This is another thrift store purchase and the first non-fiction I've read from "the Grish." He usually writes legal thrillers.
This is about two wrongful convictions in the small town of Ada, Oklahoma in the 1980's which resulted in one death sentence and one life sentence. Both men spent 11 years in prison until both were exonerated with DNA evidence.
Kudos to "the Grish" for tackling a very serious problem in our society. Many people convicted of serious crimes have been exonerated with DNA evidence. These are unpopular people, for various reasons, not represented by good lawyers, and railroaded by unscrupulous and ambitious prosecutors. Neither judge nor jury critically examine evidence, which is often flimsy, essentially deferring to prosecutors.
The job I'm perhaps proudest of was a clerkship during law school for a unit within the federal public defender in LA representing death row inmates in their habeas corpus claims. These were true believer type attorneys who everyone hated, including their own clients, but were the only ones involved in the case doing the right thing. No one should kill these inmates, whether they did the deed or not. Perhaps one day I will resume meaningful work such as this. We'll see.
Supporting culture of life, as they say, doesn't stop when someone's born, and it isn't just for pleasant people. It goes from natural birth to death and is for everyone without distinction.
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