True Crime Central
Guilty and Innocent at the Same Time: The Murder Case of Nathaniel Young and the Plea That Changed American Law A man stood in a North Carolina courtroom in 1963 and told the judge he was innocent — then pleaded guilty to the crime. That single moment created a legal mechanism used hundreds of times every year in American courts. The same mechanism that failed to save Henry Alford later freed three men who had spent nearly two decades on death row for murders the DNA evidence said they did not commit. In this episode, we explore the night Nathaniel Young was killed by a single shotgun blast in Forsyth County, the words Henry Alford spoke directly to the judge before accepting a deal he said gave him no real choice, and how the West Memphis Three used that same legal framework in 2011 to walk free while remaining convicted killers under the law. How does a plea of guilty mean innocent — and what does that cost the people who make it? Case Details Victim: Nathaniel Young, age unknown, private citizen. Date: November 22, 1963. Location: Forsyth County, North Carolina, USA. Case Status: Henry Alford pleaded guilty to second-degree murder on December 10, 1963, and was sentenced to thirty years. He died in prison in 1975. The United States Supreme Court upheld the plea in a six-to-three ruling, establishing the Alford plea as binding legal precedent still in use today. Episode Key Points - Henry Alford told the judge he was innocent at the moment he entered his guilty plea — and the judge accepted both statements simultaneously. - Ruby, Alford's longtime girlfriend, told police he left home with a shotgun and four shells, returned thirty minutes later, and described how he shot Nathaniel Young at the front door. - A 2007 DNA sweep of every piece of evidence in the West Memphis Three case found zero biological material linking the three convicted men to any of the three victims. - Damien Echols, Jason Baldwin, and Jesse Misskelley stood in court in 2011, proclaimed their innocence, pleaded guilty on paper, and walked out free — while remaining convicted murderers under Arkansas law. Nathaniel Young, Forsyth County North Carolina homicide, West Memphis Three Arkansas, 1963 murder plea, Alford plea Supreme Court, true crime, homicide, investigation, criminal minds, forensic science, murder, unsolved mysteries, true crime English.
101 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de True Crime Central!