Chasing Justice
Kerry Cook is an innocent man who wrongly served two decades in Texas's notorious death house for the brutal 1977 rape and murder of 21-year-old Linda Jo Edwards. His struggle for freedom is said to be one of the worst cases of police and prosecutorial misconduct in American history.
In the summer of 1977, Cook was staying in Tyler, TX. He met an attractive young woman nam
...morePaperback, 288 pages
Published
May 24th 2007
by Harper
(first published April 5th 2007)
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This has to be the most frightening book I have ever read. This is the story of a young man (20) who was railroaded into a death sentence by the Smith County Prosecutors in Tyler Texas. He was eventually exonerated after nearly 22 years on Death Row, multiple courts - all the way to the US Supreme Court, overturning the convictions not once but three times.
This book shows how the wins and the careers are often placed above truth and justice. In the end, the only exoneration cam...more
This book shows how the wins and the careers are often placed above truth and justice. In the end, the only exoneration cam...more
Our cataloguer at work finished reading it, and she was extolling it to anyone who would listen. She donated her copy to the library, and she had it processed within the hour for circulation. Given her passion for it, I got curious, so I checked it out. I am told it will be an engrossing read. While this book genre is not usually what I like reading, she made it sound interesting. Plus the events happened here in Tyler, TX, so the local story now interests me as well. We'll see how it goes.
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"Jerry Joe Byrd suffered a massive heart attack on the eve of his execution. Medical officials saved him long enough so that he could still be alive to execute." -- For what reason?!
This book will have you questioning your opinion of the "justice" system and capital crimes punishable by execution. Seeing injustice first hand from a family member wrongfully accused and imprisoned for many years, this book really hits home. Definitely a page turner! Cook will h...more
This book will have you questioning your opinion of the "justice" system and capital crimes punishable by execution. Seeing injustice first hand from a family member wrongfully accused and imprisoned for many years, this book really hits home. Definitely a page turner! Cook will h...more
This sounded so intriguing--and, indeed, I think it had the potential to be fascinating, but I wish they'd hired a ghostwriter. The writing was terrible, and the story dragged (in opposite directions simultaneously, sometimes), and the author/victim was so unlikeable that I found myself not feeling very sympathetic to his plight. Oops.
It's a riveting story but unfortunately it reads like a made-for-tv movie. And wtf is up with "Momma and Daddy" and the a little-too-brotherly love for his brother? Freaky.
An utterly disturbing recount of the "justice" system. As I delved further and further into this book, I couldn't believe the flagrant corruption. It's incredible to believe this is a true story, it seems like a joke; how can the justice system be this corrupt, how did this happen to such a blatantly innocent victim?! I found myself cringing at the situations, but not able to put the book down. I just kept reading and reading, growing more and more disgusted, but needing to know when a...more
Another story of wrongful conviction and another reason why I oppose the death penalty.
This is a truly frightening book about our justice system.
I thought I believed in the perfection of our courts until I read this book. It gives new meaning to being portrayed as guilty by the media and having that affect a person's trial.
Also a scary look at an innocent man's journey through the prison system. Wow!
I could hardly contain myself. I had to stop my hand from flipping forward in the book to see what happened next a few times.
What...more
I thought I believed in the perfection of our courts until I read this book. It gives new meaning to being portrayed as guilty by the media and having that affect a person's trial.
Also a scary look at an innocent man's journey through the prison system. Wow!
I could hardly contain myself. I had to stop my hand from flipping forward in the book to see what happened next a few times.
What...more
This crime happened in Tyler in 1977 and I was mildly interested in it at the time. It is very well written and had some surprises. It makes me question a lot of authority systems. A graphic picture of life on death row.
This is a great book that exposes the unjustice of our justice system.
I used to believe the system worked, until I read this book.
Grant
marked it as to-read
Anthony
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