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 young white woman in Lake County, Florida in 1949. During the racist hys­te­ria fol­low­ing the accu­sa­tion, white mobs burned down black res­i­dences, a mas­sive white posse lynched a black sus­pect, all-white juries con­demned two inno­cent men to death and an inno­cent teen to a life sen­tence, and a racist sher­iff mur­dered one of the men and attempt­ed to kill anoth­er. Gov. Ron DeSantis, con­ven­ing the board for the first time since his elec­tion, urged it to grant clemen­cy, call­ing the noto­ri­ous case a mis­car­riage of jus­tice.” The state leg­is­la­ture issued a for­mal apol­o­gy to the fam­i­ly mem­bers of the men in 2017, but for­mer Gov. Rick Scott had tak­en no action on a pardon.

The four black men – Charles Greenlee, Ernest Thomas, Walter Irvin and Samuel Shepherd – were accused of the 1949 rape of a 17-year-old white woman, 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. The NAACP took up the men’s case, and they were rep­re­sent­ed by Thurgood Marshall, among oth­ers. In 1951, the U.S. Supreme Court unan­i­mous­ly over­turned Irvin and Shepherd’s con­vic­tions. 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, who sur­vived by play­ing dead until oth­ers arrived at the scene, was retried and once again sen­tenced to death by an all-white jury. He received a last-minute reprieve when the pros­e­cu­tor expressed doubt as to his guilt and his sen­tence was 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.

Carol Greenlee, Charles Greenlee’s daugh­ter, tes­ti­fied in favor of the par­dons. In an inter­view, she said, I want­ed two things to hap­pen. I want­ed the world to know the truth, and I want­ed my daddy’s name cleared.” Governor DeSantis said, I don’t know that there’s any way you can look at this case and think that [the] ideals of jus­tice were sat­is­fied. Indeed, they were per­vert­ed, time and time again.” In addi­tion to the par­don and the legislature’s apol­o­gy, the Groveland Four also received an apol­o­gy from the Orlando Sentinel, which inflamed pas­sions with its racist cov­er­age of the case in 1949. In par­tic­u­lar, the news­pa­per apol­o­gized for run­ning a polit­i­cal car­toon as the grand jury con­vened, show­ing four emp­ty elec­tric chairs with the title No Compromise!” A Sentinel edi­to­r­i­al pub­lished the day before the par­dons said, We’re sor­ry for the Orlando Sentinels role in this injus­tice. We’re sor­ry that the news­pa­per at the time did between lit­tle and noth­ing to seek the truth. We’re sor­ry that our cov­er­age of the event and its after­math lent cred­i­bil­i­ty to the cov­er-up and the offi­cial, racist narrative.”

(Stephen Hudak, Ryan Gillespie, Beth Kassab and Gray Rohrer, Groveland Four get jus­tice 70 years lat­er; Pardons approved for four accused black men, Orlando Sentinel, January 11, 2019; Samantha J. Gross, Florida par­dons Groveland Four: This was a mis­car­riage of jus­tice’, Tampa Bay Times, January 11, 2019; Jacey Fortin, Florida Pardons the Groveland Four, 70 Years After Jim Crow-Era Rape Case, New York TImes, January 11, 2019; Editorial, To the com­mu­ni­ty and the fam­i­lies of the Groveland Four: We’re sor­ry, Orlando Sentinel, January 10, 2019.) See Race and Innocence.

Citation Guide