cover image The Last Lawyer: The Fight to Save Death Row Inmates

The Last Lawyer: The Fight to Save Death Row Inmates

John Temple. University Press of Mississippi, $25 (234pp) ISBN 978-1-60473-355-6

For years, lawyer Ken Rose has fought to save wrongly-condemned prisoners; chronicling the story of Rose and death row inmate Bo Jones, author Temple (Dollhouse: Life in a Coroner's Office) finds high drama in Raleigh penitentiaries, North Carolina backroads, cramped law offices, and sweltering courtrooms. Investigators, criminals, judges, witnesses, and attorneys are all finely, vividly drawn in this disturbing account of a justice system hijacked by officials whose prime interest is finding criminals to execute: ""Even if Bo Jones wasn't one of the worst of the worst, they pursued him because he was one of the ones they could get."" Reviewing the original 1987 murder, the consequent trials and endless hearings, Temple creates an intimate portrait of Rose and his Center for Death Penalty Litigation as they trudge through a decade of work on this case, a typical example that pits the odds and public opinion against them: ""To question capital punishment was to appear soft on crime... In court, one well known district attorney sported a golden lapel pin shaped like a hangman's noose."" Ultimately, Temple's account is a stand-up-and cheer account of one man standing up for justice.