Williamston, Apr. 30—The stage is all set for the opening of two of the greatest legal battles that have ever occurred in the history of North Carolina, when on Monday, Judge N.A. Sinclair of Fayetteville will open a Special Term of Criminal Court called by Governor McLean to try Joseph Needleman, charged by Miss Effie Griffin, now Mrs. F.W. Sparrow Jr., with rape, and also try 30 men composing a mob that entered the Martin County jail and carried Needleman away and horribly and brutally mutilated him.
It cannot be said that interest in the two cases has abated, and it is believed that Williamston will be packed with visitors when the cases are called.
Needleman, at first expected to die, is slowly recovering and his physicians and attorneys say that he will be prepared for trial when his case is called. He is still in the Washington Hospital where he has been the recipient of many courtesies on the part of many of the leading citizens of this county. Mrs. Sparrow, who married her husband the day after Needleman’s mutilation and whose husband is now out on a $30,000 bond charged with being one of the chief leaders of the mob, still insists that Needleman raped her, but public sentiment seems to be still running strongly in his favor, and certainly does not regard that he is guilty of any major offense. It is assumed though that Needleman will be tried for his life. In this case, Solicitor Donnel Gilliam will be assisted in the prosecution by Messrs. Dunning and Moore and former Congressman H.S. Ward, while Needleman will be defended by Harry W. Stubbs, Congressman Lindsay Warren and A.D. MacLean. Solicitor Gilliam has indicated that he will call the Needleman case first.
Thirty men have been indicted and are out under bond either for conspiracy, jail breaking or castration, some being charged with all three offenses. Twenty-seven of the number are from Martin County, being residents of Griffin Township and Robersonville, while the other three, F.W. Sparrow Sr., F.W. Sparrow Jr. and Claro Heath, are from Kinston. Twenty-four of the 30 men so indicted have made sworn confessions to the Solicitor and his associates, but in spite of this and other evidence, it is expected that a stiff fight will be made on behalf of the three Kinston men and Dennis Griffin and Julian Bulluck of Robersonville. These five men are regarded as the ring leaders of the mob and no confessions have been made by them. In the prosecution of the mob, Solicitor Gilliam will e assisted by A.D. MacLean and Congressman Warren; the confessing defendants by Dunning & Moore and Ward & Grimes; Griffin and Bulluck are represented by Harry W. Stubbs; while State Chairman John G. Dawson is representing the three men from Kinston.
There is a possibility that the cases may not be tried on Monday, but may be removed by Judge Sinclair to either Beaufort, Pitt, Edgecombe or Hallifax. Practically every man, woman and child in this county have probably discussed the cases and made some comment on them.
From the front page of The Independent, Elizabeth City, N.C., Friday, May 1, 1925
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