
Bobby Frank Cherry was 71 in 2002. He moved from

After the Blanton conviction, momentum began to build. Though his attorneys had appealed to the court to excuse Cherry because of alleged brain deterioration, many people didn't believe it. "The delay the court has given Mr. Cherry," said Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth of the

Prosecutors later brought psychologists to the stand who testified Cherry was faking it. In January 2002, Judge James Garrett ruled that Cherry was competent and the rusty wheels of justice began to turn again. "This is an easy man to prosecute," one attorney told the press, "because he is the human equivalent of a cockroach." The trial began in May 2002. U.S. Attorney Doug Jones would again lead the prosecution team.
Jones put Cherry's former wife, Willadean Brogdon, on the stand. "He said he lit the fuse," she told the court. Also damaging to Cherry was his own granddaughter, Teresa Stacy. "He said he helped blow up a bunch of niggers back in
In his closing argument, U.S. Attorney Jones told the jury that Cherry "was a murderer who lived among us." He said that Blanton, Chambliss, Cash and the defendant were the "forefathers of terrorism." After six hours of deliberations, the jury of six white women, three white men and three black men found Cherry guilty on all counts. He was sentenced to life in prison. At his sentencing, Cherry told the court that he was framed.
"The whole bunch lied all the way through this," he said, "I don't know why I'm going to jail for nothing!"
But his protestations fell mostly on deaf ears. In the back of the courtroom sat Sarah Collins Rudolph, 51, who lost her sister Addie in the 1963 explosion. "I feel at ease now," she later told the press, "We have been waiting on this day for a long time!" Sitting in the back of the courtroom at the moment of the verdict, the veteran civil rights warrior and witness to the explosion that killed four of his flock, Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth, all of 80 years old, contemplated the gift of justice in the twilight of his life.
"Justice will shine for black and white people now," he told reporters.
Cherry died, at age 74, in the Kilby Corrctional Facility in Montgomery, Alabama on November 18, 2004, after a long illness.




