14 Facts About Eunice Carter

1.

Eunice Roberta Hunton Carter was an American lawyer.

2.

Eunice Carter was one of New York's first female African-American lawyers, and one of the first African-American prosecutors in the United States.

3.

Eunice Carter was active in the Pan-African Congress and in United Nations committees to advance the status of women in the world.

4.

Eunice Carter led a massive prostitution racketeering investigation, building the case and strategy that allowed New York District Attorney Thomas Dewey to successfully charge Mafioso kingpin Charles "Lucky" Luciano with compulsory prostitution.

5.

Eunice Carter was selected as one of two women to go to France during World War I to check on the condition of United States black servicemen.

6.

In mid-May 1933, Eunice Carter passed the New York bar exam.

7.

Eunice Carter soon established a career in both law and international politics.

8.

In 1935 Eunice Carter became the first black woman assistant district attorney in the state of New York.

9.

Eunice Carter then put together a massive prostitution racketeering case that eventually implicated Luciano.

10.

Eunice Carter convinced New York District Attorney Thomas Dewey to personally prosecute the case.

11.

Eunice Carter made two unsuccessful runs for the White House, one against President Harry S Truman.

12.

Eunice Carter frequently accompanied him to political events in Harlem and elsewhere, and reporters noted that she offered him advice.

13.

Active in the Pan-African Congress in the 1920s, Carter later became active in the United Nations, serving on committees that advocated improving the status of women.

14.

Eunice Carter practiced law and later worked in the John F Kennedy and Lyndon B Johnson presidential administrations as a political appointee.