<oai_dc:dc xmlns:oai_dc="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd"><dc:coverage>United States, Georgia, Fulton County, Atlanta, 33.749, -84.38798</dc:coverage><dc:creator>Schwartz, Dale M., 1940-2021</dc:creator><dc:creator>Wittenstein, Charles F., 1928-2013</dc:creator><dc:creator>Thompson, Jerry, 1940-</dc:creator><dc:creator>Sherborne, Robert, 1950-</dc:creator><dc:creator>Henson, Allen Lumpkin</dc:creator><dc:creator>Slaton, John M.</dc:creator><dc:date>1982/1983</dc:date><dc:description>CONTENT WARNING: Page 154 of this item contains an image of Leo Frank's body after he was lynched. This folder contains a Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles Decision in Response to Application for Posthumous Pardon for Leo M. Frank (denied in 1983); an application for Leo M. Frank's posthumous pardon prepared by Dale M. Schwartz and Charles F. Wittenstein; National Pencil Company custodian Jim Conley's "four statements"; an affidavit dated March 4, 1982 from 83-year-old Alonzo Mann, who, at the time of Mary Phagan's murder, was the 14-year-old office boy at the National Pencil Company Building. Within the affidavit, Mann reverses his testimony, asserts that Jim Conley, not Leo Frank, was Mary Phagan's killer, and that Conley threatened to kill him if he stated otherwise at Frank's trial. The folder also contains a transcript of Mann's videotaped testimony, dated November 10, 1982; a copy of Georgia governor John M. Slaton's order of June 21, 1915 that commuted Leo Frank's execution sentence to life imprisonment; an in-depth special news section published on Sunday, March 7, 1982 in The Tennessean newspaper authored by Jerry Thompson and Robert Sherborne outlining the miscarriage of justice against Leo Frank; an affidavit from Annie Maud Carter, a girlfriend of Jim Conley who initially stated Conley had confessed Phagan's murder, but reversed her testimony under pressure from solicitor Hugh Dorsey; excerpts of the Leo Frank case covered in chapter 7 of "Confessions of a Criminal Lawyer" by Allen Lumpkin Henson (Vantage Press, 1959); a letter dated October 29, 1914 from Leo Frank to his college friend J. H. Gould on National Pencil Company letterhead.</dc:description><dc:format>image/jp2</dc:format><dc:language>eng</dc:language><dc:rights>http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/</dc:rights><dc:source>The Jeffrey Levine Papers</dc:source><dc:subject>Georgia. State Board of Pardons and Paroles</dc:subject><dc:subject>Pardon--Georgia</dc:subject><dc:subject>Lynching--Georgia--Marietta</dc:subject><dc:subject>Justice, Administration of</dc:subject><dc:subject>Judgments</dc:subject><dc:subject>Trials (Murder)--Georgia</dc:subject><dc:subject>Frank, Leo, 1884-1915--Trials, litigation, etc.</dc:subject><dc:subject>National Pencil Company--Employees</dc:subject><dc:subject>Jews--Georgia--History--20th century</dc:subject><dc:subject>Judicial process--United States</dc:subject><dc:subject>False testimony--Law and legislation</dc:subject><dc:subject>Governors--Georgia--History--20th century</dc:subject><dc:subject>Georgia--Ethnic relations</dc:subject><dc:subject>Georgia--History</dc:subject><dc:subject>Investigative reporting</dc:subject><dc:subject>Affidavits</dc:subject><dc:subject>Jews--Persecutions--Georgia--History--20th century</dc:subject><dc:subject>Journalism--United States</dc:subject><dc:subject>Governors--Georgia--Correspondence</dc:subject><dc:subject>Criminal law</dc:subject><dc:subject>Due process of law</dc:subject><dc:subject>Antisemitism--Georgia</dc:subject><dc:subject>Vigilantism--Georgia</dc:subject><dc:title>The Jeffrey Levine Papers</dc:title><dc:type>Text</dc:type></oai_dc:dc>