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Justice for Savory

Falsely Accused, Unjustly Convicted: A Child's Story

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Justice Denied while Voices Endure: Emmett Till and Johnnie Lee Savory

Emmitt and Johnnie
Emmett Till 

In 1955, fourteen year-old Emmett Till traveled from Chicago to Money, Mississippi, to visit his cousins. He returned home in a casket, his body distorted almost beyond recognition. As punishment for whistling at Carolyn Bryant, a white woman, outside the local grocery store, Carolyn’s husband, Roy Bryant, and brother-in-law, J.W. Milam, abducted Emmett in the middle of the night. They proceeded to torture, mutilate, shoot him, tie him to a seventy-pound cotton gin fan, and toss him into the Tallahatchie River. An all-white jury acquitted Milam and Bryant, although they later sold their confession to Look magazine.  

While officials in Mississippi tried to dispose of the body, Emmett’s mother, Mamie Till-Mobley, demanded that her son's body be returned to her and made the momentous decision to have an open casket funeral. A picture of his corpse was plastered on the cover of newspapers and magazines across the nation and over 50,000 people attended Emmett’s funeral. Emmett Till is one of the catalysts of the civil rights movement as his death forced a nation to confront injustice. 
 

Johnnie Lee Savory  

Convicted of double murder by an all-white jury in 1977 at the age of fourteen, Savory served thirty years in prison for a crime he did not commit. Released on parole in 2006, Savory still has not been officially exonerated. After his release from prison, Johnnie attended a play about Emmett Till and found himself overwhelmed with emotion as he related to the horrible fate of another innocent fourteen-year old child. Johnnie’s deep connection to Emmett was cemented when he discovered that they share the same birthday, July 25th.

Voices for Justice

Johnnie and Emmett’s cases both represent a state-sponsored denial of justice and the loss of innocence for children, for communities of color, and for our entire nation. However, these stories also are a part of a collective story for change, they contribute to the struggle for justice. Emmett’s death sparked change in this nation and his mother ensured that his legacy lives on for eternity. While Emmett’s voice was silenced, the strength and courage of so many in the civil rights movement allowed for their collective voice to be heard and heeded.

As Johnnie’s story reminds us, the civil rights movement does not and cannot remain in the past. Johnnie uses his voice to be part of this continued movement for justice for all people and you can contribute your voice to this movement as well. We are seeking 11,000 signatures to present a petition to Illinois Governor Pat Quinn to order DNA testing to exonerate Johnnie Lee Savory. I will continue to blog intertwining Emmett and Johnnie’s stories to illuminate the connections between the past and the present, and the continued struggle for justice. Sign the petition, speak out against wrongful convictions, and join in this powerful movement.  
 

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Jeannesegil
I graduated from Pomona College in May 2009 with a BA in Social Justice Studies (a self-designed major). I am interning at the Center on Wrongful Convictions, part of the Bluhm Legal Clinic at Northwestern University School of Law. I will leave in January to spend ten months at the University of Fort Hare in Alice, South Africa, as part of a Fulbright Fellowship. More

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Comments

I was absolutely shocked at the story of Emmett Till. I am interested in and a member of the Centre on Wrongful Convictions. This was one reason why the death penalty was abolished here in Australia. Johnnie Savory deserves to have the test and be really free.

Jeannesegil 13 weeks 2 hours ago
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Clout

Thank you very much for your comment Margaret! If you could sign the petition at: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/dnaforsavory/index.html
and spread the word to your friends, it would be much appreciated! Thank you again for your support!

About this blog

When Johnnie Lee Savory was 14 years old, he was falsely accused and unjustly convicted for double homicide in his hometown of Peoria, Illinois. In 2006, after spending 30 years in prison, Savory was granted parole and released.

Though a free man today, society still considers Savory an ex-felon, which is why he is asking Governor Pat Quinn to order DNA testing of the evidence that was used to convict him.

This blog, managed by Windy Citizen contributor John Maki, will chronicle Savory's fight for the justice that he has been denied. Through commentary, interviews, and web videos, it will also invite readers to get to know Savory and join him in his struggle.

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