A protest starting on February 1, 1960, at the Alabama State College campus had been aggressively attended by Montgomery police, triggering the appeal. Following the New York Times call to action a libel suit was filed by police commissioner L. B. Sullivan.[14] Attorneys Conley and Fred Gray represented accused students in local, state and federal courtrooms. The intervention resulted in restaurants and lunch-counters in 26 southern cities ending segregationist policies. Discrimination against African Americans continued in Montgomery but segregation had been effectively disputed allowing expansion of the movement to overturn racial injustice.[15]
Conley was elected in 1972 as Alabama's first Black judge of the Court of Common Pleas (Macon County).[16] This court system changed to that of a District Court, and Judge Conley was re-elected in 1976.[4] Conley served as attorney of record for cases until 1992, when he officially retired.
Legacy
Before Conley's death, he had made provisions for a $1.2 million donation to his Alma mater to create the Honorable Charles Swinger Conley Scholarship Fund within the AnBryce Program at the New York University School of Law.[4]
^Adcock, Thomas (September 26, 2011). "Charles Conley (1921-2010)". The Law School, Magazine of the New York University School of Law. Full Circle Color: 117. Retrieved February 4, 2019.
^Gray, Fred D. (2012). Bus ride to justice : changing the system by the system : the life and works of Fred Gray, preacher, attorney, politician (Rev.. 2013 ed.). NewSouth Books. p. 175. ISBN978-1588382863.