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Brown v. Mississippi: Difference between revisions

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|court=Supreme Court of the United States
|court=Supreme Court of the United States
|date=1936
|date=1936
|case_treatment=No
|facts=In 1934, a murdered white man's body was discovered in the state of Mississippi. A mop of white people and a sheriff's deputy demand confession out of a black man under the threat of lynching. A suspect named Ellington was repeatedly tortured before being let go.  
|facts=In 1934, a murdered white man's body was discovered in the state of Mississippi. A mop of white people and a sheriff's deputy demand confession out of a black man under the threat of lynching. A suspect named Ellington was repeatedly tortured before being let go.  


Another murder suspect named Brown was forcibly hauled by a mob across the border to Alabama. After torture, Brown confessed to murder.
Another murder suspect named Brown was forcibly hauled by a mob across the border to Alabama. After torture, Brown confessed to murder.
|holding=A confession may not be obtained by violence.
|judgment=SCOTUS overturns Brown's conviction.
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 03:41, July 14, 2023

Brown v. Mississippi
Court Supreme Court of the United States
Citation
Date decided 1936

Facts

In 1934, a murdered white man's body was discovered in the state of Mississippi. A mop of white people and a sheriff's deputy demand confession out of a black man under the threat of lynching. A suspect named Ellington was repeatedly tortured before being let go.

Another murder suspect named Brown was forcibly hauled by a mob across the border to Alabama. After torture, Brown confessed to murder.

Holding

A confession may not be obtained by violence.

Judgment

SCOTUS overturns Brown's conviction.