
Pardon for Homer Plessy, of Plessy v. Ferguson's 'separate but equal' ruling, heads to Louisiana governor's desk
CNN
Homer Plessy, whose 19th century case Plessy v. Ferguson became a landmark civil rights Supreme Court ruling, is only a step away from a posthumous full pardon from the state of Louisiana.
Plessy's case led to the "separate but equal" doctrine and the Jim Crow laws regarding segregation of other public places like parks and restaurants.
On Friday, the Louisiana Board of Pardons on Friday voted unanimously in favor of a pardon for Plessy, who died in his 60's in 1925. Gov. John Bel Edwards' signature would make the pardon official.

A defiant Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is testifying before an investigative Georgia Senate Committee on Wednesday. The committee scrutinized her prosecution of President Donald Trump and multiple codefendants, at one point cutting Willis’ microphone briefly when she testified beyond the question she was asked.












