Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Barrier-breaking lawyer known for scoring landmark victories

- By Margalit Fox

The jurors were looking at her when they filed into court. That, Dovey Johnson Roundtree knew, could have immense significan­ce for her client, a feeblemind­ed day laborer accused of one of the most sensationa­l murders of the mid-20th century.

Little had augured well for that client, Raymond Crump Jr., during his eight-day trial in United States District Court in Washington: Mr. Crump, who had been found near the crime scene, was black and poor. The victim waswhite, glamorous and supremely well connected. The country, in the summer of 1965, seethed with racial tension amid the surging civil rightsmove­ment.

Federal prosecutor­s had amassed a welter of circumstan­tial evidence — including 27 witnesses and more than 50 exhibits — to argue that on Oct. 12, 1964, Mr. Crump had carried out the execution-style shooting of Mary Pinchot Meyer, a Washington socialite said to have been a former lover of President John F. Kennedy.

By contrast, Ms. Roundtree, who died on Monday at 104, had chosen to present just three witnesses and a single exhibit to the jury, which comprised men and women, blacks and whites. Her closing argument was only 20 minutes long.

Now, on July 30, 1965, the jury, having deliberate­d, was back. The court clerk handed the verdict slip to the judge, Howard F. Corcoran. For most observers, inside the courtroom and out, conviction — and an accompanyi­ng death sentence — was a foregone conclusion.

“Members of the jury,” Judge Corcoran said. “We have your verdict, which states that you find the defendant, Ray Crump Jr., not guilty.”

Ms. Roundtree’s defense, which hinged partly on two forensic masterstro­kes, made her reputation as a litigator of acuity, concision and steel who could win even the most hopeless trials. And this in a case for which she had received a fee of one dollar — and in a courthouse where she was not allowed to use the law library, cafeteria or restroom.

“As a woman, and as a woman of color in an age when black lawyers had to leave the courthouse to use the bathrooms, she dared to practice before the bar of justice and was unflinchin­g,” Katie McCabe, the coauthor of Ms. Roundtree’s memoir, “Justice Older Than the Law,” said in an interview for this obituary in 2016. “She was a one-woman Legal Aid Society before people used that term.”

Ms. Roundtree’s victory in the Crump case was not her first noteworthy accomplish­ment, and it was by no means her last. Born to a family of slender means in the Jim Crow South, Ms. Roundtree — or the Rev. Dovey Johnson Roundtree, as she was long formally known — was instrument­al in winning a spate of advances for blacks and women in midcentury America, blazing trails in the military, the legal profession andthe ministry.

Asan inaugural member of the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (later the Women’s Army Corps), she became, in 1942, one of the first women of any race to be commission­ed anArmy officer. Attaining the rank of captain, she personally recruited scores of African-American women for wartimeArm­y service.

As a Washington lawyer, she helped secure a landmark ban on racial segregatio­n in interstate bus travel in a case that originated in 1952 — three years before Rosa Parks refused to yield herseat in Montgomery, Ala.

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