DULUTH – Max Mason was the only person sent to prison for the reported rape of Irene Tusken, an unproven allegation that resulted in a white mob lynching three black men in downtown Duluth 100 years ago next week.
On Friday, as the state continues to confront the aftermath of George Floyd's death and calls for racial justice, Mason could become the first person granted a posthumous pardon in Minnesota's history.
"It is not surprising that Mason, a poor black laborer from the South, was convicted of a fictitious charge of raping a white woman by an all-white jury in the 1920s in Duluth," reads his pardon application. "There is also no question that now, one century after the horrors of Duluth in 1920, the time has come for Max Mason to receive that pardon."
If the members of the Board of Pardons — Gov. Tim Walz, Attorney General Keith Ellison and Lorie Skjerven Gildea, chief justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court — find they have the legal authority to grant a posthumous pardon, they could vote to grant one Friday morning.
The application has the backing of numerous former state leaders and current Duluth officials, who have submitted letters in support of the pardon.
"A pardon reminds all of us that the lynchings and circumstances giving rise to them were a stain on the history of Minnesota and do not reflect who we are as a state," wrote nearly a dozen former pardon board members, including former Govs. Arne Carlson, Tim Pawlenty and Mark Dayton and former attorneys general Walter Mondale, Skip Humphrey and Lori Swanson.
"The historical record clearly reflects that Mr. Mason was investigated, charged and convicted because of his race and not because of the strength and sufficiency of the evidence," St. Louis County Attorney Mark Rubin wrote.
Jerry Blackwell, a Minneapolis lawyer who drafted Mason's pardon application, said he's hopeful the application will get the unanimous vote needed to grant the pardon.