Deathwork: Defending the CondemnedU of Minnesota Press, 2002 - 338 páginas Michael Mello, a capital public defender, tells us the stories behind the cases that make up Deathwork, a moment-by-moment, behind-the-scenes look at the life and work of a death row lawyer and his clients. |
Índice
The Laws Machinery of Death | 1 |
Death Clerk | 37 |
The Aging Hit Man Anthony Antone | 71 |
Executing the Insane Alvin Ford | 90 |
The Electric Chair Bob Sullivan | 115 |
Racism James Adams and James Dupree Henry | 127 |
Executing Juveniles Paul Magill | 148 |
The Poet Stephen Todd Booker | 162 |
My Roommate Joseph Green Brown | 198 |
The Innocent Man Bennie Demps | 207 |
Missing in Action David Funchess | 230 |
Poorhouse Justice David Washington | 248 |
Killed by a Legal Technicality Ronald Straight | 257 |
Conclusion | 275 |
277 | |
The Landmark Case Jim Hitchcock | 190 |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
African American Alvin Ford Antone Antone's argued asked attorney Booker Bundy called capital punishment capital statute claim clerk clients condemned constitutional convicted Craig Barnard crime criminal David Funchess death penalty death row death row prisoners death sentence death warrant deathwork decided decision Demps Demps's denied electric chair electrocution Eleventh Circuit federal court federal trial court filed Florida State Prison Florida Supreme Court Ford's Furman habeas corpus Haskew Hathaway Hitchcock Holdman inmate innocent insane issue Jorandby Judge Vance Judge Vance's jury instruction Justice killed lawyers litigation Lockett Magill Magill's Mark Olive McCoun mental mitigating circumstances mitigating evidence Mungin murder opinion oral argument person petition postconviction procedural prosecutor public defender raised rape ruled scheduled Scottsboro sentenced to death Stanley stay of execution Straight Sullivan Ted Bundy tence testified testimony tion told trial counsel trial judge U.S. Constitution U.S. Supreme Court Vietnam vote wrote