The Truth Behind Mary Phagan’s 1913 Murder: Fight Back Episode 68 with Jake ShieldsEpisode 68 of the Fight Back podcast, hosted by Jake Shields and released on April 26, 2025, dives deep into the 1913 murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan, a case that remains one of the most controversial in American legal history. Shields begins by recounting the tragic events of April 26, 1913, when Phagan, a worker at the National Pencil Company in Atlanta, visited the factory to collect her wages and was later found raped and strangled in the basement by watchman Newt Lee. The podcast details the swift investigation that zeroed in on Leo Frank, the factory’s Jewish superintendent, who admitted to seeing Phagan that day but denied any wrongdoing. Shields examines the prosecution’s case, led by Hugh Dorsey and Frank Hooper, which presented forensic evidence—blood and hair in the factory’s machine room—and relied heavily on the testimony of Jim Conley, a janitor with a criminal past who claimed Frank confessed to the murder and instructed him to dispose of Phagan’s body. The episode explores the defense’s counterarguments, led by attorneys Luther Rosser and Reuben Arnold, who portrayed Conley as the real killer, a theory later bolstered by Alonzo Mann’s 1982 affidavit, where Mann, a former office boy, claimed he saw Conley with Phagan’s body but remained silent out of fear. Shields delves into the trial’s social context, highlighting the antisemitism allegations that surrounded Frank’s prosecution, which the defense argued biased the jury. The podcast notes the trial’s conclusion on August 25, 1913, with Frank’s conviction and death sentence, a verdict that sparked national outrage and led to the founding of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) to address antisemitism. Shields critiques the ADL’s ongoing efforts to posthumously exonerate Frank, pointing to the Leo Frank Trial Brief of Evidence, which documented extensive forensic and witness testimony upheld through appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court. The episode also covers the aftermath: Governor John Slaton’s 1915 commutation of Frank’s sentence, which incited public fury, and the subsequent lynching of Frank by a mob in Marietta on August 17, 1915, an act carried out by a group calling themselves the Knights of Mary Phagan. Shields addresses the racial dynamics of the case, noting the unusual circumstance in the Jim Crow South where a Black man’s testimony (Conley’s) was prioritized over a white man’s (Frank’s), reflecting the complex interplay of race and prejudice. The podcast reflects on the 1986 pardon by the Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles, which acknowledged procedural errors but stopped short of exonerating Frank, and recent developments as of May 20, 2025, including advocacy by groups like the Georgia Innocence Project for a full exoneration, which remains contentious. Shields incorporates contemporary perspectives from X, where users debate Frank’s guilt, with some citing Mann’s affidavit as evidence of innocence, while others, including Phagan’s family, maintain the trial’s verdict was just. The episode concludes by emphasizing the case’s lasting impact on discussions of justice, antisemitism, and racial bias, urging listeners to grapple with the complexities of historical truth in a polarized modern context.