cover image Dead Wrong: A Death Row Lawyer Speaks Out Against Capitol Punishment

Dead Wrong: A Death Row Lawyer Speaks Out Against Capitol Punishment

Michael A. Mello. University of Wisconsin Press, $29.95 (416pp) ISBN 978-0-299-15340-3

Fourteen years of ""deathwork"" as a public defender appealing capital convictions in Florida have convinced Vermont Law School professor Mello (Against the Death Penalty) that the U.S. system of capital punishment is just plain evil. This blistering, well-annotated critique of a legal system ""so rigged that it can't even be trusted to ensure that it is killing the right person"" is an often manifesto-like explication of his recent decision to abstain from ""deathwork"" altogether. Writing in ""a language that my mother could read"" and citing poets, philosophers and musicians when his own words fail, Mello is both passionate and eloquent. When he's over the top--in a single sentence that rambles for 28 pages or in the obscenities he applies to certain judges--he's railing against the perceived injustice and perverseness he has had ample opportunity to experience up close, and which, he says, has claimed lives in error. One of his clients was executed ostensibly because Mello did not file certain claims soon enough. Another has spent 20 years on death row for, Mello explains, a crime he never committed--a media expose saved his life. Far from romanticizing the defendants or their crimes, Mello keeps the focus on the system: regardless of actual guilt or innocence, convicts die, he argues, because of procedural technicalities, the performance of their attorneys or the political aspirations of governors and judges. Mello's searing, intense and personal witness forces readers to confront the seemingly faulty mechanics lurking behind the ultimate judicial process. Author tour. (Jan.)