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Maryland
Related: About this forumGov. Hogan grants posthumous pardons to 34 Maryland lynching victims, including 15-year-old ...
Hat tip, some radio station that I was listening to overnight
Gov. Hogan grants posthumous pardons to 34 Maryland lynching victims, including 15-year-old Howard Cooper
By JEFF BARKER
BALTIMORE SUN | MAY 08, 2021 AT 6:11 PM
Gov. Larry Hogan granted posthumous pardons Saturday to 34 Maryland lynching victims, including Howard Cooper, a 15-year-old Black boy who was hanged outside the Towson jailhouse by a white mob in 1885. ... Hogans office said it was the first time a governor has issued a blanket pardon for the victims of racial lynchings.
In the interest of equal justice under law, I have made the decision to grant a posthumous pardon today for Howard Cooper, Hogan said during an outdoor ceremony in Towson in which Cooper was memorialized with a marker and speeches by the governor and other officials. ... And studying this case led me to dig deeper, Hogan, a Republican, continued. Today I am also granting pardons to all the 34 victims of racial lynchings in the state of Maryland which occurred between 1854 and 1933.
Cooper was convicted by an all-white jury that, within minutes, concluded he was guilty of raping Katie Gray, a white teenager, in an area then known as Rockland in Baltimore County. Neither Gray nor Cooper testified that Gray was raped. His sentence was death by hanging. He was lynched in the early hours of July 13, 1885, before his attorneys could appeal his conviction to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Hogan said the impetus for his action came in part from a petition by students at Loch Raven Technical Academy who urged a pardon for Cooper in light of the fact that he was never afforded due process under the law.
{snip}
Jeff Barker
Jeff Barker is The Sun's Washington correspondent and a business of sports reporter. A University of Pennsylvania graduate, he formerly worked for AP and as the Arizona Republics Washington reporter. He has covered politics and Terps basketball and football for The Sun. He is co-director of a documentary on the development of baseball in China.
By JEFF BARKER
BALTIMORE SUN | MAY 08, 2021 AT 6:11 PM
Gov. Larry Hogan granted posthumous pardons Saturday to 34 Maryland lynching victims, including Howard Cooper, a 15-year-old Black boy who was hanged outside the Towson jailhouse by a white mob in 1885. ... Hogans office said it was the first time a governor has issued a blanket pardon for the victims of racial lynchings.
In the interest of equal justice under law, I have made the decision to grant a posthumous pardon today for Howard Cooper, Hogan said during an outdoor ceremony in Towson in which Cooper was memorialized with a marker and speeches by the governor and other officials. ... And studying this case led me to dig deeper, Hogan, a Republican, continued. Today I am also granting pardons to all the 34 victims of racial lynchings in the state of Maryland which occurred between 1854 and 1933.
Cooper was convicted by an all-white jury that, within minutes, concluded he was guilty of raping Katie Gray, a white teenager, in an area then known as Rockland in Baltimore County. Neither Gray nor Cooper testified that Gray was raped. His sentence was death by hanging. He was lynched in the early hours of July 13, 1885, before his attorneys could appeal his conviction to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Hogan said the impetus for his action came in part from a petition by students at Loch Raven Technical Academy who urged a pardon for Cooper in light of the fact that he was never afforded due process under the law.
{snip}
Jeff Barker
Jeff Barker is The Sun's Washington correspondent and a business of sports reporter. A University of Pennsylvania graduate, he formerly worked for AP and as the Arizona Republics Washington reporter. He has covered politics and Terps basketball and football for The Sun. He is co-director of a documentary on the development of baseball in China.
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Gov. Hogan grants posthumous pardons to 34 Maryland lynching victims, including 15-year-old ... (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
May 2021
OP
Almost obscenely too little. How does society atone for terrible sins committed before most ...
marble falls
May 2021
#1
marble falls
(62,959 posts)1. Almost obscenely too little. How does society atone for terrible sins committed before most ...
... of us can remember? Their murderers went free and the victims get pardoned. I understand it can be a first step, but it seems inadequate.
IrishAfricanAmerican
(4,193 posts)2. Yep.