Hale v. Kentucky

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hale v. Kentucky
United States Supreme Court
Full case name Hale v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Date decided 1938
Citations 303 U.S. 613

Hale v. Kentucky (303 U.S. 613) was a 1938 United States Supreme Court case relating to racial discrimination in the selection of juries for criminal trials. The case overturned the conviction of an African American man accused of murder because the lower court of Kentucky had systematically excluded African Americans from serving on the jury in the case. [1] NAACP counsel, including Charles H. Houston and Thurgood Marshall, represented Hale. [1]

Contents

[edit] Background

Joe Hale, an African American, had been convicted in McCracken County, Kentucky. No African Americans were selected as jury members within the past 50 years although nearly 7,000 were eligible for jury service. [1]

[edit] Ruling

The court unanimously ruled that the plaintiff's civil rights had been violated. [1]

[edit] Results

Hale v. Kentucky was one in a series of cases where the Supreme Court overturned convictions of blacks for reason of discrimination in jury selections in the lower courts. [1]

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e Encyclopedia. The History of Jim Crow.