On a sweltering day in August 1925, Mary Vickery vanished from Coxton, Kentucky. Several months later, her remains were found in an abandoned mine located just outside the town. A local taxi driver was apprehended, tried, and sentenced to life in prison for the teenager's murder. In the spring of 1927, a young woman appeared in Harlan County with information that could clear his name.
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Episode Sources
- The Lexington Herald: Coxton Child Still Missing, August 30, 1925
- The Harlan Daily Enterprise: Vickery Girl Still Missing, September 18, 1925
- The Harlan Daily Enterprise: Dabney Caught: Now in Jail, March 5, 1926
- The Harlan Daily Enterprise: Dabney Given Life for Slaying of Vickery Girl, April 2, 1926
- The Atlanta Constitution: When Justice Triumphed, September 4, 1932.
- Kidnapping, Murder and Mayhem: “She Rose from the Dead”, September 10, 2020.
- The Messenger: Marie Jackson fails to know Mary Vickery, March 22, 1927
- The Park City Daily News: A Woman Scorned, March 22, 1927
- The Lexington Herald: Senate Bill Asks $5,000 to Repay Harlan Man for Erroneous Imprisonment, February 15, 1928
- The Voice: An Act of Revenge, August 17, 1935
- National Register of Exonerations: Condy Dabney
- Edwin Borchard: Convicting the Innocent: Errors of Criminal Justice (1932)
- FindaGrave: Condy Ulysses Dabney, 1895-1966
Episode Music
Out of the Mines, courtesy of Ross Gentry, Asheville, North Carolina.