Yes, about Dorothy Dandridge, but not in general. Rape, for instance, was not a capital crime in England in WW2 but regardless of that five blacks and one Mexican-American were hanged for the crime.
The full extent of the crime wave that the "overpaid, oversexed and over  here" American forces brought to wartime Britain is disclosed today.
Home Office files kept secret for 60 years show that GIs committed 26  murders, 31 manslaughters, 22 attempted murders and more than 400 sexual  offences, including 126 rapes, in the three years between their arrival  and the end of the war.
They also show that American commanders allowed Herbert Morrison, the  home secretary, to mislead Parliament by assuring MPs that no race  discrimination was practised by US courts martial over executions for  rape.
Rape was not a capital offence in Britain but under emergency  legislation allowing American and other allied armies to use their own  system, GIs could be sentenced to death for rape in this country.
Labour MPs who opposed the death penalty challenged Mr Morrison about  its use in rape cases and put down parliamentary questions to find out  whether black and white soldiers were treated equally.
Home Office officials sensed serious trouble and consulted the American  judge advocate general's office in London, according to files released  at the National Archives in Kew, south-west London.
A senior US official reassured them there was no prejudice and said the  Americans would be happy if the home secretary told the Commons that  three white GIs had been sentenced to death for rape in America a year  before.
Mr Morrison duly told the Commons and chided party colleagues for  seeking to raise divisions on racial lines.
But only black Americans were facing execution for rape at the time he  spoke.
Figures show that, of the 122 rapes committed by Americans between 1943  and 1945, six perpetrators were executed. Five were black and the sixth  was a Mexican-American who raped a 75-year-old widow at her  Staffordshire home.
The most senior mandarins did not want American executions on British  soil. Sir Frank Newsam, the deputy head of the Home Office, wrote: "We  should take up with the Americans the question of the desirability of  carrying out these sentences in America."
But the documents show that Col Edward Betts, the judge advocate  general, "did not think that the US authorities would wish to do this,  because if a man was taken away to be executed his fellow soldiers would  not believe the sentence had been carried out and the deterrent effect  would be lessened".
The Americans arrived in Britain without a scaffold and because their  main method of execution - hanging with a coiled noose - was considered  cruel by British authorities, they had to borrow "a set of apparatus  from Wandsworth" and a British hangman.
Consequently, all of the 16 GIs hanged at the American "discipline base"  at Shepton Mallet, Somerset, were put to death by Thomas Pierrepoint,  Britain's chief executioner, or his nephew, Albert.
Two soldiers, who killed fellow GIs, were put to death as the US army's  manual quaintly put it, "by musketry": a firing squad.
The first to die was a private, David Cobb, a black man who had killed  his platoon commander in late 1942.
Other murders included that of a taxi driver in Colchester, a  35-year-old widow in Henley-on-Thames and a pimp in Belfast.
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