Description

Book Synopsis
On May 13, 1988, Stephen Roy Carr, a so-called mountain man living in Michaux State Forest in south central Pennsylvania, shot two female hikers while they were making love at a campsite near the Appalachian Trail. Rebecca Wight died at the scene. Claudia Brenner, despite five bullet wounds, survived to testify against her attacker. In this book, H.L. Pohlman reconstructs the dramatic story of this widely-publicized murder case and traces its disposition through the criminal justice system. Drawing on interviews with participants as well as court records, he closely examines competing interpretations of the evidence. Was the attack a hate crime? A sex crime? A class crime? At the same time, he shows how a broad range of substantive and procedural issues - from the rights of the accused to evaluations of potential mitigating circumstances - can influence the assessment of culpability in homicide cases. Much of Pohlman's analysis centres around two fundamental and related questions: To what extent did the adversarial system facilitate or hinder the discovery of the ""whole truth"" in the Carr case? And was justice served? He concludes by revisiting the ongoing debate over the nature of the American criminal justice system and the legitimacy of its ultimate sanction - the death penalty.

The Whole Truth?: A Case of Murder on the

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    A Paperback / softback by H.L. Pohlman

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      View other formats and editions of The Whole Truth?: A Case of Murder on the by H.L. Pohlman

      Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
      Publication Date: 31/01/1999
      ISBN13: 9781558491663, 978-1558491663
      ISBN10: 155849166X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      On May 13, 1988, Stephen Roy Carr, a so-called mountain man living in Michaux State Forest in south central Pennsylvania, shot two female hikers while they were making love at a campsite near the Appalachian Trail. Rebecca Wight died at the scene. Claudia Brenner, despite five bullet wounds, survived to testify against her attacker. In this book, H.L. Pohlman reconstructs the dramatic story of this widely-publicized murder case and traces its disposition through the criminal justice system. Drawing on interviews with participants as well as court records, he closely examines competing interpretations of the evidence. Was the attack a hate crime? A sex crime? A class crime? At the same time, he shows how a broad range of substantive and procedural issues - from the rights of the accused to evaluations of potential mitigating circumstances - can influence the assessment of culpability in homicide cases. Much of Pohlman's analysis centres around two fundamental and related questions: To what extent did the adversarial system facilitate or hinder the discovery of the ""whole truth"" in the Carr case? And was justice served? He concludes by revisiting the ongoing debate over the nature of the American criminal justice system and the legitimacy of its ultimate sanction - the death penalty.

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