Justice Failed : How Legal Ethics Kept Me in Prison for 26 Years
Justice Failed : How Legal Ethics Kept Me in Prison for 26 Years
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Author(s): Logan, Alton
ISBN No.: 9781619029927
Pages: 160
Year: 201710
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 44.79
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Praise for Justice Failed An Official Junior Library Guild Selection, Adult Crossover Nonfiction "Alarming and timely, Justice Failed is a must-read for anyone hoping to better understand the reality of modern American criminal justice." -- New York Journal of Books "A shocking tale of wrongful conviction . that brings general conditions into cruelly sharp focus." -- Kirkus Reviews "In simple, unadorned prose, Logan tells his story of the gravely flawed justice system that imprisoned him, an innocent man, for nearly three decades . A powerful argument that will appeal to readers of Michael Morton's Getting Life: An Innocent Man's 25-Year Journey from Prison to Peace ." -- Library Journal "The story of the wrongful conviction of Alton Logan in Chicago stands out as perhaps one of the most unusual and cruel stories in the history of American jurisprudence. Convicted of a 1982 murder and sentenced to life in prison, Logan was not only innocent, but lawyers for the real killer knew it all along and, citing legal ethics, kept it a secret for more than a quarter of a century before revealing the evidence that set Logan free." --Maurice Possley, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and New York Times best-selling author of The Brown's Chicken Massacre and Everybody Pays "This remarkable first-person story, told by an innocent man who lost twenty-six years of his life for a crime he did not commit, not only presents the dilemma that criminal defense attorneys face when their client confesses to them, but also recounts how a serial police torturer named Jon Burge framed him, and a racist 'justice' system sealed his fate.


" --G. Flint Taylor, longtime attorney at the People's Law Office in Chicago, who has represented numerous wrongfully convicted victims of Chicago police torture "This is a superb book about a tragedy in which legal ethics stood perversely in the way of justice, costing an innocent man more than a quarter century of his life." --Rob Warden, codirector of Injustice Watch, Inc., and executive director emeritus of the Center on Wrongful Conviction, Northwestern University School of Law.


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