Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption
Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption book cover

Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption

Hardcover – October 21, 2014

Price
$9.80
Format
Hardcover
Pages
352
Publisher
One World
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0812994520
Dimensions
6.34 x 0.96 x 9.54 inches
Weight
1.38 pounds

Description

From School Library Journal What is the one commonality of people on death row? If the victim is white, the perpetrator is 11 times more likely to be condemned to die than if the victim is black. When Stevenson was a 23-year-old Harvard law student, he started an internship in Georgia where his first assignment was to deliver a message to a man living on death row. This assignment became his calling: representing the innocent, the inadequately defended, the children, the domestic abuse survivors, the mentally ill—the imprisoned. This fast-paced book reads like a John Grisham novel. One of those profiled, Walter, was at a barbecue with over 100 people at the time of the murder he was accused of, and spent more than six years on death row. The stories include those of children, teens, and adults who have been in the system since they were teens. This is a title for the many young adults who have a parent or loved one in the prison system and the many others who are interested in social justice, the law, and the death penalty. A standout choice.—Amy Cheney, Alameda County Library, Juvenile Hall, CA “ Just Mercy is every bit as moving as To Kill a Mockingbird, and in some ways more so. . . . [It] demonstrates, as powerfully as any book on criminal justice that I’ve ever read, the extent to which brutality, unfairness, and racial bias continue to infect criminal law in the United States. But at the same time that [Bryan] Stevenson tells an utterly damning story of deep-seated and widespread injustice, he also recounts instances of human compassion, understanding, mercy, and justice that offer hope. . . . Just Mercy is a remarkable amalgam, at once a searing indictment of American criminal justice and a stirring testament to the salvation that fighting for the vulnerable sometimes yields.” —David Cole, The New York Review of Books “A searing, moving and infuriating memoir . . . Bryan Stevenson may, indeed, be America’s Mandela. For decades he has fought judges, prosecutors and police on behalf of those who are impoverished, black or both. . . . Injustice is easy not to notice when it affects people different from ourselves; that helps explain the obliviousness of our own generation to inequity today. We need to wake up. And that is why we need a Mandela in this country.” —Nicholas Kristof, The New York Times “Unfairness in the justice system is a major theme of our age. . . . This book brings new life to the story by placing it in two affecting contexts: [Bryan] Stevenson’s life work and the deep strain of racial injustice in American life. . . . You don’t have to read too long to start cheering for this man. Against tremendous odds, Stevenson has worked to free scores of people from wrongful or excessive punishment, arguing five times before the Supreme Court. . . . The book extols not his nobility but that of the cause, and reads like a call to action for all that remains to be done. . . . The message of the book, hammered home by dramatic examples of one man’s refusal to sit quietly and countenance horror, is that evil can be overcome, a difference can be made. Just Mercy will make you upset and it will make you hopeful. . . . Stevenson has been angry about [the criminal justice system] for years, and we are all the better for it.” —Ted Conover, The New York Times Book Review “Not since Atticus Finch has a fearless and committed lawyer made such a difference in the American South. Though larger than life, Atticus exists only in fiction. Bryan Stevenson, however, is very much alive and doing God’s work fighting for the poor, the oppressed, the voiceless, the vulnerable, the outcast, and those with no hope. Just Mercy is his inspiring and powerful story.” —John Grisham “Bryan Stevenson is one of my personal heroes, perhaps the most inspiring and influential crusader for justice alive today, and Just Mercy is extraordinary. The stories told within these pages hold the potential to transform what we think we mean when we talk about justice.” —Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow “A distinguished NYU law professor and MacArthur grant recipient offers the compelling story of the legal practice he founded to protect the rights of people on the margins of American society. . . . Emotionally profound, necessary reading.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review, Kirkus Prize Finalist) “A passionate account of the ways our nation thwarts justice and inhumanely punishes the poor and disadvantaged.” — Booklist (starred review) “From the frontlines of social justice comes one of the most urgent voices of our era. Bryan Stevenson is a real-life, modern-day Atticus Finch who, through his work in redeeming innocent people condemned to death, has sought to redeem the country itself. This is a book of great power and courage. It is inspiring and suspenseful—a revelation.” —Isabel Wilkerson, author of The Warmth of Other Suns “Words such as important and compelling may have lost their force through overuse, but reading this book will restore their meaning, along with one’s hopes for humanity.” —Tracy Kidder, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Mountains Beyond Mountains “Bryan Stevenson is America’s young Nelson Mandela, a brilliant lawyer fighting with courage and conviction to guarantee justice for all. Just Mercy should be read by people of conscience in every civilized country in the world to discover what happens when revenge and retribution replace justice and mercy. It is as gripping to read as any legal thriller, and what hangs in the balance is nothing less than the soul of a great nation.” —Desmond Tutu, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Bryan Stevenson is the executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Alabama, and a professor of law at New York University Law School. He has won relief for dozens of condemned prisoners, argued five times before the Supreme Court, and won national acclaim for his work challenging bias against the poor and people of color. He has received numerous awards, including the MacArthur Foundation “Genius” Grant. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One Mockingbird Players The temporary receptionist was an elegant African American woman wearing a dark, expensive business suit—a well-dressed exception to the usual crowd at the Southern Prisoners Defense Committee (SPDC) in Atlanta, where I had returned after graduation to work full time. On her first day, I’d rambled over to her in my regular uniform of jeans and sneakers and offered to answer any questions she might have to help her get acclimated. She looked at me coolly and waved me away after reminding me that she was, in fact, an experienced legal secretary. The next morning, when I arrived at work in another jeans and sneakers ensemble, she seemed startled, as if some strange vagrant had made a wrong turn into the office. She took a beat to compose herself, then summoned me over to confide that she was leaving in a week to work at a “real law office.” I wished her luck. An hour later, she called my office to tell me that “Robert E. Lee” was on the phone. I smiled, pleased that I’d misjudged her; she clearly had a sense of humor. “That’s really funny.” “I’m not joking. That’s what he said,” she said, sounding bored, not playful. “Line two.” I picked up the line. “Hello, this is Bryan Stevenson. May I help you?” “Bryan, this is Robert E. Lee Key. Why in the hell would you want to represent someone like Walter McMillian? Do you know he’s reputed to be one of the biggest drug dealers in all of South Alabama? I got your notice entering an appearance, but you don’t want anything to do with this case.” “Sir?” “This is Judge Key, and you don’t want to have anything to do with this McMillian case. No one really understands how depraved this situation truly is, including me, but I know it’s ugly. These men might even be Dixie Mafia.” The lecturing tone and bewildering phrases from a judge I’d never met left me completely confused. “Dixie Mafia”? I’d met Walter McMillian two weeks earlier, after spending a day on death row to begin work on five capital cases. I hadn’t reviewed the trial transcript yet, but I did remember that the judge’s last name was Key. No one had told me the Robert E. Lee part. I struggled for an image of “Dixie Mafia” that would fit Walter McMillian. “u2009‘Dixie Mafia’?” “Yes, and there’s no telling what else. Now, son, I’m just not going to appoint some out-of-state lawyer who’s not a member of the Alabama bar to take on one of these death penalty cases, so you just go ahead and withdraw.” “I’m a member of the Alabama bar.” I lived in Atlanta, Georgia, but I had been admitted to the Alabama bar a year earlier after working on some cases in Alabama concerning jail and prison conditions. “Well, I’m now sitting in Mobile. I’m not up in Monroexadville anymore. If we have a hearing on your motion, you’re going to have to come all the way from Atlanta to Mobile. I’m not going to accommodate you no kind of way.” “I understand, sir. I can come to Mobile, if necessary.” “Well, I’m also not going to appoint you because I don’t think he’s indigent. He’s reported to have money buried all over Monroe County.” “Judge, I’m not seeking appointment. I’ve told Mr.xa0McMillian that we would—” The dial tone interrupted my first affirmative statement of the phone call. I spent several minutes thinking we’d been accidentally disconnected before finally realizing that a judge had just hung up on me. I was in my late twenties and about to start my fourth year at the SPDC when I met Walter McMillian. His case was one of the flood of cases I’d found myself frantically working on after learning of a growing crisis in Alabama. The state had nearly a hundred people on death row as well as the fastest-growing condemned population in the country, but it also had no public defender system, which meant that large numbers of death row prisoners had no legal representation of any kind. My friend Eva Ansley ran the Alabama Prison Project, which tracked cases and matched lawyers with the condemned men. In 1988, we discovered an opportunity to get federal funding to create a legal center that could represent people on death row. The plan was to use that funding to start a new nonprofit. We hoped to open it in Tuscaloosa and begin working on cases in the next year. I’d already worked on lots of death penalty cases in several Southern states, sometimes winning a stay of execution just minutes before an electrocution was scheduled. But I didn’t think I was ready to take on the responsibilities of running a nonprofit law office. I planned to help get the organization off the ground, find a director, and then return to Atlanta. When I’d visited death row a few weeks before that call from Robert E. Lee Key, I met with five desperate condemned men: Willie Tabb, Vernon Madison, Jesse Morrison, Harry Nicks, and Walter McMillian. It was an exhausting, emotionally taxing day, and the cases and clients had merged together in my mind on the long drive back to Atlanta. But I remembered Walter. He was at least fifteen years older than me, not particularly well educated, and he hailed from a small rural community. The memorable thing about him was how insistent he was that he’d been wrongly convicted. “Mr.xa0Bryan, I know it may not matter to you, but it’s important to me that you know that I’m innocent and didn’t do what they said I did, not no kinda way,” he told me in the meeting room. His voice was level but laced with emotion. I nodded to him. I had learned to accept what clients tell me until the facts suggest something else. “Sure, of course I understand. When I review the record I’ll have a better sense of what evidence they have, and we can talk about it.” “Butxa0.u2008.u2008. look, I’m sure I’m not the first person on death row to tell you that they’re innocent, but I really need you to believe me. My life has been ruined! This lie they put on me is more than I can bear, and if I don’t get help from someone who believes me—” His lip began to quiver, and he clenched his fists to stop himself from crying. I sat quietly while he forced himself back into composure. “I’m sorry, I know you’ll do everything you can to help me,” he said, his voice quieter. My instinct was to comfort him; his pain seemed so sincere. But there wasn’t much I could do, and after several hours on the row talking to so many people, I could muster only enough energy to reassure him that I would look at everything carefully. I had several transcripts piled up in my small Atlanta office ready to move to Tuscaloosa once the office opened. With Judge Robert E. Lee Key’s peculiar comments still running through my head, I went through the mound of records until I found the transcripts from Walter McMillian’s trial. There were only four volumes of trial proceedings, which meant that the trial had been short. The judge’s dramatic warnings now made Mr.xa0McMillian’s emotional claim of innocence too intriguing to put off any longer. I started reading. Even though he had lived in Monroe County his whole life, Walter McMillian had never heard of Harper Lee or To Kill a Mockingbird. Monroexadville, Alabama, celebrated its native daughter Lee shamelessly after her award-winning book became a national bestseller in the 1960s. She returned to Monroe County but secluded herself and was rarely seen in public. Her reclusiveness proved no barrier to the county’s continued efforts to market her literary classic—or to market itself by using the book’s celebrity. Production of the film adaptation brought Gregory Peck to town for the infamous courtroom scenes; his performance won him an Academy Award. Local leaders later turned the old courthouse into a “Mockingbird” museum. A group of locals formed “The Mockingbird Players of Monroexadville” to prexadsent a stage version of the story. The production was so popular that national and international tours were organized to provide an authentic presentation of the fictional story to audiences everywhere. Sentimentality about Lee’s story grew even as the harder truths of the book took no root. The story of an innocent black man bravely defended by a white lawyer in the 1930s fascinated millions of readers, despite its uncomfortable exploration of false accusations of rape involving a white woman. Lee’s endearing characters, Atticus Finch and his precocious daughter Scout, captivated readers while confronting them with some of the realities of race and justice in the South. A generation of future lawyers grew up hoping to become the courageous Atticus, who at one point arms himself to protect the defenseless black suspect from an angry mob of white men looking to lynch him. Today, dozens of legal organizations hand out awards in the fictional lawyer’s name to celebrate the model of advocacy described in Lee’s novel. What is often overlooked is that the black man falsely accused in the story was not successfully defended by Atticus. Tom Robinson, the wrongly accused black defendant, is found guilty. Later he dies when, full of despair, he makes a desperate attempt to escape from prison. He is shot seventeen times in the back by his captors, dying ingloriously but not unlawfully. Walter McMillian, like Tom Robinson, grew up in one of several poor black settlements outside of Monroexadville, where he worked the fields with his family before he was old enough to attend school. The children of sharecroppers in southern Alabama were introduced to “plowin’, plantin’, and pickin’u2009” as soon as they were old enough to be useful in the fields. Educational opportunities for black children in the 1950s were limited, but Walter’s mother got him to the dilapidated “colored school” for a couple of years when he was young. By the time Walter was eight or nine, he became too valuable for picking cotton to justify the remote advantages of going to school. By the age of eleven, Walter could run a plow as well as any of his older siblings. Times were changing—for better and for worse. Monroe County had been developed by plantation owners in the nineteenth century for the production of cotton. Situated in the coastal plain of southwest Alabama, the fertile, rich black soil of the area attracted white settlers from the Carolinas who amassed very successful plantations and a huge slave population. For decades after the Civil War, the large African American population toiled in the fields of the “Black Belt” as sharecroppers and tenant farmers, dependent on white landowners for survival. In the 1940s, thousands of African Americans left the region as part of the Great Migration and headed mostly to the Midwest and West Coast for jobs. Those who remained continued to work the land, but the out-migration of African Americans combined with other factors to make traditional agriculture less sustainable as the economic base of the region. By the 1950s, small cotton farming was becoming increasingly less profitable, even with the low-wage labor provided by black sharecroppers and tenants. The State of Alabama agreed to help white landowners in the region transition to timber farming and forest products by providing extraordinary tax incentives for pulp and paper mills. Thirteen of the state’s sixteen pulp and paper mills were opened during this period. Across the Black Belt, more and more acres were converted to growing pine trees for paper mills and industrial uses. African Americans, largely excluded from this new industry, found themselves confronting new economic challenges even as they won basic civil rights. The brutal era of sharecropping and Jim Crow was ending, but what followed was persistent unemployment and worsening poverty. The region’s counties remained some of the poorest in America. Walter was smart enough to see the trend. He started his own pulpwood business that evolved with the timber industry in the 1970s. He astutely—and bravely—borrowed money to buy his own power saw, tractor, and pulpwood truck. By the 1980s, he had developed a solid business that didn’t generate a lot of extra money but afforded him a gratifying degree of independence. If he had worked at the mill or the factory or had had some other unskilled job—the kind that most poor black people in South Alabama worked—it would invariably mean working for white business owners and dealing with all the racial stress that that implied in Alabama in the 1970s and 1980s. Walter couldn’t escape the reality of racism, but having his own business in a growing sector of the economy gave him a latitude that many African Americans did not enjoy. That independence won Walter some measure of respect and admiration, but it also cultivated contempt and suspicion, especially outside of Monroexadville’s black community. Walter’s freedom was, for some of the white people in town, well beyond what African Americans with limited education were able to achieve through legitimate means. Still, he was pleasant, respectful, generous, and accommodating, which made him well liked by the people with whom he did business, whether black or white. Walter was not without his flaws. He had long been known as a ladies’ man. Even though he had married young and had three children with his wife, Minnie, it was well known that he was romantically involved with other women. “Tree work” is notoriously demanding and dangerous. With few ordinary comforts in his life, the attention of women was something Walter did not easily resist. There was something about his rough exterior—his bushy long hair and uneven beard—combined with his generous and charming nature that attracted the attention of some women. Walter grew up understanding how forbidden it was for a black man to be intimate with a white woman, but by the 1980s he had allowed himself to imagine that such matters might be changing. Perhaps if he hadn’t been successful enough to live off his own business he would have more consistently kept in mind those racial lines that could never be crossed. As it was, Walter didn’t initially think much of the flirtations of Karen Kelly, a young white woman he’d met at the Waffle House where he ate breakfast. She was attractive, but he didn’t take her too seriously. When her flirtations became more explicit, Walter hesitated, and then persuaded himself that no one would ever know. After a few weeks, it became clear that his relationship with Karen was trouble. At twenty-five, Karen was eighteen years younger than Walter, and she was married. As word got around that the two were “friends,” she seemed to take a titillating pride in her intimacy with Walter. When her husband found out, things quickly turned ugly. Karen and her husband, Joe, had long been unhappy and were already planning to divorce, but her scandalous involvement with a black man outraged Karen’s husband and his entire family. He initiated legal proceedings to gain custody of their children and became intent on publicly disgracing his wife by exposing her infidelity and revealing her relationship with a black man. For his part, Walter had always stayed clear of the courts and far away from the law. Years earlier, he had been drawn into a bar fight that resulted in a misdemeanor conviction and a night in jail. It was the first and only time he had ever been in trouble. From that point on, he had no exposure to the criminal justice system. When Walter received a subpoena from Karen Kelly’s husband to testify at a hearing where the Kellys would be fighting over their children’s custody, he knew it was going to cause him serious problems. Unable to consult with his wife, Minnie, who had a better head for these kinds of crises, he nervously went to the courthouse. The lawyer for Kelly’s husband called Walter to the stand. Walter had decided to acknowledge being a “friend” of Karen. Her lawyer objected to the crude questions posed to Walter by the husband’s attorney about the nature of his friendship, sparing him from providing any details, but when he left the courtroom the anger and animosity toward him were palpable. Walter wanted to forget about the whole ordeal, but word spread quickly, and his reputation shifted. No longer the hard-working pulpwood man, known to white people almost exclusively for what he could do with a saw in the pine trees, Walter now represented something more worrisome. Fears of interracial sex and marriage have deep roots in the United States. The confluence of race and sex was a powerful force in dismantling Reconstruction after the Civil War, sustaining Jim Crow laws for a century and fueling divisive racial politics throughout the twentieth century. In the aftermath of slavery, the creation of a system of racial hierarchy and segregation was largely designed to prevent intimate relationships like Walter and Karen’s—relationships that were, in fact, legally prohibited by “anti-miscegenation statutes” (the word miscegenation came into use in the 1860s, when supporters of slavery coined the term to promote the fear of interracial sex and marriage and the race mixing that would result if slavery were abolished). For over a century, law enforcement officials in many Southern communities absolutely saw it as part of their duty to investigate and punish black men who had been intimate with white women. Although the federal government had promised racial equality for freed former slaves during the short period of Reconstruction, the return of white supremacy and racial subordination came quickly after federal troops left Alabama in the 1870s. Voting rights were taken away from African Americans, and a series of racially restrictive laws enforced the racial hierarchy. “Racial integrity” laws were part of a plan to replicate slavery’s racial hierarchy and reestablish the subordination of African Americans. Having criminalized interracial sex and marriage, states throughout the South would use the laws to justify the forced sterilization of poor and minority women. Forbidding sex between white women and black men became an intense preoccupation throughout the South. In the 1880s, a few years before lynching became the standard response to interracial romance and a century before Walter and Karen Kelly began their affair, Tony Pace, an African American man, and Mary Cox, a white woman, fell in love in Alabama. They were arrested and convicted, and both were sentenced to two years in prison for violating Alabama’s racial integrity laws. John Tompkins, a lawyer and part of a small minority of white professionals who considered the racial integrity laws to be unconstitutional, agreed to represent Tony and Mary to appeal their convictions. The Alabama Supreme Court reviewed the case in 1882. With rhetoric that would be quoted frequently over the next several decades, Alabama’s highest court affirmed the convictions, using language that dripped with contempt for the idea of interracial romance: The evil tendency of the crime [of adultery or fornication] is greater when committed between persons of the two races.u2008.u2008.u202f. Its result may be the amalgamation of the two races, producing a mongrel population and a degraded civilization, the prevention of which is dictated by a sound policy affecting the highest interests of society and government. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • #1
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER •
  • NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE STARRING MICHAEL B. JORDAN AND JAMIE FOXX • A powerful true story about the potential for mercy to redeem us, and a clarion call to fix our broken system of justice—from one of the most brilliant and influential lawyers of our time. “[Bryan Stevenson’s] dedication to fighting for justice and equality has inspired me and many others and made a lasting impact on our country.”
  • —John Legend
  • NAMED ONE OF THE MOST INFLUENTIAL BOOKS OF THE DECADE BY CNN
  • • Named One of the Best Books of the Year by
  • The New York Times • The Washington Post • The Boston Globe • The Seattle Times • Esquire • Time
  • Bryan Stevenson was a young lawyer when he founded the Equal Justice Initiative, a legal practice dedicated to defending those most desperate and in need: the poor, the wrongly condemned, and women and children trapped in the farthest reaches of our criminal justice system. One of his first cases was that of Walter McMillian, a young man who was sentenced to die for a notorious murder he insisted he didn’t commit. The case drew Bryan into a tangle of conspiracy, political machination, and legal brinksmanship—and transformed his understanding of mercy and justice forever.
  • Just Mercy
  • is at once an unforgettable account of an idealistic, gifted young lawyer’s coming of age, a moving window into the lives of those he has defended, and an inspiring argument for compassion in the pursuit of true justice.
  • Winner of the Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction • Winner of the NAACP Image Award for Nonfiction • Winner of a Books for a Better Life Award • Finalist for the
  • Los Angeles Times
  • Book Prize • Finalist for the
  • Kirkus Reviews
  • Prize • An American Library Association Notable Book
  • “Every bit as moving as
  • To Kill a Mockingbird,
  • and in some ways more so . . . a searing indictment of American criminal justice and a stirring testament to the salvation that fighting for the vulnerable sometimes yields.”
  • —David Cole,
  • The New York Review of Books
  • “Searing, moving . . . Bryan Stevenson may, indeed, be America’s Mandela.”
  • —Nicholas Kristof,
  • The New York Times
  • “You don’t have to read too long to start cheering for this man. . . . The message of this book . . . is that evil can be overcome, a difference can be made.
  • Just Mercy
  • will make you upset and it will make you hopeful.”
  • —Ted Conover,
  • The New York Times Book Review
  • “Inspiring . . . a work of style, substance and clarity . . . Stevenson is not only a great lawyer, he’s also a gifted writer and storyteller.”
  • The Washington Post
  • “As deeply moving, poignant and powerful a book as has been, and maybe ever can be, written about the death penalty.”
  • —The Financial Times
  • “Brilliant.”
  • —The Philadelphia Inquirer

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Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Historical, Sociological and Spiritual Tour de Force

I have a new hero . . . Bryan Stevenson. He joins my other hero lawyer, Morris Dees, in my personal pantheon of those who fight for social justice.

Bryan Stevenson is the self-effacing author of this terrific book about the legal war he has waged against cruel, unjust sentencing practices in this country for over three decades now. His history of founding and working for the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Alabama, is told through real case histories of real people who were subjected to degradation and inhumane treatment that will shock you, anger you, and bring you to tears.

I spent a 25+ year career as a federal prosecutor, in the rarefied world of the federal courts, and am ashamed to say that I had no idea that such horrendous things were happening simultaneously in the state courts of our country. How Stevenson managed to stay on task for decades, to spend so much time simply connecting with his clients as human beings, and to accomplish such extraordinary results is amazing. I learned a lot, and the teachings of The New Jim Crow, by Michelle Alexander [another excellent book on the prison industrial complex in this country] were reinforced.

Perhaps my favorite chapter, for what it said about humanity, is entitled Mitigation. I will be using the facts from that chapter in a future talk at my Unitarian Universalist church. "Each of us is more than the worst thing we have ever done." This phrase echoes throughout this work, which, while fact filled, also has a strong spiritual component to it.

This is a great book. Please read it, and do as I did upon completion. Find the Equal Justice Initiative and give them some financial support. They work on a shoestring, and take care of some of the most helpless and needy among us.
526 people found this helpful
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Powerful, important book -- does the American justice system fail the disenfranchised?

At its core, Bryan Stevenson's JUST MERCY is about the inherent inhumanity of the American justice system. As Stevenson puts it, "Presumptions of guilt, poverty, racial bias, and a host of other social, structural, and political dynamics have created a system that is defined by error, a system in which thousands of innocent people now suffer in prison." This is a system that condemns children to life imprisonment without parole, that makes petty theft a crime as serious as murder, and that has declared war on hundreds of thousands of people with substance abuse problems by imprisoning them and denying them help. Stevenson is an attorney with the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Alabama, an organization that offers free legal services to the poor and disenfranchised. His book is a sobering look at criminal justice from the perspective of those least likely to be treated fairly.

JUST MERCY explores a number of devastating cases, including children as young as fourteen facing life imprisonment, and scores of people on death row - mostly poor, and mostly black - who have been unfairly convicted. But the central focus is on Walter McMillan, a black man sentenced to death for the murder of a prominent young white woman. McMillan claimed he did not commit this crime, and he had a score of alibi witnesses, but he was quickly railroaded into both a conviction and a death sentence. Stevenson spent years working to get McMillan a new trial, and the two men remained connected throughout the remainder of McMillan's life. It's a fascinating case, one that involves perjury, police corruption, a racist judge, and prosecutors more intent on protecting their political positions than finding justice.

Stevenson's thesis is that justice itself is denied for the millions of Americans who are poor, non-white, mentally ill, or otherwise disenfranchised. Ours is no longer a country that sees compassion as a virtue; instead, we write harsher and harsher laws that demand longer and longer sentences for those we consider undesirables. "The true measure of our character," Stevenson writes, "is how we treat the poor, the disfavored, the accused, the incarcerated, and the condemned." And by the final page of JUST MERCY, it is quite clear that we, as Americans, have fallen short.

It's rare these days to meet someone who truly dedicates himself to those least able to help themselves, especially someone who isn't after media attention or self-promotion. Stevenson's tireless efforts to give solace to the many men and women on death row are both inspirational and affirming. He isn't successful in freeing all of his clients - more than a few are executed in spite of his pleas - but what he offers them is more than just legal support. He listens to them, takes them seriously, investigates in ways the police failed to do, and gives them a voice they had otherwise been denied. In the end, Stevenson writes, "we have to reform a system of criminal justice that continues to treat people better if they are rich and guilty than if they are poor and innocent." That's a tough lesson for a world too often motivated by money, power, and political position. The people Bryan Stevenson works for have no money, no power, and no political position, but they are human beings deserving of compassion and mercy. "Each of us is more than the worst thing we've ever done," Stevenson writes, adding, "the opposite of poverty is not wealth; the opposite of poverty is justice." As Americans, we can't be proud of our justice system until it offers justice to all of our people, and not only those with money and influence. It's a hard sell in today's mercenary, "me first" environment. But Stevenson's voice is one we all need to hear. JUST MERCY is a powerful and eye-opening book. I recommend it highly.
424 people found this helpful
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A Shattering Experience.

The author, Bryan A. Stevenson is the founder and executive director of the Montgomery Alabama Equal Justice Initiative which was formed initially to provide free, quality legal services to condemned men and women on death row in Alabama and to challenge the injustice of the criminal justice system against poor people and people of color.

He has represented those on death row, mentally disabled people whose illnesses have landed them in prison for decades, and abused and neglected and emotionally ill and cognitively impaired children who have been prosecuted as adults and imprisoned in adult prisons and suffered horrible sexual and physical abuse.

Bryan Stevenson is a hero to the many whose lives he has saved.

Stevenson states in the introduction to the book that he's writing about, "...Getting closer to mass incarceration and extreme punishment in America....how easily we condemn people...the injustice we create when we allow fear, anger and distance shape the way we treat the most vulnerable among us."

* America has the highest rate of incarceration in the world. The U.S. is the only country that condemned children (currently 2,500) to life imprisonment without parole. Race is the greatest predictor of who gets the death penalty in the U.S. There are many instances of bad lawyers, later disbarred who inadequately defend indigent clients.

Just Mercy's focus is on the author's tireless, almost Herculean efforts and constant struggles to get those who've been unjustly accused off death row and also to advocate for children as young as 13 years who've been sentenced to life without parole.

The book's main character is a man who has been framed and is scheduled to be executed. We are introduced to him as he sits on death row before he's even been convicted. We follow him throughout the book as the author struggles to save his life.

Many of the stories are Kafkaesque: A woman lies to police and says she's pregnant to avoid doing jail time and is later accused of killing her (nonexistent) infant. She faces capitol murder charges and a potential death sentence so she makes a deal and accepts a 20 year prison sentence.

Most of the stories are horrifying like something from a Russian Gulag: A homeless sexually abused and battered 14 year old girl accidentally sets a fire and kills two and though she is found to lack intent, she is sentenced to life in prison ...where she is raped by a guard...and becomes pregnant. As of 2014 she's been in prison for 38 years.

A 13 year old with mental disabilities and who reads at a first grade level is charged with sexual battery in addition to a burglary he committed with two older boys; one who committed a prior sex crime. The boy maintains his innocence. The state refuses to present DNA evidence, then destroys it. The boy isn't even identified by the victim. He is sentenced to life without parole...and is repeatedly raped ...and attempts suicide many times.

A thirteen year old shot a woman. He and two other boys are charged with armed robbery and attempted homicide. The boy's lawyer tells him to plead guilty and tells the boy he'd be sentenced to 15 years in prison. The judge accepts the boy's plea and sentences him to life without parole. To protect the boy from sexual assault the staff at the prison puts the 13 year old in solitary confinement. He spends 18 years in solitary confinement, not seeing another inmate or being able to touch another person, getting his meals through a slot, and living in a space the size of a closet. He becomes a `cutter' and slashes his wrists arms. He attempts suicide several times.

This book reads like one horror story after another.

Stevenson writes, "The true measure of our character is how we treat the poor, the disfavored, the accused, the incarcerated and the condemned."

Bryan Stevenson more than measures up.

In June 1012 the author won a constitutional ban on life without parole sentences imposed on children convicted of homicides.
He continues to fight. He continues to win though for too many, the battle has been lost.

This book is a shattering experience.
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Just read it. Please.

I thought I was well-informed when it came to racial disparity in our prison system. I've read the reports, I know the shocking numbers. I turned the last page of Stevenson's book feeling like I knew nothing at all. I felt outraged (and here I thought I was pretty inured to injustice by this point...I thought I was pretty jaded). I felt so deeply saddened.

But I don't want those deep feelings, as negative as they sound, to keep other people from reading this book. Because I believe that it's one of the most important books you will ever read. As frustrating as Stevenson's experiences have been, as frustrating as our legal system is, the work that Stevenson has done is still uplifting. That there are people like him still in our world is important to me --- it gives me hope.

Please. Read this book. Make an effort to understand the judicial system you thought you knew. There are certain idealistic lies we just accept in this country (good example: Christopher Columbus was a great explorer, a great man who discovered America and we honor him every year with his own holiday. In reality, he enslaved and killed the natives of the Bahamas, had no problem with turning young native girls into sexual slaves, etc and so on. This information is freely available in the form of Chris's journals for anyone to read transcribed online, but we live in ignorance.). This is certainly true of our justice system here in America. We continue to believe that our justice system always does the "right" thing. Because this is America, after all. When the truth is quite different. We just don't want to know about that. But we need to. So read the book.
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Powerful

I recall once having a discussion with someone after a death-row inmate had been released after being exonerated. The person I was talking with, a coworker, lamented the release. When I protested that the released man was innocent, the rebuttal was that a brutal murder had been committed, and it seemed almost criminal to let the guy go free. It was a frustrating conversation since the man's actual innocence did not register with my coworker.

Reading "Just Mercy" reminded me of that conversation. Bryan Stevenson discusses a great number of cases in which the biases in the system, primarily but not exclusively racial and socioeconomic, lead to predetermined (or foreordained) results. The stories here are sometimes painful to read, and most do not end well. Some do, though, so this book, though a lament about the injustices in the prison system, does have its share of hope.

At its core, though, it is the hope that drives the book, the hope that keeps the author and the Equal Justice Initiative he founded moving forward. At its core is the struggle for Walter McMillian, a condemned man who insists that he is innocent of the murder he was convicted of. This story alone plays out like the best legal-thriller novel, but the difference here is that the story is true.

Ultimately, "Just Mercy" shows the many flaws of the justice system while at the same time showing many of the strengths, the good people who are working hard to do the right thing, even in the face of stronger forces pushing the other way. If you do not know the justice system apart from legal dramas on television or in novels, this book will show you a system of which you cannot be proud. But it will show you people of whom you absolutely can be proud.
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Tragic and Uplifting

This engaging, informative and descriptive book of actual court cases of severe injustice written by Bryan Stevenson, a Harvard graduate, who founded the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI), located in Montgomery, Alabama may possibly cause your blood pressure to elevate due to anger and/or may as in my case, reduce you to tears due to gross inhumanity. There are some happy endings but they suffer a long painful journey. However, this book will enlighten you on the United States justice system's history (focusing on the South's poor and/or black population's gross abuse) and there is a lot not to be proud of besides the legendary Ku Klux Klan. Thankfully some of that history has changed recently in a positive way. Examples of that positive change include on 05/17/10, EJI won from the Supreme Court that life imprisonment without parole on children convicted of non-homicide crimes was cruel and unusual punishment and constitutionally impermissible. During June 2012, EJI won a constitutional ban on mandatory life without parole sentences on children convicted of homicides. I worked as a pediatric nurse for 13 years and never knew children/adolescents could be convicted with those types of sentences.

It is noteworthy the United States has the largest number of prisons and prisoners in the world, plus spends more on prisons than on children's primary and secondary education (check out CNN http://money.cnn.com/infographic/economy/education-vs-prison-costs/). Is that the taxpayer's priority? And why have we gone from federal and state prisons being privatized at a greater cost? Also I encourage you to watch Harvard University's Justice with Michael Sandel - Online Harvard Course Exploring Justice, Equality, Democracy, and Citizenship @ http://www.justiceharvard.org/). This is one of my favorite shows as I always learn something and get exposed to historical and current content.

After you read the many heart-breaking case stories that other reviewers have commented on, I hope you feel compelled to assist in correcting our dysfunctional judicial system. It can be as simple as voting on Nov. 4, 2014, contacting your local and state politicians to express concerns, serving on jury duty, volunteering and/or donating money or supplies to local legal aid offices, and as has happened recently-peaceful protests against injustice.

I hope that either PBS, Sundance, Ken Burns,or Oprah decide to sponsor a documentary on Mr. Stevenson's long journey and celebrate his success as well as informing the masses.

Addendum 11/20/14: I just found out that today Bryan Stevenson speaks on Ferguson, Prison Reform & Why the Opposite of Poverty is Justice at http://www.democracynow.org/2014/11/20/just_mercy_bryan_stevenson_on_ferguson. If this link doesn't work just go to Democracy Now and select 11/20/14. The full transcript is posted. He looks a lot younger than I thought he would given the stress of his occupation. A true American hero.

Addendum 03/01/15: Today on Whroworld at 11:19 EST on Well Read, Bryan A. Stevenson will discuss this book. Likely it will be on their website if you miss it.
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A Life Lived Sharing Mercy with Those in Need of Justice

The statistics related to capital crimes and imprisonment in the US are disheartening, and little seems to have changed over the years since Bryan Stevenson started the work that became the Equal Justice Initiative, EJI. When Rosa Parks once "sweetly asked, 'Now, Bryan, tell me who you are and what you're doing," he summarized his work as follows: "we're trying to help people on death row. We're trying to stop the death penalty, actually. We're trying to do something about prison conditions and excessive punishment. We want to free people who've been wrongly convicted. We want to end unfair sentences in criminal cases and stop racial bias in criminal justice. We're trying to help the poor and do something about indigent defense and the fact that people don't get the legal help they need. We're trying to help people who are mentally ill. We're trying to stop them from putting children in adult jails and prisons. We're trying to do something about poverty and the hopelessness that dominates poor communities....I realized that I had gone on way too long, and I stopped abruptly...Ms. Parks leaned back, smiling. 'Oooooh, honey, all that's going to make you tired, tired, tired....That's why you've got to be brave, brave, brave.'"

Just Mercy is a wonderfully readable acoount of Stevenson's work with individuals and families caught in the mire of an often unjust justice system. There are successes and failures, there is pain and incredible sadness, but makes this book stand out is the strength of the author's own character. He has appeared before the US Supreme Court as well as many lower courts, sometimes gaining stays of execution, sometimes unable to get through the arcane nature of some laws and regulations. But the power of his willingness to stay the course, to continue his work is seen when after he was unable to stop the execution of an intellectually disabled client. He dried his tears and got in the car to go home, weary and worn. Then he hears a radio pastor speaking of 2 Corinthians 12:9: "So now I am glad to boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may work through me. Since I know it is all for Christ's good, I am quite content with my weaknesses and with insults, hardships, persecution and calamities." Ruminating on the pastor's words, Stevenson says, "I understood that even as we are caught in a web of hurt and brokenness, we're also in a web of healing and mercy...The power of just mercy is that it belongs to the undeserving. It's when mercy is least expected that it's most potent."

And so EJI continues its work, bringing mercy and working for justice. This book is incredibly important for us all to read and begin to realize that all of us need to be supporting efforts to bring real justice to all parts of our society. Thank goodness for Mr. Stevenson and others working with him as they bring a ray of hope into the lives of so many. "The kind of hope that creates a willingness to position oneself in a hopeless place and be a witness, that allows one to believe in a better future, even in the face of abusive power. That kind of hope makes one strong." Pick up a copy of Just Mercy and consider how you too can become one more ray of hope.
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How the justice system really works

If you've read other books about the American criminal justice system, you won't be surprised. The system ultimately costs a great deal in human suffering, misplaced resources, long-term damage to family structure and a great deal more. Yet it's not clear that we're getting any benefits.

Many authors describe the problem in the abstract; an opening note from the editor refers to Gopnick's description of the US as an "incarceral state." In some ways, the system seems to operate from an underlying belief that locking people up is a virtue in itself; the need to protect society is of far lesser importance.

Bryan Stevenson focuses on the nitty-gritty of the system. He shows us the way the arbitrariness of judges and prosecutors affects individuals; indeed, the evil in the system comes not from criminals, but from those who claim to representing the good forces o justice.

Stevenson adds a personal touch, showing how his career has been spent as san attorney with a non-profit Alabama agency. Not surprisingly, few lawyers are willing to work long hours for low pay, so thousands of prisoners are left with inadequate representation. From a new intern who had never been inside a prison, Stevenson went on to become an agency director and a national authority.

Stevenson presents many horrific stories, including stories of young teenagers who are tried as adults and end up being abused in adult prison, often serving life sentences. Psychologists now know that the brains of children and teenagers operate differently from those of adults, yet the justice system takes no notice. In Pennsylvania alone, something like 500 people are serving time for crimes committed as children; the cost alone should give us pause.

Racism still accounts for much of the injustice. Stevenson writes of working at defense counsel table in a courtroom, before the trial began, wearing a dark suit and tie; the judge reprimanded him harshly, assuming he was a defendant, ordering him to "get back in the hall." Stevenson stayed polite because he didn't want to alienate a judge and thus adversely affect his client.

Stevenson devotes much attention to the case of Walter McMillan, a black man facing the death penalty, accused of murdering a white woman. McMillan insisted on his innocence. Witnesses came forward to show he couldn't have committed the crime, firmly placing his whereabouts elsewhere. Nobody was listening.

Readers might be reminded of the Duke lacrosse case, where a young man was charged with a crime when an ATM photo placed him far from the scene of the crime. Unlike McMillan, this young man and his co-defendants had resources to mount a strong campaign to get the charges dropped and the prosecutor disbarred. Yet their lives were permanently affected; many people learned of the charges but were not aware that their innocence was made clear.

Stevenson says, "Walter made me understand why we have to reform a system of criminal justice that continues to treat people better if they are rich and guilty than if they are poor and innocent." Yet rich people also get railroaded, as Mark Geragos writes in his book, Mistrial, and Harvey Silvergate writes in Three Felonies a Day. The truth is that no one is really safe. We as a society have bought into the "tough on crime" mystique and the belief that if someone has been accused of a crime - however capriciously - that person probably is guilty. These beliefs have a particularly adverse impact on poor, non-white populations, but ultimately make a mockery of a society that prides itself on offering "liberty and justice to all."

Next steps: Write to your legislators and donate to legal funds, either now or with a provision in your will.
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A must read.

I listened to this book on Audible and I enjoyed it so much that I just bought the actual book for my Dad for Christmas. Maybe enjoyed isn’t the correct word, as the subject matter was infuriating. As a white middle aged blonde woman, I cannot even begin to understand the inequalities that people of color experience even today, but I’m always trying to learn and understand. On an intellectual level I know that disparities occur with law enforcement and have had actual arguments with people who will say “if they would just follow the police officer’s orders” when discussing yet another death of a black male at the hands of law enforcement. And then there is the time I argued with an acquaintance who was defending George Zimmerman. So yeah, people’s attitudes haven’t changed as much as one would hope. Reading this book helped me to actually *feel* the fury and hopelessness that the people and their loved ones in these stories experienced. This should be a must read for all Americans, especially those who doubt that the disparity is real.
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THIS BOOK HITS THE NAIL ON THE HEAD IN A WAY THAT IS VISCERAL. CHOOSE JUSTICE IF YOU TRULY WANT A NATION OF PEACEFUL CITIZENS

A riveting and relentlessly needed look at just what laws and justice in America really have to do with the people
the police and the lawyers on both sides of the table. Then of course there is the throned wonders called judges.
Some of whom make being honest and law abiding more work than walking home alone on a dark windy night.

Beneath the skillful prose is a heart and mind that love the Law and what it can be and someone who is dedicated to seeing that it is fair.
The stories including his own feelings of fear after a police stop and illegal search of his vehicle make what is happening in places like what is happening in todays inner cities throb in one's mind. In my day it was the white gangs and punks and the bad cops and the things they unlawfully did and we suffered in silence.

I am someone who loved reading about the Knights and the code of protecting the weak from the abusive. I feared that sensibility of wanting balance and fairness in the execution of the Laws of the land was but a memory. Not anymore.

THis book is a great read that marries a message of the wisdom of a fair system of justice with the compassion of a very wise elder teaching us that to have a land of peace we must first stop the bullying cops and the lopsided legal from creating the problem rather than mitigating it.

Highly recommended
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