliation, the prosecution introduced Stinney’s birth
certificate, which indicated he was born on October 21, 1929. Under
South Carolina law in 1944, an adult was anyone over the age of 14.
George Stinney was 14 years and five months old. That was the end of
the case. It had begun at 2:30 in the afternoon and was over by 5:30
PM. “The jury retired at five minutes before five to deliberate.
Ten minutes later it returned with its verdict: guilty, with no
recommendation for mercy” (Brock, sec. D). The entire court
proceeding from opening statements to sentencing had taken less than
3 hours. George Stinney “only when asked to arise and be
sentenced, did he appear nervous and slightly excited” (Rowe,
p.1). Judge Stoll sentenced him to die in the electric chair at
Central Correctional Institution in Columbia, South Carolina on June
16, 1944. Stinney was quickly escorted out of court. He had less
than two months to live.
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Death Sentence on April 24, 1944
ordering Stinney's execution on June 16, 1944 |
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