Bringing Ben Home
A Murder, a Conviction, and the Fight to Redeem American Justice
In 1987, Ben Spencer, a twenty-two-year-old Black man from Dallas, was convicted of murdering white businessman Jeffrey Young—a crime he didn’t commit. From the day of his arrest, Spencer insisted that it was “an awful mistake.” The Texas legal system didn’t see it that way. It allowed shoddy police work, paid witnesses, and prosecutorial misconduct to convict Spencer of murder, and it ignored later efforts to correct this error. The state’s bureaucratic intransigence caused Spencer to spend more than half his life in prison.
Eventually independent investigators, new witness testimony, the foreman of the jury that convicted him, and a new Dallas DA convinced a Texas judge that Spencer had nothing to do with the killing, and in 2021 he was released from prison.
As Spencer’s fight to clear himself demonstrates, our legal systems are broken: expedience is more important than the truth. That is starting to change as states across the country implement new efforts to reduce wrongful convictions, and one of the states leading the way is Texas.
Award-winning journalist Barbara Bradley Hagerty has spent years digging into this issue, and she has immersed herself in Spencer’s case. She has combed police files and court records, interviewed dozens of witnesses, and had extensive conversations with Spencer, and in Bringing Ben Home she threads together two narratives: how an innocent Black man got caught up in and couldn’t escape a legal system that refused to admit its mistakes; and what Texas and other states are doing to address wrongful convictions to make the legal process more equitable for everyone.
By turns fascinating and enraging, personal and provocative, Bringing Ben Home is the powerful story of one innocent man who refused to admit that he was guilty of murder, and how his plight became part of a paradigm shift in how the legal system thinks about innocence as it institutes new methods to overturn wrongful convictions to better protect people like Ben Spencer.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
August 6, 2024 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780593420102
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780593420102
- File size: 2191 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
June 15, 2024
A thought-provoking cultural discussion of wrongful convictions based on race. In 1987, Benjamine Spencer, a Black man, received a life sentence for a crime he did not commit: the brutal murder of Jeffrey Young, a white man, in Dallas. According to Hagerty, author of Life Reimagined and Fingerprints of God, this narrative--of an innocent person of color incarcerated without the benefits of credible witnesses, solid evidence, a competent investigation, or effective legal counsel--is disturbingly common. What makes this story distinctive, however, is the author's keen understanding that each experience is unique to a specific individual. The concept of injustice may be monolithic, but the mechanics involved are far more complex than most people comprehend. "If Spencer's experience could be captured in one sentence," writes Hagerty, "it is this: Convicting an innocent person is easy; undoing the mistake is almost impossible." The author's narrative persuasively demonstrates how deeply embedded racism is in the fabric of the American criminal justice system. Unfortunately, few people heroically advocate for the wrongly imprisoned. In this case, the hero is Jim McCloskey, a Vietnam veteran and priest who has been instrumental in the modern innocence movement and aided Spencer in his fight for freedom until 2021, "when he became one of the rare prisoners in America who persuaded a prosecutor to take a second look at his conviction." The description of the emancipation process is occasionally a slog, but Hagerty skillfully interweaves details of relevant past cases and historical commentary about how the justice system consistently moves the goalpost to punish Black Americans. Thankfully, the story has a satisfying conclusion, but it's disconcerting nonetheless. Hagerty's work will appeal to readers of Bryan Stevenson's Just Mercy and similar books. A stirring account of a legal travesty that effectively reveals a rotten core within the justice system.COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Booklist
July 1, 2024
Jeffrey Young, a 33-year-old businessman and father, was working on a Sunday night in March 1987, before being beaten by two men in his office building's parking garage, locked in the trunk of his BMW, and left, dead, on a West Dallas street.The brutal murder of a white man in a predominantly Black Dallas neighborhood brought national pressure to the case. Despite conflicting witness statements and an alibi, detectives arrested Benjamine Spencer, who maintained his innocence during his trials and for more than 30 years of incarceration. Journalist Hagerty (Life Reimagined, 2016) takes readers through Ben's story, from the rushed investigation to the uphill battle to prove his innocence. When describing each piece of the process, such as the use of jailhouse informants, Hagerty draws on examples from other exonerees' cases, at times distracting from the narrative of Ben's experience. Including interviews with many people involved in Ben's case and excerpts of his letters from prison, Bringing Ben Home shines a wrenching, difficult spotlight on the U.S. legal system's potential for extraordinary failure.COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
subjects
Languages
- English
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