- Wilmington Ten
The Wilmington Ten were a group of
civil rights activists who spent nearly adecade in jail after being convicted ofarson andconspiracy in 1971. The case became an internationalcause celebre amidst widespread beliefs that the individuals in the case were only guilty of holding dissenting political beliefs.cite news |url=http://web.mit.edu/esg-conscience/www/resr/mmr-young.shtml |publisher=Newsweek |date=July 31 ,1978 |page=23 |accessdate=2007-12-14 |title=US Political Prisoners? |author=Franker, Susan; Smith, Vern E.; Lee, Elliott D.]Amnesty International took up the case in 1976 and the convictions were finally overturned on a technicality in 1980.Firebombing of Mike's Grocery
In the 1960s and 1970s, African-American residents of
Wilmington, North Carolina were unhappy with the lack of progress in implementing reforms from federal legislation and court decisions during theAmerican Civil Rights Movement . Additionally the 1968assassination ofMartin Luther King, Jr. increased racial tensions and lead to an increase in outbreaks of violence, including the arson of several white-owned businesses.In February 1971, Reverend Benjamin Chavis, Jr. of
Oxford, North Carolina was sent to Wilmington by theUnited Church of Christ to leadAfrican American students in aboycott of the city's schools. Racial tension had increased after the 1969integration of Wilmington high schools and a number of clashes between white and African-American students had resulted in a number of arrests and expulsions. In response to a number of arsons in Wilmington, members of theKu Klux Klan and otherwhite supremacist groups began patrolling the streets.cite web
url=http://www.lib.unc.edu/ncc/ref/nchistory/feb2005/
title=This Month in North Carolina History - The Wilmington Ten
accessdate=2008-06-26
last=Graham |first=Nicholas
year=2005
month=February
format=
work=North Carolina Collection
publisher=Wilson Library,University of North Carolina
pages= |language= |doi= |archiveurl= |archivedate= |quote= ]On
February 6 ,1971 , Mike's Grocery, a white-owned business, was firebombed. Whenfirefighters arrived to put out the flames, they were fired upon bysnipers positioned on the roof of Gregory Congregational Church. A number of people, including Chavis and several students, were barricaded inside the building. The area erupted into rioting for the next day. On February 8 the National Guard entered the church and found it empty. The violence resulted in two deaths, six injuriesFact|date=December 2007, and over $500,000 in property damage.Fact|date=December 2007 Chavis and nine others, eightAfrican American men and one white woman, were arrested and tried and convicted for arson and conspiracy in connection with the firebombing of Mike's Grocery. They were sentenced to nearly 28 years in prison.Trial and sentencing
The state's case against the Wilmington Ten was seen as controversial both in the state of
North Carolina and in theUnited States . Two witnesses recanted. One testified that he was given aminibike in exchange for his testimony against the group. Another witness, Allen Hall, had a history ofmental illness and had to be forcibly removed from the courthouse after recanting on the stand uponcross examination . But despite these incidents, the group was convicted.Fact|date=December 2007The resulting sentences for the men ranged from 29 years to 34 years for arson. Ann Shepard of
Auburn, New York age 35, received 15 years as an accessory before the fact and conspiracy to assault emergency personnel. The youngest of the group, Earl Vereen, was 18 years old at the time of his sentencing. Reverend Chavis was the oldest of the men at age 24. The sentences totaled 282 years.Fact|date=December 2007 The convictions were eventually overturned by thefederal appeals court in 1980.International response
Several national magazines, including "Time," "
Newsweek ," "Sepia" and "The New York Times Magazine ," published articles on the trial and its aftermath. When then PresidentJimmy Carter admonished theSoviet Union for holding political prisoners, the Soviets responded by citing the incarceration of the Wilmington Ten as an example of American political imprisonment.Fact|date=December 2007 In 1977,60 Minutes aired a special about the case, insinuating that the evidince against the Wilmington Ten was fabricated.Amnesty International
Amnesty International (AI) took on the Wilmington Ten case in 1976. The men still in prison at the time were part of a group of 11 African American men incarcerated in the U.S. that AI considered to bepolitical prisoners , under the definition in the 1948Universal Declaration of Human Rights .The "Ten"
* Benjamin Chavis (age 24) - 34 years
* Connie Tindall (age 21) - 31 years
* Marvin "Chili" Patrick (age 19) - 29 years
* Wayne Moore (age 19) - 29 years
* Reginald Epps (age 18) - 28 years
* Jerry Jacobs (age 19) - 29 years
* James "Bun" McKoy (age 19) - 29 years
* Willie Earl Vereen (age 18) - 29 years
* William "Joe" Wright, Jr. (age 19) - 29 years
* Ann Shepard (age 35) - 15 yearsReferences
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