The 10 Most Controversial Death Penalty Cases Ever
9 The Scottsboro Boys (1931)
Eight African-American teenage boys referred to as “The Scottsboro Boys” were given the death penalty in 1931 for raping two white women on a freight train. Every member of the jury was white, the two defense lawyers were a rusty retiree and a Tennessee real estate lawyer with no knowledge of Alabama law, and the entire trials were over in a single day.
The black community was outraged (one of the boys sentenced to the electric chair was 12 years old) and carried out a protest in Harlem, New York City.
Due to the overwhelming controversy, the authorities were forced to take the case to Supreme Court and it was declared that the accused had received inadequate defense.
Four of the teenagers had all charges against them dropped, three were sentenced to life imprisonment, and Clarence Norris was given the death penalty a second time, although it was later reduced to life imprisonment, and then he was pardoned in 1976.