The Wrong Man: The Final Verdict on the Dr. Sam Sheppard Murder Case
James Neff. Random House Trade, $13.95 (456pp) ISBN 978-0-375-76105-8
The brutal murder of Marilyn Sheppard in a Cleveland suburb in 1954 led to the wrongful conviction and imprisonment of her husband and precipitated a popular television series (The Fugitive), two hit films and the federal appeals case that made F. Lee Bailey famous. This is a story of ""blood, violent death, mystery and sex,"" and Neff (Mobbed Up) brilliantly dissects the vital organs of the case, uncovering the terror and bureaucratic frustration Dr. Sam Sheppard encountered when faced with ""a community, a court system, and a powerful press corps working in apparent lockstep to convict him."" More importantly, he presents new case material, including blood evidence and unheard testimonies as well as Sheppard's prison diaries and interviews with those close to the investigation-all evidence that now points to the true identity of Marilyn's killer. Neff's illumination of Marilyn's unhappy marriage is careful and empathetic, while his portrayal of Sam's womanizing shows how easy it was for the prosecution to paint him as a killer. Neff's nose for news is no less powerful: he tracks the increasing public support of Sheppard's innocence, follows a pioneering criminologist whose career was nearly destroyed by Cleveland's political machine and sheds light on the historical shifts in the treatment of suspects since the Sheppard murder case. This brilliant, well-written story is one of the best true-crime volumes in years.
Details
Reviewed on: 11/01/2002
Genre: Nonfiction
Hardcover - 414 pages - 978-0-679-45719-0