The accidental encounter in 1944 brought the 14-year-old George Stinney Jr. easily into contact with two white girls. At the moment the girls left, an immutable mystery was born
Introduction Looking back on the history of executions in the United States, history shows that 14-year-olds were executed. In 1944, a black teenager named George Steiner got shocked as two white girls beaten and sentenced to murder and electric shock. This incident occurred in Columbia, South Carolina. (ABC, 2013) Many other states participated in the implementation of youth during this period. - When thinking about bullying, they often think about school children and their abuse, sometimes abuse. There is no real argument about the effect of bullying on victims and bullying. However, what has never been considered is the effect of bullying on the law.
George Stinney Jr. lives in Mill Town, Alcolu, South Carolina. Here white and black people are separated by railroad tracks. Stinney's family lived in the house until his father George Sr was fired from the local wood factory. According to the court 's document, on March 24, 1944, 11 - year - old Betty June Binnicker and 7 - year - old Mary Emma Thames took a bicycle to find flowers in the black part of Alcolu. When they saw Stinney and his sister Aime taken outside their wealth, they stopped asking if they knew where they should find a maypops
After more than 70 years, the Steiny family decided to cancel the case and take the case back to the court to bring justice. Brothers and sisters of George Junius Stinney Jr. testified in court and wanted to have a chance to do a new fair trial. Unfortunately, the judge ruled that the trial can not continue because there is too much evidence. Emmett Louis Till was a 14-year-old boy, was cruelly beaten and killed by Carolyn Bryant (white woman) sexually harassing her. Emmett Tier was kidnapped by Caroline Bryant's husband and brothers, beaten with malice, was shot head and thrown into the Tallahaci River. Three days later, the body of Emmett Till was discovered. Emmett Tills's mother Mamie Carthan Till-Mobley accused and condemned Carolyn Bryant's husband and brothers