National Post (National Edition)

FLORIDA PARDONS FOURMENIN 1949 RAPE CASE

Accused were black, victim was white, evidence scant

- KaTie meTTler

Seventy years ago in Groveland, Florida, a white teenager named Norma Padgett accused four black men of kidnapping and raping her in a car on a dark road.

Two of the men would eventually be shot dead by the segregatio­nist sheriff of Lake County and his angry mob, and the other two wrongfully convicted of crimes on little evidence. The Groveland Four, as they became known, inspired a Pulitzer-winning book and have been considered for decades one of Florida’s most grave injustices and a case study on failed rule of law in the Jim Crow south.

In 2017, the state of Florida formally apologized for what happened in 1949.

And on Friday, the state’s clemency board voted to posthumous­ly pardon all four men — Ernest Thomas, Samuel Shepherd, Charles Greenlee and Walter Irvin.

After hearing testimony from family members of the men and Padgett herself, now in her late 80s, newly-inaugurate­d Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis said this case was a “miscarriag­e of justice” and that the “only appropriat­e thing to do is to grant pardons.”

“I hope that this will bring peace to the their families and their communitie­s,” DeSantis said after the formal vote, which took place after his first Cabinet meeting as governor.

Padgett, who was 17 when she said she was raped, sat in a wheelchair and told DeSantis and the Cabinet the rape did indeed happen, saying she was dragged from a car, had a gun put to her head and was told not to scream or they would “blow your brains out.”

Within days of Padgett’s accusation­s, Shepherd, Greenlee and Irvin had been jailed and Thomas was dead, shot and killed by an angry mob — led by Sheriff Willis V. McCall — who had chased him 300 kilometres into the Panhandle. In Groveland, black-owned homes were shot up and burned, sparking chaos so intense the governor sent in the National Guard.

Despite the lack of evidence, a jury quickly convicted the three still alive. Greenlee, just 16 at the time, was sent to prison for life.

Shepherd and Irvin, friends and Army veterans, were sentenced to death, but the U.S. Supreme Court later overturned their conviction­s and ordered a retrial. Before that could happen, though, McCall shot them both. Shepherd died at the scene, but Irvin — who played dead — survived, and his sentence was later commuted to life in prison.

Carole Greenlee was in her mother’s womb when her father was accused of raping Padgett. He had been in Lake County that day looking for a job, a way to provide for his young family.

After his conviction, his wife would bring the infant Carole for visits but eventually they became too difficult. Carole didn’t see her father again until he was paroled in 1962.

Charles Greenlee did not appeal his conviction, according to PBS, and spent 12 years in prison. He died in 2012 at age 78.

Shepherd and Irvin, however, did appeal, and although the Florida Supreme Court initially upheld their conviction­s, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimousl­y overturned them.

They were shot by McCall on their return trip from prison to Lake County, where a new trial awaited them.

In his second trial, Irvin was represente­d by future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, but was once again convicted after a speedy deliberati­on. They appealed again, but the U.S. Supreme Court denied the case. The governor at the time also rejected a clemency appeal and scheduled Irvin’s execution.

But an emergency stay saved his life, and a newly elected moderate governor commuted Irvin’s sentence to life in prison after commission­ing a report on the case. He was released in 1968 and died two years later of a heart attack.

 ?? STATE LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES OF FLORIDA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lake County Sheriff Willis McCall, far left, and an unidentifi­ed man stand next to, from left, Walter Irvin, Samuel Shepherd and Charles Greenlee, charged with another man in connection with a 1949 rape in Florida.
STATE LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES OF FLORIDA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lake County Sheriff Willis McCall, far left, and an unidentifi­ed man stand next to, from left, Walter Irvin, Samuel Shepherd and Charles Greenlee, charged with another man in connection with a 1949 rape in Florida.

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