On Memorial Day 1933, Stanford executive David Lamson found his wife, Allene, dead in their Palo Alto home. The only suspect, he became the face of California's most sensational murder trial of the century. After a judge sentenced him to hang at San Quentin, a team of Stanford colleagues stepped in to form the Lamson Defense Committee. The group included poets Yvor Winters and Janet Lewis, as well as the "Sherlock Holmes of Berkeley," criminologist E.O. Heinrich. They managed to overturn the verdict and incite a series of heated retrials that gripped and divided the community. Was Lamson the victim of aggressive prosecutors, or was he a master of deception whose connections helped him get away with murder? Author and Stanford alum Tom Zaniello meticulously examines the details of a notorious case with a lingering legacy.
Starte noch heute mit diesem Buch für 0 €
- Hole dir während der Testphase vollen Zugriff auf alle Bücher in der App
- Keine Verpflichtungen, jederzeit kündbar
Autor*in:
Reihe:
True CrimeSprache:
Englisch
Format:

True Crime, Pt. 1: Jack the Ripper - The Story of a Murderer (Audiodrama)

True Crime - The 60's : 13 Shocking True Crime Cases From The 1960's

True Crime - The 90's : 13 Shocking True Crime Cases From The 1990's

True Crime Northern Virginia in the '50s & '60s

Northern Ohio Cold Cases

Historic Louisville Murders

St. Louis Gambling Kingpins

The Thibodaux Massacre : Racial Violence and the 1887 Sugar Cane Labor Strike

Crooked Politics in Northwest Indiana

The Boy Nevada Killed: Floyd Loveless and the Juvenile Capital Punishment Debate

True Crime Stories of Burlington, Vermont
