Innocence

Posthumous Declarations of Innocence

This is non-com­pre­hen­sive list of indi­vid­u­als declared inno­cent after their deaths.

The Martinsville 7” Receive Posthumous Pardons 70 Years After Their Executions in Virginia.

The Martinsville 7

In 1949, sev­en young Black men were accused of the rape and beat­ing of a white woman in Martinsville, Virginia. The sev­en — Francis DeSales Grayson, Frank Hairston Jr., Howard Hairston, James Luther Hairston, Joe Henry Hampton, Booker T. Millner, and John Clabon Taylor — were inter­ro­gat­ed by police with­out the appoint­ment of legal coun­sel. Under threats that they would be released to a lynch mob if they denied involve­ment, each con­fessed to par­tic­i­pat­ing in the rape. After a suc­ces­sion of per­func­to­ry tri­als before all-white, all-male juries, each was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death. They were exe­cut­ed in 1951 in the largest mass exe­cu­tion for rape in U.S. history.

Following years of advo­ca­cy from fam­i­ly mem­bers and oth­er advo­cates, the case gained renewed atten­tion on the sev­en­ti­eth anniver­sary of the exe­cu­tions, as Virginia con­sid­ered and then adopt­ed a bill to abol­ish the state’s death penal­ty. The advo­cates con­tin­ued to push for guber­na­to­r­i­al action, and Governor Ralph Northam announced the posthu­mous par­dons on August 31, 2021, say­ing This is about right­ing wrongs.” Northam’s par­dons did not address the ques­tion of inno­cence, but, Northam said, they serve as recog­ni­tion from the Commonwealth that these men were tried with­out ade­quate due process and received a racial­ly biased death sen­tence not sim­i­lar­ly applied to white defendants.


The Groveland Four” Posthumously Pardoned in Florida 70 Years After False Rape Accusation.

The Groveland Four, Charles Greenlee, Ernest Thomas, Walter Irvin and Samuel Shepherd.

On January 11, 2019, the Florida Clemency Board unan­i­mous­ly grant­ed posthu­mous par­dons to the Groveland Four,” four young African-American men false­ly accused of rap­ing a white teenag­er in Lake County, Florida in 1949

Charles Greenlee, Ernest Thomas, Walter Irvin, and Samuel Shepherd were charged with rap­ing 17-year-old Norma Padgett. Thomas escaped from cus­tody but was hunt­ed down and mur­dered by an angry mob. He was report­ed­ly shot 400 times. White mobs burned and shot at the homes of black fam­i­lies, many of whom fled and nev­er returned. Greenlee, Irvin, and Shepherd were beat­en until they false­ly con­fessed to the crime. All-white juries con­vict­ed them, sen­tenc­ing World War II vet­er­ans Irvin and Shepherd (pic­tured, right) to death and Greenlee (pic­tured, left), who was only 16 years old, to life in prison. 

Represented by Thurgood Marshall before the U.S. Supreme Court, Irvin’s and Shepherd’s con­vic­tions were unan­i­mous­ly over­turned in 1951. Shortly after the rever­sal, Lake County Sheriff Willis V. McCall shot the two hand­cuffed men while he was dri­ving them to a court appear­ance, and posed for a pho­to in front of their prone bod­ies. McCall claimed that he had act­ed in self-defense. Shepherd died. Irvin sur­vived by play­ing dead until oth­ers arrived at the scene. He was retried and once again sen­tenced to death by an all-white jury but received a last-minute reprieve when the pros­e­cu­tor expressed doubt as to his guilt. His sen­tence was then com­mut­ed to life in prison. Greenlee and Irvin were both even­tu­al­ly paroled, but Irvin died just one year after his release. Greenlee died in 2012


South Carolina Pair Exonerated 94 Years After Execution — The South Carolina Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services vot­ed 7 – 0 to par­don Thomas Griffin and Meeks Griffin for the 1913 mur­der of for­mer Confederate Army vet­er­an John Q . Lewis. The pair were exe­cut­ed in 1915 for the mur­der after anoth­er man, Monk Stephenson, plead guilty and received a life sen­tence in exchange for impli­cat­ing the Griffins. Stevenson lat­er told a fel­low inmate that he had impli­cat­ed the Griffin broth­ers because he believed they were wealthy enough to pay for legal coun­sel, and as such would be acquit­ted,” said legal his­to­ri­an Paul Finkelman. Two oth­ers, Nelson Brice and John Crosby, were also exe­cut­ed for the crime. The pair were great uncles of nation­al­ly syn­di­cat­ed radio show host Tom Joyner. It’s good for the com­mu­ni­ty. It’s good for the nation. Anytime that you can repair racism in this coun­try is a step for­ward,” Joyner said. (CNN​.com, October 152009).


Georgia Board to Pardon Woman 60 Years After Her Execution - The Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles in August 2005 issued a for­mal par­don for Lena Baker (pic­tured), the only woman exe­cut­ed in the state dur­ing the 20th cen­tu­ry. The doc­u­ment, signed by all five of the cur­rent board mem­bers, will note that the parole board­’s 1945 deci­sion to deny Baker clemen­cy and allow her exe­cu­tion was a griev­ous error, as this case called out for mer­cy.” Baker, an African American, was exe­cut­ed for the mur­der of Ernest Knight, a white man who hired her . Baker was tried, con­vict­ed, and sen­tenced to die in one day by an all-white, all-male jury. Baker claimed she shot Knight in self-defense after he locked her in his grist­mill and threat­ened her with a met­al pipe. The par­don notes that Baker could have been charged with vol­un­tary manslaugh­ter, rather than mur­der, for the death of E.B. Knight.” The aver­age sen­tence for vol­un­tary manslaugh­ter is 15 years in prison. Baker’s pic­ture and her last words are cur­rent­ly dis­played near the retired elec­tric chair at a muse­um at Georgia State Prison in Reidsville. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution, August 162005).

Suffolk District Attorney Posthumously Dismisses Charges Against Two Co-defen­dants in Mob-Related Murder — In 1968, Joseph Salvati, Peter Limone, Henry Tameleo, and Louis Greco were con­vict­ed of a 1965 mur­der of a Massachusetts-mob mem­ber. Mr. Limone, Mr. Tameleo, and Mr. Greco were sen­tenced to death by Massachusetts’ elec­tric chair, but were spared in 1974 when Massachusetts abol­ished the death penal­ty and their sen­tences were com­mut­ed to life in prison. Mr. Salvati was sen­tenced to life in prison and was released in 1997, fol­low­ing a com­mu­ta­tion of his sen­tence. Mr. Tameleo and Mr. Greco died in prison, in 1985 and 1995, respec­tive­ly. At tri­al, the main wit­ness against the four men was Joseph Barboza, a hit man coop­er­at­ing with pros­e­cu­tors, who lat­er admit­ted that he had fab­ri­cat­ed much of his tes­ti­mo­ny against the four men. In 2001, Mr. Limone’s con­vic­tion was over­turned and the case against him was offi­cial­ly dropped, as a result of new evi­dence (Commonwealth v. Limone, 2001 Mass. Super. LEXIS 7 (2001)). FBI doc­u­ments revealed that infor­mants had told the FBI before the mur­der that the vic­tim would be killed, and by whom, as well as a mem­o­ran­dum after the crime that list­ed the men involved. In 2004, the Suffolk District Attorney’s Office posthu­mous­ly dis­missed charges against Mr. Greco, cit­ing the evi­dence used in Mr. Limone’s exon­er­a­tion. Three years lat­er, in 2007, the charges against Mr. Tameleo were also dropped.

(Find more infor­ma­tion on Mr. Limone’s exon­er­a­tion, here.)

Frank Lee Smith was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death in Florida in 1986 for the rape and mur­der of 8‑year-old Shandra Whitehead. Smith’s con­vic­tion was based pri­mar­i­ly on three ques­tion­able wit­ness iden­ti­fi­ca­tions. The first wit­ness iden­ti­fied Mr. Smith at tri­al based on his shoul­ders,” while the sec­ond tes­ti­fied that he was both­ered” by the line up he was shown because Mr. Smith did not seem as tall as the man the wit­ness remem­bered. The police assured him that every­one in the line-up was at least 6’ tall, but that was not true — Mr. Smith was 59” tall. The final wit­ness tes­ti­fied that the man she had seen was not wear­ing glass­es although Smith, who was legal­ly blind, wore thick glasses.

Frank Lee Smith, Photo Courtesy of Innocence Project of Florida, Inc.

Mr. Smith con­sis­tent­ly main­tained his inno­cence, say­ing dur­ing the sen­tenc­ing phase of his tri­al: I didn’t do it…It real­ly hurt me to be accused of some­thing like this, when my mama was raped…and my mama was killed like that…How do you think I feel about a baby like that?” One wit­ness lat­er recant­ed her tes­ti­mo­ny and iden­ti­fi­ca­tion of Smith. In an affi­davit, she said, While I was in the court­room telling about what I saw, I knew that the man on tri­al was too thin to be the same man I saw on the street.” When an inves­ti­ga­tor for Mr. Smith showed the wit­ness a pic­ture of a man named Eddie Mosley, she claimed she real­ized her mis­take. When I looked at the pic­ture every­thing came back to me,” she said. The man in the pho­to is with­out a doubt the man I saw. I know that he is not the same man who was on tri­al for the lit­tle girl’s mur­der. I am so sor­ry that the wrong man is in prison and sen­tenced to death. I had doubts in the court­room, but I was under so much pres­sure. Also, the state attor­ney told me about how dan­ger­ous the man was and how he need­ed to be locked up for­ev­er.” Regardless of the affi­davit, Mr. Smith’s con­vic­tion and sen­tence was affirmed in 1990.

Mr. Smith died on January 30, 2000, from pan­cre­at­ic can­cer. In July of 2000, Mr. Smith’s attor­neys and the state reached an agree­ment to obtain DNA test­ing. On December 11, 2000, the lab report­ed that Mr. Smith’s DNA did not match the DNA evi­dence found at the crime scene. Four days lat­er, the lab report­ed that the genet­ic mate­r­i­al was con­sis­tent with Eddie Mosley’s DNA. Mr. Smith was posthu­mous­ly exon­er­at­ed on December 152000.

(Find more infor­ma­tion on Mr. Smith’s exon­er­a­tion, here)

From Professor Michael Radelet, University of Colorado:

In Illinois in 1893, Governor Peter Altgeld par­doned three of the Haymarket defen­dants, six years after four of their co-defen­dants had been hanged. An eighth defen­dant had tak­en his own life on the eve of his sched­uled exe­cu­tion. Altgeld issued the par­dons because all eight had been wrong­ful­ly con­vict­ed and were inno­cent of the crime .…” P. AVRICH, THE HAYMARKET TRAGEDY 423 (1984).

In Massachusetts in 1977 (on the 50th anniver­sary of their exe­cu­tions), Gov. Michael Dukakis apol­o­gized for the mas­sive due process vio­la­tions in the case of Sacco and Vanzetti.

In 1987, Nebraska Governor Bob Kerry par­doned William Jackson, who had been hanged exact­ly 100 years ear­li­er in Beatrice for the mur­der of a man who lat­er turned up alive.

In Maryland in 2001, Governor Paris Glendening issued a par­don to John Snowden, a Black man who was hanged in 1919 for the rape and mur­der of the wife of a promi­nent White busi­ness­man. Two key tri­al wit­ness­es had recant­ed their tes­ti­mo­ny and before the hang­ing, eleven of the twelve jurors had pled for mercy.

In 2009, South Carolina par­doned two African-American men, Thomas and Meeks Griffin, who had been elec­tro­cut­ed in 1915 for mur­der­ing a white Confederate War vet­er­an. They were con­vict­ed on the per­jured tes­ti­mo­ny of the actu­al mur­der­er, who false­ly fin­gered the men to save him­self from the executioner.