During
the closing months of 1984 and extending through
A PLEA FOR JUSTICE: The Timothy Cole Story describes how a 24-year-old black student, an army veteran also attending Tech, became entangled in a web of deceit that branded him as the assailant.
Before he passed away while
serving the thirteenth of a twenty-five year sentence, Tim Cole expressed
a fervent desire to be vindicated, exonerated, and pardoned, and in
an effort to honor his last wishes, a devoted mother and family, supported
and represented by the Innocence Project of Texas, carried the fight
through the court system, both houses of the Lone Star State’s legislature,
to the Board of Pardons and Paroles, and finally to the governor.
This is a gut-wrenching story of courage, devotion, conviction, honor, a family that never compromised its principles—and at the end of a struggle that lasted almost twenty-five years, the manner in which Texas conducts criminal investigations and treats its exonerees is rocked to the very core.
Read more: FOREWORD by Jeff Blackburn, founder and chief counsel, the Innocence Project of Texas.
Read Bob Ray Sanders' REVIEW. Mr. Sanders is a vice president/associate editor of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Tim Cole, 1960–1999, holds
the distinction of being the first to receive a posthumous exoneration
and pardon in the
[Eakin Press, 2010 (Softcover), Non-Fiction,
ISBN 193563204-3, 6X9, xvi + 241 pages, photos, appendices,
endnotes, glossary, bibliography, and index]
The Innocence Project
of Texas in
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