The death of innocents : an eyewitness account of wrongful executions / Helen Prejean.

By: Material type: TextPublication details: New York, NY : Vintage Books, 2006.Edition: 1st Vintage Books edDescription: xvi, 310 p. ; 21 cmISBN:
  • 0679759484
  • 9780679759485
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • HV 8699 .U5 P745 2005
Online resources:
Contents:
Dobie Gillis Williams -- Joseph O'Dell -- The machinery of death -- The death of innocence.
Review: "Sister Helen Prejean traces the historical underpinnings of executions in this country, demonstrating that it is no accident that over 80 percent of executions in the past twenty-five years have been carried out in the former slave states. She also raises profound constitutional questions about an appeals system that decides most death cases on procedural grounds without ever examining their merits." "To date, well over one hundred wrongfully convicted persons have been freed from death row. If constitutional protections - due process, assistance of counsel, and equal justice under law - are truly being respected, how is it possible that these people were convicted in the first place? And how can we accept a system so rife with error?"--BOOK JACKET.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
Book Storms Research Center Main Collection HV 8699 .U5 P745 2005 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 98644545

Originally published: New York : Random House, c2005.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Dobie Gillis Williams -- Joseph O'Dell -- The machinery of death -- The death of innocence.

"Sister Helen Prejean traces the historical underpinnings of executions in this country, demonstrating that it is no accident that over 80 percent of executions in the past twenty-five years have been carried out in the former slave states. She also raises profound constitutional questions about an appeals system that decides most death cases on procedural grounds without ever examining their merits." "To date, well over one hundred wrongfully convicted persons have been freed from death row. If constitutional protections - due process, assistance of counsel, and equal justice under law - are truly being respected, how is it possible that these people were convicted in the first place? And how can we accept a system so rife with error?"--BOOK JACKET.

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