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馃浉 #UFO captured in the skies of Hokuto City, #Japan The #UAP accelerates at high speeds and vanishes from the sky! What do you think this may be? #aliens #flyingsaucer #alientechnology #hypersonic #wormhole #stargate #fyp #foryou #foryoupage

ManishShah

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How to memorise what the blood is made of in 60s! #GCSE #Science #Biology #Studytok

ManishShah

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Send this to a depressed person in need 鉂わ笍 #comedy #parents #funnyvideos #snl #sketchcomedy #funny

ManishShah

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ManishShah

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George Stinney Jr.'s story is a tragic and unjust one. In 1944, at the age of 14, Stinney became the youngest person executed in the United States in the 20th century. The events leading to his wrongful conviction and execution highlight the systemic racism and injustice prevalent in the American legal system during that era. In March 1944, in Alcolu, South Carolina, two young white girls, Betty June Binnicker and Mary Emma Thames, were brutally murdered. George Stinney, an African American teenager, was quickly arrested as a suspect based on flimsy evidence and coerced statements. The lack of proper legal representation and the racial tension of the time played a significant role in the swift trial that followed. Stinney's trial lasted only a few hours, and he had no defense attorney present. The jury, composed entirely of white individuals, deliberated for only ten minutes before finding him guilty of the murders. There was no physical evidence linking Stinney to the crime, and his supposed confession was given under questionable circumstances. The young boy was sentenced to death by electrocution. Despite appeals for clemency and a flawed legal process, Stinney was executed on June 16, 1944. He was so small that he had to sit on a Bible in the electric chair to reach the electrodes. Decades later, in 2014, Stinney's conviction was posthumously overturned by a South Carolina circuit court judge, who cited fundamental violations of due process and the lack of a fair trial. The judge acknowledged the racial bias and rushed proceedings that led to George Stinney's wrongful execution, offering a belated recognition of the grave injustice done to him. The case remains a stark reminder of the systemic racism and shortcomings in the American legal system.

ManishShah

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#Milwaukee #PublicSafety #PrivatePolice

ManishShah

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