Bickett Commutes
Sentences of Men
Raleigh, Dec. 3—Governor Bickett late last afternoon
commuted the sentences of George Lineberry, Grady Boyd, Paul Austin, Duncan
Solomon and Nick Simmons, charged with assault with intent to kill and
conspiracy to prevent the enforcement of law from four months on the roads to
fines of $75 each. These defendants were sentenced as the result of the riot at
Albemarle, which Governor Bickett asserted in no uncertain terms was due more
to the activities of outside agitators than to the men upon whom road sentences
were imposed, with the announcement that he had commuted these sentences,
Governor Bickett issued the following statement:
‘These defendants, together with 25 other prisoners, pleaded
guilty at the November term of Stanly superior court to a conspiracy to prevent
workers from entering a cotton mill to work on the morning of September 15,
1919. The defendants, Marvin I. Ritch and J.H. Graham, were sentenced to pay a
fine of $500 and all the other defendants were sentenced to pay fines ranging
from $75, downward, except the five defendants above named, who were all given
road sentences of four months each.
“A petition is presented to me presenting that the road
sentence against the above named defendants be commuted to fines. This petition
is signed by all the county officials of Stanly county; by all the town
officials of Albemarle; by the pastors of the churches; by the owners and
officers of the cotton mills of the town, and by every representative citizen
in that community, with whom I am personally acquainted. The evidence in the
case discloses that these five men were more sinned against than sinning. They
are not men of education, or of means, but are hard working men, and two outside
agitators, one a lawyer and one a labor agent, came into court and pleaded
guilty to the charge of urging these men to enter into this unlawful
conspiracy. The judge who tried the case saw fit in his wisdom, which I do not question,
to impose fines upon the chief conspirators, and I do not think that these
ignorant people, who followed the advice of men of more education and more experience
than themselves ought to be worked on the roads.
“The whole case illustrates how dangerous it is for our
people to act upon the advice of outside agitators, who have no jobs in the
community, who are not personally interested in the development of the business
interests of the community, who have no particular friends in the community,
and who have nothing to lose in case the community is stricken with business
paralysis. Our people would do well before listening to any agitator to
ascertain whether or not he proposes to lose his job when they lose theirs, to
go hungry when they go hungry and when the go to jail to go with them. For
these reasons the road sentence against each of the five defendants above named
is commuted to a fine of $75. Each fine to be paid $5 cash and the balance in
installments of $10 every 30 days.
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