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Dead Run: The Untold Story of Dennis Stockton and America's Only Mass Escape
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Dead Run: The Untold Story of Dennis Stockton and America's Only Mass Escape from Death Row Hardcover - 1999

by Jackson, Joe

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From the publisher

Burke and Joe Jackson, a reporter colleague, investigate Stockton's persistent claims of innocence and discover that everything he has asserted checks out, from his version of the closing hours of a lonely country diner to his allegations of a secret prosecution deal with the witness whose testimony convicted him. They uncover a sinister underworld in Stockton's small town and fill in the frame that was hung around his neck. Employing Stockton's writings and their own deep research into the rural South and Death Row, the authors have produced a powerful book on a front-page social issue--wrongful conviction and execution--that reads like the most chilling suspense novel. Yet this is not fiction. Dead Run is a riveting, impeccably sourced prison drama about a condemned man whose fate readers will never forget.

Since 1980, when William F. Burke, Jr. (right), became an editor at The Virginian-Pilot, stories he's edited have received four Pulitzer Prize nominations. During Joe Jackson's tenure with The Virginian-Pilot, stories he reported were nominated for three Pulitzers and resulted in the acquittal of a man wrongly convicted of murder and the recantations of two witnesses whose testimony had sentenced men to death. They live with their families in Virginia Beach, Virginia.

First line

Dennis Stockton watched the rolling hills of Virginia's Piedmont scroll across the windows of the hot, sealed prison van.

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Media reviews

Early Readers Praise A Riveting Jailhouse Drama

"Dead Run is a gripping true narrative, remarkable for the manner in which it treats crime and punishment, and the issue of justice in this country, on a level that should trouble one's deepest conscience. . . . What gives the tale much of its extraordinary fascination is its rendition of life on Death Row as seen through Stockton's eyes. . . . Colorful, ironic and cheerfully mordant . . . [he] came to the writer's calling fairly late in life, and this straightforward and often pungently stoical record of his slow inching toward death was all he had to give us, before the state exacted its retribution. . . . It is a gift we should treasure, bearing witness as it does to Stockton's own appealing humanity, and the inhumanity of the law that destroyed him."--from William Styron's Introduction

"Whew! This is great stuff, ingeniously told, hard to put down. The first page hustles you through the prison gates and you don't get out until the last line. This is the sort of inside stuff that outsiders who have studied prisons for years just don't get, written as it is not by an outsider looking in, but through the eyes of an arguably innocent man whose brutally
honest account of what it feels like to be a dead man walking is both captivating and horrific. The two authors--reporters who covered Stockton's story--have done a brilliant job letting him carry the book. In a sensitive and unfettered voice, Stockton's story is told with such searing honesty that a reader wants to jump to his feet and yell, 'Stop this insanity!'
as he is being led to the execution chamber."--Pete Earley, author of The Hot House: Life Inside Leavenworth Prison