Groveland Four officially exonerated after more than 70 years
“At the request of the local prosecutor, Administrative Judge Heidi Davis dismissed the indictments of Ernest Thomas and Samuel Shepherd, who were fatally shot by law enforcement, and set aside the convictions and sentences of Charles Greenlee and Walter Irvin. The men known as the Groveland Four, who ranged from 16 to 26 at the time, were accused of raping a woman in the central Florida town of Groveland in 1949.”
Gov. Ron DeSantis and the state’s clemency board gave pardons in January 2019 to the “Groveland Four”– Black men wrongly accused of raping a 17-year-old white woman in Lake County in 1949.
But despite the pardons, the case was still not over for the four men, now deceased – Charles Greenlee, Walter Irvin, Samuel Shepherd and Ernest Thomas.
In late October, State Attorney William Gladson, of the Fifth Judicial Circuit of Florida, announced that he had filed motions to dismiss the indictments of Thomas and Shepherd; set aside judgments and sentences of Greenlee and Irvin and “correct the record with newly discovered evidence,” according to a press release.
On Monday, Gladson said in the AP report: “We followed the evidence to see where it led us and it led us to this moment.”
State Rep. Kamia Brown, a Democrat representing Orange County, said in a statement:
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