Raleigh, July 3—“Here I am, warden, lock me up.”
These were the last words spoken by Herman Banks of Asheville before he entered the State prison here to start serving a term of from four to eight years for having been a member of the mob that searched the Buncombe County jail in search of Alvin Mansel, before Mansel’s trial and conviction for rape. Mansel is now in the death house of the prison, awaiting action by Governor McLean on an appeal for commutation of his sentence to death in the electric chair.
Banks came to the prison unaccompanied by any officer, having driven here in his car from Asheville. His brother came with him to drive his car back. Banks’ last act before leaving his family was to take his mother and brother to a picture show and his five-year-old daughter for an automobile ride afterwards. He left a 12-days-old son at home, who will be four years old before he ever will see his father.
“It is an unpleasant situation for me,” said Banks, who looks upon his conviction and sentence largely as a matter of circumstance of which he was the victim. “However, I am going to make the best of it.”
North Carolina, however, has learned a lesson from the situation, said Banks in discussing the indictment and speedy conviction of 15 alleged mob members. Banks appealed his case to the State Supreme Court, but his appeal was overruled. He maintains that he was merely an onlooker rather than an active member of the mob that stormed the court house. He made the mistake, he says, of allowing himself to become a member of the committee that examined the jail when the jailor sought to prove to the mob that Alvin Mansel was not in the jail at that time.
From the front page of The Concord Daily Tribune, July 3, 1926
newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn92073201/1926-07-03/ed-1/seq-1/