Hurt was
court-martialed on charges of rape and felony murder by an American military court in Okinawa. He was tried just 15 days after U.S. Marine Raymond Elton Parker was sentenced to life in prison for raping a 7-year-old Okinawan girl. Hurt insisted on his innocence. His court martial lasted 13 days and he was convicted after a deliberation of less than an hour, and
sentenced to death. While it was standard procedure, Hurt was returned to the U.S. without the Okinawan public being informed. After sentencing, people from his hometown, as well as number of politicians jumped to his defense. The defense presented letters and petitions from Hurt's hometown of Lothair, which described him as "honest" and "law abiding". Military prosecutors rejected this, citing Hurt's prior convictions.
Release from prison Following the commutation of his death sentence, Hurt was transferred to
United States Penitentiary in
Leavenworth, Kansas, where he suffered a stroke in 1969. He wrote letters to Senators and members of the U.S. government requesting to be granted parole or his case to be dismissed. In one letter, he alleged, "I was sacrificed to appease the dissident political elements who were demanding an end to American mil. [military] Occupation." Hurt was released from prison later that year. Following his release, he found work as a night watchman and married Lura Bea McKinney in 1981. On 6 August 1984, Hurt died at a
Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in Ohio State. ==Aftermath==