Groveland Case

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The Groveland Case refers to events that took place in Groveland, Florida from 1949-1951 and the resulting investigations. In 1949, Harry T. Moore, the executive director of the Florida NAACP, organized a campaign against the wrongful conviction of four African Americans for the rape of a white woman in Groveland. Two years later, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered a new trial. Soon afterwards, Sheriff Willis V. McCall of Lake County, Florida, shot two of the men while in his custody. One was killed and other man was seriously wounded.

Case Details

On July 16, 1949, Norma Padgett, a 17-year-old Groveland, Florida woman, accused four black men of rape, testifying that she and her husband were attacked when their car stalled on a rural road near Groveland, Florida. The next day, 16-year-old Charles Greenlee, Sam Shepherd, and Walter Irvin were in jail. Ernest Thomas fled the county and avoided arrest for several days until a Sheriff's posse of over 1000 armed men, shot and killed him about 200 miles northwest in a lengthy chase through the swamps of Lake County.[1] McCall was in the area when Thomas was killed, but a coroner's inquest was unable to determine exactly who killed him.

McCall himself was out of the state for the initial arrests of Greenlee, Irvin and Shepherd, returning to Lake County the following day. As word spread about the accusation of rape and subsequent arrest of three of the "Groveland Four", an angry crowd gathered at the county jail. The crowd demanded that McCall turn the men over to them. Just moments before, McCall had hidden Shepherd and Irvin in a nearby orange grove, then had them transferred to Raiford State Prison. After allowing Padgett's husband and father to search the jail, McCall promised the mob that he would see that justice was done and urged them to "...let the court handle this calmly."

With Shepherd and Irvin out of harm's way, the mob looked for a new target. They turned on a black section of Groveland, a small town in South Lake County where two of the accused and their families lived. The men drove to Groveland in a caravan and once they arrived, shot into the tavern owned by the mother of Ernest Thomas, and hurled insults at any blacks they found. On the third day, fearing an escalation of mob and Klan violence, McCall and several prominent businessmen in the area warned most of the black residents to leave town until things settled down, which most did. McCall called in the National Guard, then pulled troops away from the black section of Groveland, and the mob moved in and proceeded to burn Shepherd's home and two others to the ground.[2] The presence of the National Guard halted the destruction caused by the rioters, however the true extent of bloodlust was not satisfied. This was disclosed when Cockcroft, the leader of the riot, revealed their true intentions when he told a reporter, "The next time, we'll clean out every Negro section in south Lake County." [3]

A grand jury indicted the three remaining rape suspects. Shepherd and Greenlee told FBI investigators that confessions were beaten out of them at the hands of deputies. Irvin refused to confess, despite being severely beaten. An FBI investigation concluded that Lake County Sheriff's Department deputies James Yates and Leroy Campbell were responsible for the beatings, and agents documented the physical abuse with photographs. The Justice Department urged the U.S. Attorney in Tampa to file charges, but U.S. Attorney Herbert Phillips was reluctant, and failed to return indictments. Once the trial began, the prosecution did not bring the alleged confessions into evidence, fearing that a higher court would overturn guilty verdicts on the grounds of coerced confessions. Shepherd and Irvin claimed they were in Eatonville, Florida, drinking that night. Greenlee claimed to be nowhere near the other defendants on that night and stated that he had never met the other defendants until he was arrested and taken to the same jail in Tavares, Florida. The physician who examined Norma Padgett was not called to the witness stand by the prosecution, and Judge Truman Futch did not allow the defense to call him. A forensics expert for the defense testified that the footprint casts were fraudulently manufactured by Deputy James Yates. (Yates was indicted years later in another footprint case when another deputy admitted that Yates had fraudulently manufactured shoeprint evidence and an FBI investigation confirmed the plaster casts were faked. But before Yates could be tried, the statute of limitations had expired.) Shepherd and Irvin were sentenced to death. Greenlee, because of his age, was sentenced to life in prison. Greenlee never appealed his conviction, as he faced receiving the death penalty in the future should another jury find him guilty again. In 1951, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Lake County's verdict on the grounds that blacks had been improperly excluded from the jury. But Justice Robert Jackson was more critical of the prejudicial pretrial publicity and McCall's trumpeting the coerced confessions to the press. In his concurring opinion, Justice Jackson wrote, "The case presents one of the best examples of one of the worst menaces to American justice."

In November 1951, McCall was transporting Shepherd and Irvin from Raiford to Tavares for the retrial, when he pulled his car off the state road leading into Umatilla, a small town in Lake County, claiming tire trouble. McCall swore in a deposition that Shepherd and Irvin attacked him in an escape attempt when he let them out of the car so that Shepherd could relieve himself. McCall claimed that he pulled his revolver and shot both prisoners, who were still handcuffed as they attacked. Shepherd was killed, but Irvin played dead and survived, despite being shot three times. The next day in his hospital room, Irvin told FBI investigators and the press that McCall shot them without provocation, and that Deputy James Yates, arriving at the scene, observed that Irvin was not yet dead. Irvin claimed that it was Yates who fired the sixth and last bullet into his neck, while Irvin was lying on the ground. Irvin's story was verified by author Gary Corsair in his 2010 book Legal Lynching: The Sad Saga of The Groveland Four. In his Pulitzer Prize-winning book, Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America, author Gilbert King examined the unredacted FBI files from the case and revealed that the FBI located a .38 caliber bullet buried ten inches in the ground beneath Irvin's blood spot—evidence that supported Irvin's version of the shooting.

A Lake County Coroner's inquest, however, never saw the FBI reports and concluded that McCall had acted in the line of duty, and Judge Truman Futch claimed that he saw no need to impanel a grand jury. The re-trial of Irvin was moved from Lake County to Marion County (just north of Lake County) and began in February 1952, after Irvin recovered from the shooting. This time, prosecutor Jesse Hunter offered Irvin a deal that if he pled guilty to the rape of Norma Padgett, the state would not seek the death penalty. Irvin refused, stating that he did not rape Norma Padgett and he would not lie, even if it saved his life. NAACP lawyer (and future Supreme Court justice) Thurgood Marshall represented Irvin in the re-trial. The trial became a pawn in the Cold War as newspapers in the Soviet Union pointed to the trial as evidence that American blacks were not free. New evidence was presented, but the jury again found Irvin guilty after a deliberation of 90 minutes, and Judge Futch once again sentenced Irvin to death. The case was appealed again, but the conviction was again upheld by the Florida State Supreme Court, and in early 1954, the Supreme Court of the United States declined to hear the case.

After promising Irvin's mother that he would not let her boy die in the electric chair, Thurgood Marshall continued to seek relief outside the courts. He organized a committee of religious leaders to apply pressure on newly elected Governor LeRoy Collins, who ultimately commuted Irvin's sentence to life in prison. After conducting his own investigation, Collins stated that "the State did not walk that extra mile--did not establish of Walter Lee Irvin in an absolute and conclusive manner." Irvin was paroled in 1968. In 1970, while visiting Lake County, he was found dead slumped over his car, officially of natural causes though doubt remained in Marshall's mind. Greenlee was paroled in 1962 and was still alive as of the publication of Gilbert King's book.

The Harry T. Moore bombing

Harry T. Moore, an executive director of the Florida NAACP, demanded that McCall be indicted for murder following the Groveland rape case, and requested that the Governor suspend him from office. Six weeks after calling for McCall's removal, Moore and his wife were killed when a bomb exploded under their bedroom in Mims in Brevard County on Christmas night. Rumors alleged that McCall was behind the bombing. However, an extensive FBI investigation at the time and additional separate investigations have failed to produce any evidence supporting the claim of McCall's involvement.

In 2005, a new investigation was launched by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to include excavation of the Moore home in a search for new forensic evidence that may assist with the investigation.

On August 16, 2006, Florida Attorney General Charlie Crist announced his office had completed its 20-month investigation, resulting in the naming of four now-dead suspects, Earl Brooklyn, Tillman Belvin, Joseph Cox and Edward Spivey. All four had a long history with the Ku Klux Klan, serving as officers in the Orange County Klavern.

Although members of the Ku Klux Klan were suspected of the crime, the people responsible were never brought to trial.[4]

References

  1. [King, Gilbert. "Chapter 9: Don't Shoot, White Man." Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America. New York: Harper, 2012. 116+. Print.]
  2. PBS - Freedom Never Dies: The Story of Harry T. Moore - Florida Terror - Groveland - Introduction
  3. [King, Gilbert. "Chapter 7: Wipe This Place Clean." Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America. New York: Harper, 2012. 92-93. Print]
  4. PBS - Freedom Never Dies: The Story of Harry T. Moore - Florida Terror - Groveland - Introduction, 2000. Retrieved May 20, 2007
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