June 16, 1944 was execution day at the Central Correctional Institution in Columbia, and next on the docket to confront the electrical chair was George Stinney, a 14-year-old African American boy from Acolu, South Carolina. George weighed merely 95 pounds and stood at only 5” 1′ at the time he was strapped to an electric chair too big for his physique.1 Due to George’s small physique, extra holes needed to be punched into the chair’s leather bindings before the bindings could fit onto George’s limbs. This extra step bought George a couple extra minutes of life before he faced the electric chair.2 What was 14-year-old George Stinney thinking about right before execution? Surely not that he would soon become the youngest person executed in the 20th century.3
On March 24, 1944, tragedy and injustice came strolling into the small segregated lumber mill town of Alcolu, South Carolina. Betty June Binnicker, 11, and Mary Emma Thames, 7, were walking with their bike when they came across Aime Stinney Ruffner and George Stinney. The girls asked Aime and George whether or not they knew where they could find Maypops. Aime and George responded with a “no” and the girls went on their way. The night of March 24, Betty and Mary were reported missing after both girls failed to return home. The morning after, Betty June Binnicker and Mary Emma Thames were found dead in a ditch with their bikes laying on top of them. Police arrived at the Stinney household and arrested George, a 14-year-old African American boy, for the murders on Betty June Binnicker and Mary Emma Thames.4 Unfortunately, at the time police arrested George, the 1966 Supreme Court ruling on Miranda v. Arizona, which requires law enforcement officials to advise suspects of their rights, had not been ruled yet.5 After the police arrested and interrogated George without any access to his parents nor to an attorney, George confessed to the murders of Betty Binnicker and Mary Thame.6 George Stinney was not the only party impacted as a result of the murders, the Stinney family was persecuted by the rest of the town due the accusation against George. George Stinney Sr. was fired from work and the entire family was forced to permanently leave Acolu and move to Pinewood where the grandmother resided. Aime Stinney Ruffner stated, “We had no choice, the crowd came and they said they were going to get us.”7
The judge presiding over the case appointed Charles Plowden, 31-year-old local lawyer and aspiring politician, to represent George Stinney during the trial. On April 24, 1944, residents of Alcolu packed the local courthouse hoping justice would be served swiftly. A jury composed of 12 white men would be destined to determine George Stinney’s fate.8 Plowden failed to motion for a change of venue, which is a motion to change the location of a trial to overcome local prejudice. Stinney could have had a less partial jury in a different location. The prosecution’s case relied on the testimony of two police officers giving an account of Stinney’s confession he made during his interrogation. According to the police, Stinney confessed to having followed Betty Binnicker and Mary Thames after initially making contact with the girls, then unsuccessfully attempted to rape Betty, and then proceeded to beat both Betty and Mary with a railroad spike that had been laying around. The prosecution presented Stinney’s birth certificate as the last piece of evidence. The prosecution presented the birth certificate to make the case that Stinney was born on October 21, 1921, making him 14 years of age, which was traditionally the accepted age of criminal responsibility at the time.9 Plowden failed to cross-examine the prosecution’s witnesses, call forth any witness that could have corroborated with Stinney’s alibi, question the circumstances under which the police obtained the confession, nor to point out the lack of physical evidence, nor to point out the impracticality of a 14-year-old boy weighing 95 pounds and standing at 5 feet and 1 inch of physically being able to murder two girls, and finally failed to file an appeal. Plowden’s only defense comprised of the defendant being too young to be held responsible for the crimes he committed. Stinney’s trial, that would determine whether he lived or died, lasted a total of 3 hours. The judge sentenced the jury to deliberation, and 10 minutes later the jury comprised of 12 white men, found 14 year old George Stinney guilty of the murders of Betty June Binnicker and Mary Emma Thames. The judge sentenced George Stinney to death by electrocution. On June 16, 1944, the 2,400 volts of electricity passing through George Stinney rendered his body lifeless.10
70 years after the execution of George Stinney, Stinney’s three remaining siblings are seeking justice of their own with the help of a group of lawyers and civil rights advocates determined to exonerate Stinney. Stinney’s prosecution combined unconstitutional errors with serious misconduct. The team of attorneys argued in the Sumter County Courthouse that Stinney’s verdict was solely based on a coerced confession, therefore, the verdict should be thrown out.11 Due to new testimony, Stinney’s family, along with the team of attorneys, are hoping Judge Carmen T. Mullen, of the Fourteenth Circuit Court in South Carolina, rules in their favor. Despite most of the evidence, including Stinney’s confession and the transcript of the trial disappeared, Mullen heard new testimony from Stinney’s brothers and sisters, a witness from the search party, a child forensic psychiatrist, and a statement from Wilford Hunter, Stinney’s former cellmate.12 Frankie Bailey Dyches, the niece of one of the victims, stated, “He (George Stinney) was tried, found guilty by the laws of 1944, which are completely different now—it can’t be compared— and I think that it needs to be left as is.”13 Circuit Judge Carmen Mullen makes an important distinction in the Stinney case by stating that her task is not deciding whether Stinney is guilty or innocent, but rather to decide whether or not Stinney received a fair trial. On December 10, 2014, Circuit Judge Carmen Mullen vacated George Stinney’s conviction. Mullen ruled that Stinney’s confession was likely coerced and therefore inadmissible, “due to the power differential between his position as a 14-year-old black male apprehended and questioned by white, uniformed law enforcement in a small, segregated mill town in South Carolina.”14
George Stinney was tried, convicted of murdering two young White girls, and sentenced to death by electrocution, all in a single afternoon. The story of George Stinney showcases the irreversible actions that occur in a flawed criminal justice system that implements the death penalty primarily against minorities. The court system failed to provide George Stinney with a fair and impartial trial in 1944. As a result, George Stinney paid the ultimate price, death. 70 years after the death of Stinney, the Fourteenth Circuit Court in South Carolina ruled justly by vacating Stinney’s conviction. That moment on June 16, 1944 when 2,400 volts of electricity passed through Stinney’s body, it rendered him lifeless. The death of George Stinney sealed his fate in history as the youngest person executed in the 20th century. The finality of the death penalty by definition continues to risk the loss of innocents’ lives.
Warning: the video linked below is a very realistic, violent, and disturbing set of images of what the suffering and execution must have felt to young George Stinney Jr.
- Elaine Aradillas, Jill Smolowe, Howard Breuer, Michelle Boudin, “A Family’s Quest for Justice Wrongfully Executed,”(People, March, 2014), 73. ↵
- Charles Kelly, “Next Stop, Eternity,” (Life Rich Publishing, April 27, 2016), …. ↵
- Jesse Wegman, “A Boy’s Execution, 70 Years Later,” (New York: New York Times, June, 2014), 8. ↵
- Elaine Aradillas, Jill Smolowe, Howard Breuer, Michelle Boudin, “A Family’s Quest for Justice Wrongfully Executed,”(People, March, 2014), 75. ↵
- Miranda v. Arizona, 384 US 436 (1966). ↵
- Elaine Aradillas, Jill Smolowe, Howard Breuer, Michelle Boudin, “A Family’s Quest for Justice Wrongfully Executed,”(People, March, 2014), 75. ↵
- Elaine Aradillas, Jill Smolowe, Howard Breuer, Michelle Boudin, “A Family’s Quest for Justice Wrongfully Executed,”(People, March, 2014), 74. ↵
- Mark Kantrowitz, “The Killing of George Stinney Jr.,”(Rhode Island: Rhode Island Lawyers Weekly, 2018). ↵
- David Bruck, “Executing Teen Killers Again,” (The Washington Post, September 15, 1985). ↵
- Mark Kantrowitz, “The Killing of George Stinney Jr.,”(Rhode Island: Rhode Island Lawyers Weekly, 2018). ↵
- Jesse Wegman, “George Stinney was Executed at 14,” (New York: New York Times, January 12, 2015), 9. ↵
- Lindsey Beaver, “It took 10 minutes to convict 14-year-old George Stinney Jr. It took 70 years after his execution to exonerate him,” (The Washington Post, December 18, 2014). ↵
- Jesse Wegman, “George Stinney was Executed at 14,” (New York: New York Times, January 12, 2015), 8. ↵
- Brad Knickerbocker, “Executed at Age 14, George Stinney Exonerated 70 Years Later,”(Christian Science Monitor, December, 2014). ↵
97 comments
Emmanuel Diaz
It’s very disappointing to see how flawed the justice system is at the time. For many people it was easy to place the crime on someone who merely fit the description just to have the case closed and be over with. This reminds me of the film “When They See Us.” though not completely parallel with the article it does have similar situations. Both involved children or teens who were chosen just because the law could do this to resolve the case as fast s possible and bring “justice” when in reality all they brought was pain and injustice to the families. Stinney did not deserve to be served with injustice.
Vanessa Quetzeri
This article is so sad; I cannot imagine how hopeless one must feel for being convicted of a crime they did not commit- worse the youngest person executed in the 20th century. The worst part, besides the fact that an innocent minority boy was executed due to the flaws in the judicial system at the time, the killer of those two girls is roamed around unscathed.
Nelly Perez
The criminal justice system in 1944 was flawed. He felt pressured to confess for something he did not do. These types of cases still happen today despite the change in laws. He was a young boy and he could not have possibly done it because of his color. The forensics team could have analyzed the issue, except there probably was not that much technology back then to check for DNA.
Kaleb Werku
This story is very depressing, He paid the ultimate price for something he did not do. Also, I’m mad how the person who did kill the two young girls essentially walked scotch free. It just goes to show how flawed our justice system was during the times of segregation. I don’t believe in the death penalty in fear that innocent people may die. Let just hope this never happens again.
Sebastian Azcui
This story is very interesting. Currently in the world there are many cases where people are sentenced for something that they are innocent and the guilty are still free walking through the streets. These innocent young teenagers are the ones that mostly fall in this as they do not know how to react, and have no resources. Many times life is very unfair and these children had to pass most time of their lifes in jail for something they did not even do. Justice is not given and many people are just manipulated and taken advantage due to their status and economical situation.
Juan Arceo
It truly is sad whenever somebody is put through the death penalty, because we are taking the life of somebody and even though at times they do deserve the penalty, this is not one of those cases. The fact that he didn’t even commit the crime is sad in it of itself let alone the fact that he was unfortunately put through the electric chair at such a young age (14). This just goes to show how unjust the court system was with certain races and hopefully we will change these ways sooner rather than later.
Jose De Julian
It crazy to me that George Stinney was sentenced to death at the age of 14. But these types of things happen even today. It remained me of a famous case of 4 San Antonio women who were wrongfully convicted of sexually assaulting 2 young girls. The women were 2 gay couples and the girls were nieces of one of the women. They were convicted and put in prison. The same evidence that placed them in prison was reevaluated and 15 years later they were exonerated and their criminal records were expunged since no signs of actual trauma was found. Sometimes the Justice System isn’t just.
Leopoldo Martinez-Milland
Throughout the article, Angel Torres paints a terrifying visual of what George Stinney Jr. had to be feeling before his unfortunate death. The way his case was treated with such carelessness disgusted me but seeing how it was South Carolina in 1944, it didn’t surprise me one bit. Seeing how the judicial system at the time did absolutely nothing to defend the fourteen year old, it shows how much discrimination played a vital role to Stinney’s death. Though people in South Carolina have tried to right those wrongs, namely the state’s Fourteenth Circuit Court vacating the boy’s conviction, it doesn’t hide the fact that George Stinnely Jr. was murdered by the people for what can easily be seen as simply the color of his skin.
Victoria Muller
It is sad to know that such a thing happened, unfortunately things like this were not uncommon. With the haste to point to a culprit evidence is not properly looked at. While the laws have changed and have gotten better in terms of giving people a fair trial, many are still accused and found guilty of crimes that they never committed.
Joana Isabel
The fact is in 2019 things have not changed so much……I do not understand why ….but there are still innocent people in death row and innocent people who have been executed …why?…..This case happened in1944….but the system is still flawed….