DULUTH – With a gun to his head, Max Mason told a police officer he had done no wrong.
Yet the black circus worker was convicted by an all-white jury of raping a white woman in Duluth in 1920 despite no evidence a crime had occurred.
And for 100 years, the official record reflected that lie.
No more.
Mason, a "scapegoat" for a mob that lynched three innocent black men in Duluth 100 years ago Monday, has been cleared of his century-old rape conviction.
On Friday morning the Minnesota Board of Pardons granted Mason the state's first posthumous pardon.
"This is 100 years overdue," said Gov. Tim Walz, who sits on the board along with Attorney General Keith Ellison and Lorie Skjerven Gildea, chief justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court.
It took a unanimous vote to grant the pardon, which followed emotional testimony from those supporting it.