Black Teen Se

Black Teen Se




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Black Teen Se


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More than 90 years after he became the youngest person to be executed in Pennsylvania's history, charges have been dismissed against a Black teen who was sentenced to death by an all-white jury.
District Attorney Jack Stollsteimer announced Monday that the case against Alexander McClay Williams has been nol prossed following a successful joint motion. 
“By acting to nol pros the case against Williams, today’s decision is an acknowledgement that the charges against him should never have been brought,” a spokesperson for the Delaware County District Attorney’s Office wrote. 
Williams, a 16-year-old Black student at the Glen Mills School for Boys, was convicted and sentenced to death at the Media Courthouse on February 27, 1931. He remains the youngest person executed in Pennsylvania’s history. 
“Sadly, we cannot undo the past. We cannot rewrite history to erase the egregious wrongs of our forebearers,” Stollsteimer said. “However, when, as here, justice can be served by publicly acknowledging such a wrong, we must seize that opportunity."
On October 3, 1930, 34-year-old Vida Robare, a white house matron at the Glen Mills School for Boys, was found murdered inside her cottage on the school grounds. Her body was discovered by her ex-husband Fred Robare, who was also an employee at the school. 
Williams was arrested and charged with Robare’s murder. On October 24, 1930, William H. Ridley, the first African American lawyer to join the Delaware County Bar Association, was appointed to represent Williams. 
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During the 17 days between Williams’ arrest and Ridley’s appointment, the teen signed three separate murder confessions and had been interrogated five times without an attorney or parent present. 
“Williams ‘confessed’ to the crime, despite the lack of eyewitnesses or direct evidence implicating him,” a Delaware County District Attorney’s Office spokesperson wrote. 
Ridley was paid $10 by the Court for expenses (the equivalent of $173 today) and had only 74 days to establish a defense for Williams, without any help from investigators, experts or resources. 
The trial lasted less than two days and the all-white jury found Williams guilty in less than four hours. No appeal was ever filed. 
Officials say evidence in Williams’ favor was either ignored or unexamined, including a bloody handprint from a full-grown man that was found and photographed by state police near the door of the crime scene and examined by fingerprint experts but never publicly identified or mentioned during the trial. 
Officials also said Robare had divorced her estranged husband due to his “extreme cruelty” yet he was never considered a suspect in her murder. 
“We certainly recognize that the actions taken in 1930 were before Miranda and Gideon became the law of the land,” Stollsteimer said. “However, this young man was entitled to the protections of our Constitution, particularly the Fifth Amendment’s protections against self-incrimination and the Sixth Amendment’s right to counsel. We believe that this young man’s constitutional protections were violated in an irreparable way.”
For decades, Williams’ sole surviving sister, 92-year-old Susie Carter, as well as Sam Lemon, Ridley’s great-grandson, worked to show the inconsistencies in evidence as well as the unfair way the case was handled. Finally, in 2017, Williams’ record was expunged. 
“Today’s action was only possible because of the work of Sam Lemon and his counsel, Robert Keller, Esq,” Stollsteimer said. “Mr. Lemon has spent years researching this case, and together with Mr. Keller, he has worked with our office and the courts to find a mechanism for the legal system to redress this heartbreaking miscarriage of justice. They both deserve our thanks for their tenacious pursuit of justice.” 

The Washington Post Democracy Dies in Darkness
Lawsuit: Death of Black teen at juvenile center foreshadowed
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WICHITA, Kan. — The death of a Black teenager at a Kansas juvenile detention center was foreshadowed five years earlier by a state inspection that noted systemic deficiencies in the facility’s handling of children with mental health issues, according to a federal civil rights lawsuit filed Monday.
Cedric Lofton’s foster father called authorities in September 2021 seeking help because the 17-year-old was hallucinating and needed to go to a mental health facility. Instead, police forcibly took him to the Sedgwick County Juvenile Intake and Assessment Center, where he had to be resuscitated after he was held facedown for more than 30 minutes during an altercation. He died two days later.
His brother, Marquan Teetz, acting as representative of Lofton’s estate, sued Sedgwick County, five detention center employees, the city of Wichita, and the unidentified police officers. According to the complaint, Teetz seeks to “illuminate the truth and obtain some measure of justice for Cedric’s death.”
Teetz said Monday that he is heartbroken from his brother’s death, adding that he sued “just to show they can’t get away with it. I want to prove we still have a justice system.”
More than 30 people gathered in front of the Sedgwick County Courthouse chanting, “Justice for CJ!” after his lawyers held a news conference to announce the filing of the lawsuit.
“Cedric would be alive today if Sedgwick County executives and the Wichita Police Department followed the clear recommendations of the report issued by the Kansas Department of Corrections in March of 2016,” said Andrew M. Stroth, the lead attorney representing the family.
The county did not immediately reply to emails from The Associated Press seeking comment. The Wichita Police Department said it cannot comment on pending litigation. Sedgwick County’s Corrections Director Glenda Martens has described what happened as “tragic” but said that the corrections workers followed policy in restraining the Cedric Lofton. Wichita police have said they’ve been looking into the actions officers took when booking Lofton.
No one has been criminally charged in Lofton’s death. In January, Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett said the state’s “stand-your-ground” law prevents him from bringing any charges because staff members were protecting themselves.
Teetz’s lawsuit seeks compensatory and punitive damages in an amount to be determined by a jury.
The lawsuit contends that Lofton’s death was “presaged” by the state Corrections Department inspection. The inspection report, a copy of which the AP reviewed, noted systemic deficiencies at the juvenile facility, including its inability to handle children with mental health issues, its need for training on de-escalation techniques and management of risk.
The scathing inspection also cited the facility’s need for assistance in dealing with a Wichita Police Department “who too often dropped juveniles at JIAC’s door as a form of punishment while refusing any obligation to transport such juveniles for mental health treatment,” according to the court filing.
“Everything that happened in that report lines up precisely with what happened to Cedric,” Stroth said.
The lawsuit alleges that when confronted by questioning during intake at the facility about whether Lofton required medical treatment, Wichita police intentionally falsified their response on a form and swore that he needed no such treatment. An intake official witnessed the police officer change his response on the form when the officer learned that would trigger an obligation to transport the teen for treatment.
“In other words, the officer prioritized his own convenience at the expense of this child’s welfare,” the lawsuit alleges. “And JIAC officials knowingly permitted it.”
The lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court for Kansas accuses each of the five detention center employees of using excessive force, failing to intervene in other officer’s use of deadly force and being deliberately indifferent to Lofton’s serious medical needs.
The lawsuit also alleges excessive force by Sedgwick County, contending its policies, practices and customs allow such force against juveniles. It also accuses the county of failure to train employees on the proper use of force, de-escalation techniques and the management of juveniles with mental health issues.
The complaint further contends Wichita officers were deliberately indifferent to Lofton’s medical needs and accuses the city of indifference in failing to train officers on dealing with juveniles and others in the throes of a mental health crisis.

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