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I just read about Joe Arridy — a truly shocking story. A man with an IQ of 46, in 1936 in Colorado, was forced to confess to a murder he never understood. He didn’t know what “justice” was, didn’t know what “execution” was, but he liked to smile at everyone because he wanted to make them happy.
Without any evidence — no fingerprints, no witnesses — Joe was sentenced to death simply because a sheriff needed to close the case quickly. The real killer was caught later, but it was too late for Joe Arridy. The system had already condemned him.
The most heartbreaking part? On his last days, Joe played with a toy train given by the guards. He asked for ice cream for his final meal. Smiling until the end — unaware that he was being sacrificed by a justice system that was supposed to protect him. The prison guards cried that night.
Seventy-two years later, in 2011, Colorado finally acknowledged that Joe Arridy was innocent. An apology that came far too late. Joe had long gone, never hearing those words of forgiveness, never knowing the world realized its mistake.
Joe Arridy’s story is a stark reminder that when the justice system fails, it destroys the most vulnerable — those who cannot defend themselves. It’s not just injustice. It’s a tragedy that could have been prevented.