Waterloo Region Record

Former heavyweigh­t boxing champion Johnson pardoned

Convicted in 1913 of transporti­ng a white woman across state lines

- JOHN ELIGON AND MICHAEL D. SHEAR The New York Times

WASHINGTON — On Thursday, U.S. President Donald Trump pardoned Jack Johnson, the first black heavyweigh­t champion, who was convicted in 1913 of transporti­ng a white woman across state lines.

Trump signed the pardon for Johnson during an Oval Office ceremony, sitting at the Resolute Desk and flanked by Sylvester Stallone, Lennox Lewis and others.

The president called Johnson “a truly great fighter, had a tough life,” but served 10 months in federal prison “for what many view as a racially-motivated injustice.” Trump said the conviction took place during a “period of tremendous racial tension in the United States.”

Decades after Johnson was convicted, his case drew significan­t attention as a gross miscarriag­e of justice and a symbol of the depths of racism in the American justice system.

He was convicted of violating the Mann Act, which prohibited travelling with a woman across state lines “for immoral purposes.” The woman Johnson transporte­d, Belle Schreiber, who had worked as a prostitute, had dated the heavyweigh­t champion.

Johnson was sentenced to a year in prison, but he fled the country for several years, returning in 1920 to serve his sentence.

“He was treated very rough, very tough,” Trump said Thursday as he signed what he called an “executive grant of clemency, a full pardon” to Johnson.

The president noted that bipartisan requests for the pardon for Johnson had been made for years, but that despite that, no previous president had been willing to sign one. He noted — with a glancing reference to former president Barack Obama — that the last resolution in Congress calling for the pardon was in 2015.

“They couldn’t get the president to sign it,” Trump said.

The World Boxing Council, one of boxing’s sanctionin­g bodies, invited the current and former champions, including American Deontay Wilder and Lewis of Britain, to the ceremony, according to Tim Smith, vice president of communicat­ions for Haymon Boxing.

Not only was Johnson the first black man to win the heavyweigh­t world championsh­ip, but he also was the rare black man of his era who was brash, ostentatio­us and unapologet­ic about his wealth and success. He taunted his opponents in the ring and dated white women, which was taboo at the time.

Johnson’s persona and race led to harsh coverage from newspapers over the years, which only served to further a negative image of the fighter.

“Jack Johnson lived in the lap of luxury, abused the fame and fortune that came to him, and died bereft of riches,” read an Associated Press article that ran in The New York Times after he died in 1946.

But in the decades after Johnson died, as society became more enlightene­d, his conviction came to be seen as a miscarriag­e of justice. Politician­s and celebritie­s including John McCain, Stallone and filmmaker Ken Burns advocated for his pardon.

The Obama administra­tion passed on pardoning Johnson, citing in part allegation­s of domestic violence against women. But last month, Trump tweeted that he was considerin­g pardoning Johnson after Stallone had told him about the boxer’s story.

Johnson’s 1910 fight against James J. Jeffries inspired the ’67 play and ’70 movie “The Great White Hope.”

After Johnson had won the heavyweigh­t title in 1908, many in white society advocated for a white fighter to step up and win the title back. Jeffries, a former champion who had been in retirement, took up that challenge. But Johnson decimated Jeffries, a victory that sparked violent white backlash in the form of riots across the country.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. President Donald Trump speaks after granting posthumous pardon to former heavyweigh­t champion Jack Johnson in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Thursday. Attendees included Sylvester Stallone, second from right, and...
OLIVIER DOULIERY GETTY IMAGES U.S. President Donald Trump speaks after granting posthumous pardon to former heavyweigh­t champion Jack Johnson in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Thursday. Attendees included Sylvester Stallone, second from right, and...
 ?? LIBRARY OF CONGRESS PRINTS AND PHOTOGRAPH­S DIVISION ?? Boxer Jack Johnson, shown in an undated photo, was pardoned Thursday by U.S. President Donald Trump.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS PRINTS AND PHOTOGRAPH­S DIVISION Boxer Jack Johnson, shown in an undated photo, was pardoned Thursday by U.S. President Donald Trump.

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