History, asked by sanjanpant6977, 2 days ago

Why was Leo Frank's 1913 murder conviction called into question?

Answers

Answered by jgreene230719
0

Answer:

D

Explanation:

There was conflicting evidence as to his guilt.

Answered by dipanjaltaw35
0

Answer:

The Leo Frank case is one of Georgia's most renowned and well documented court cases. A Jewish man was tried and convicted in Atlanta of raping and killing a thirteen-year-old girl who worked for the National Pencil Company, which he controlled. The case spread throughout the country until Frank's hanging two years later. The level of anti-Semitism involved in Frank's conviction and subsequent lynching motivated Jews and others across the country to oppose the conviction of an innocent man.

Explanation:

Mary Phagan, the child of tenant farmers who had migrated to Atlanta for financial gain, went to the pencil factory on April 26, 1913, to collect her week's salary. The factory's superintendent, Leo Frank, compensated her. He was the last person to admit to seeing Phagan alive. The factory watchman discovered her beaten and bloodied body in the cellar in the middle of the night and phoned the police. When the city received the news, it was shocked. Before her death, rumours circulated that she had been sexually raped. The people expected rapid action and justice.

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