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In Richwood on June 29, 1940,
Deputy Sheriff Martin Catlette and Police Chief Bert Stewart
detained seven Jehovah's Witnesses, whose patriotism was doubted
by members of the local American Legion. After legionnaires
forced four of the Jehovah's Witnesses to drink doses of castor
oil, they marched all seven through a jeering mob to the post
office, where the Witnesses refused to salute the flag. Within
several weeks this incident attracted the attention of the newly
created Civil Rights Section of the U.S. Department of Justice.
On June 3, 1942, the U.S. District Court in Charleston convicted
Catlette and Stewart of violating the Witnesses' civil rights.
Catlette's conviction was upheld by the Fourth Circuit of the
U.S. Court of Appeals.
The legal action that followed
the attack conferred it with historical significance. The incident
provided the only federal conviction in the hundreds of brutal
assaults on Jehovah's Witnesses that swept America that year.
It was the Civil Rights Section's first successful prosecution
of public officials who used their office to abridge citizens'
civil rights. Finally, the Court of Appeals ruled that the statute
applied to public officials who acted in violation of the laws
prescribing their powers and duties. That understanding broadened
the interpretation of the civil rights statute and was later
adopted by the U.S. Supreme Court. This case expanded of legal
protection for religious liberties in the United States.
See also
West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette and Religious Liberty
and the Clarksburg Firings.
Smith, Chuck. AJehovah's
Witnesses and the Castor Oil Patriots: A West Virginia Contribution
to Religious Liberty.@ West Virginia History, 57 (1998):__
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