Anatomy of Injustice: A Murder Case Gone Wrong

From Pulitzer Prize winner Raymond Bonner, the gripping story of a grievously mishandled murder case that put a twenty-three-year-old man on death row.
 
In January 1982, an elderly white widow was found brutally murdered in the small town of Greenwood, South Carolina. Police immediately arrested Edward Lee Elmore, a semiliterate, mentally retarded black man with no previous felony record. His only connection to the victim was having cleaned her gutters and windows, but barely ninety days after the victim's body was found, he was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death.

Elmore had been on death row for eleven years when a young attorney named Diana Holt first learned of his case. With the exemplary moral commitment and tenacious investigation that have distinguished his reporting career, Bonner follows Holt's battle to save Elmore's life and shows us how his case is a textbook example of what can go wrong in the American justice system. Moving, enraging, suspenseful, and enlightening, Anatomy of Injustice is a vital contribution to our nation's ongoing, increasingly important debate about inequality and the death penalty.

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Published Jan 8, 2013

320 pages

Average rating: 8.5

4 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

Khris Sellin
Jul 05, 2024
10/10 stars
Another sad story of an innocent man stuck on death row for decades. There are far too many of these cases, but this one is particularly infuriating because of the blatant racism, the lies, the planted evidence, the lost evidence, the defense attorney who did no work and put up no defense, and the prosecutors and judges who, repeatedly, ignored the facts and evidence and denied this man true due process and justice. Until Diana Holt and her team stepped in, finally giving him reason to hope.
Very well written and investigated.

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