Death Row
Interviews with Inmates, Their Families and Opponents of Capital Punishment
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About the Book
The 34 chapters in this book are largely composed of interviews—with the men on death row, with individuals fighting the death penalty, and with the families of the condemned. Several chapters also cover such topics as the execution of juveniles, mentally retarded individuals and Vietnam veterans, ineffective legal counsel and racist criminal justice systems, botched executions, and executions carried out despite the contrary wishes of prosecutors and victims’ families.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Shirley Dicks
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 158
Bibliographic Info: bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2013 [1990]
pISBN: 978-0-7864-6943-7
eISBN: 978-1-4766-1222-5
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Preface xi
Part I. Fighting the Death Penalty
1. Joe Ingle 1
2. Mary Kaki Friskics-Warren 12
3. Harmon Wray 15
4. Jeff Blum 19
5. Watt Espy 23
6. Patricia Smith 29
7. Richard Moran 31
8. The Execution of Juvenile Offenders 36
9. The Execution of Vietnam Veterans 37
10. Marie Deans 38
11. Racism and the Death Penalty 42
12. Ineffective Trial Representation 43
13. Execution by Default 45
14. Executions Despite the Wishes of Prosecutors and Victims’ Families 46
15. Botched Executions 47
16. Hugo Bedau 49
17. Victor Streib 58
Part II. The Men on Death Row
18. Richard Simon 65
19. Don Johnson 69
20. Cecil Johnson 72
21. Billy Groseclose 75
22. Gary Cone 79
23. Mr. D. 82
24. Ron Harries 85
25. Kenneth O’Guinn 90
26. Byron Parker 94
27. Fred Coffee, Jr. 99
28. Jeff Dicks 102
Part III. The Families of the Condemned
29. Rose Williams—Mother 109
30. Dovie Page—Mother 112
31. Georgia Barber—Mother 115
32. Tina Mathews—Grandmother 118
33. Dawn & Tanya Perry—Daughters 122
34. Shirley Dicks—Mother 126
Bibliography 141
Index 143
Book Reviews & Awards
• “Powerful and meaningful…a valuable addition”—Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice
• “Poignant and thought-provoking, the book exposes the contradiction between the struggle for human rights and the use of capital punishment”—CrimeFacts