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Ray Hintonauthor

Anthony Ray Hinton

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Anthony Ray Hinton (born June 1, 1956) is an American activist, writer, and author who was wrongly convicted of the 1985 murders of two fast food restaurant managers in Birmingham, Alabama. Hinton was sentenced to death and held on the state's death row for 28 years before his 2015 release.

In 2014 the Supreme Court of the United States unanimously overturned his conviction on appeal, after which the state dropped all charges against him. The court was unable to affirm the forensic evidence of a gun, which was the only evidence in the first trial. After being released, Hinton wrote and published a memoir; The Sun Does Shine: How I Found Life and Freedom on Death Row (2018). O'Shea Jackson Jr. portrayed Hinton in the 2019 film Just Mercy.

On February 25, 1985, and July 2, 1985, two fast-food managers, John Davidson and Thomas Wayne Vason were killed in separate incidents during armed robberies at their fast-food restaurants in Birmingham. A survivor of a third restaurant robbery picked a photo of Anthony Ray Hinton, then age 29, from a lineup, and the police investigated him. At the time, Hinton worked at a supermarket warehouse and lived with his mother, Buhler Hinton, at her home in rural Alabama, about half an hour north of Birmingham.

After Hinton's arrest, his public defense attorney did not provide adequate counsel. He said to Hinton, "All of y'all blacks always say you didn’t do something." and "Y'all blacks always sticking up for each other."[who?] The prosecutor discredited the credibility of his ballistics expert - the only one the attorney thought he could hire with the funds available - due to the expert's physical limitations and lack of experience. The jury disregarded the testimony of Hinton's boss, who testified that he was at work during the time of the alleged crimes.

The prosecution's only evidence at the trial was a statement that ballistics tests showed four crime scene bullets matched Hinton's mother's gun, which was discovered at her house during the investigation. No fingerprints or eyewitness testimony were introduced. Hinton was convicted of each of the two murders and sentenced to death.

In June 1988, the unanimous Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Hinton's conviction and death sentence. In June 1989, that judgment was affirmed by the unanimous Supreme Court of Alabama. Hinton was sent to death row and held in solitary confinement for nearly three decades. During his decades in prison, he was supported by his mother's faith in his innocence and that of a longtime friend, Lester Bailey, who visited him monthly. Hinton's mother died in 2002.

While on death row, Hinton spent much of his time reading. He organized a book club that was allowed to meet in the prison's law library. Among the authors whom the prisoners read and discussed were James Baldwin and Harper Lee. After a few years, the club grew as the news spread quickly in the prison that reading was a good escape. 

However, the number of members also gradually became smaller when book club members were executed. A total of 54 men walked past Hinton's cell on their way to execution. Hinton would smell burning flesh from the electric chair, also called Yellow Mama because it was close to his cell. Finally, Hinton was the last prisoner left on death row.

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The Sun Does Shine

Oprah Winfrey
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