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The Wrong Man: The Final Verdict on the Dr. Sam Sheppard Murder Case
 
 
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The Wrong Man: The Final Verdict on the Dr. Sam Sheppard Murder Case [Hardcover]

James Neff (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 30, 2001
The real-life murder that became known as “The Fugitive” case began before dawn on July 4, 1954, in a Cleveland suburb, when Marilyn Sheppard was viciously beaten to death in her bed. After an inadequate investigation, her husband, Dr. Sam Sheppard, was charged with the crime, and a chain of events was set in motion that has caused more speculation, more publicity, and more cultural myth than any other American murder.

James Neff is an award-winning investigative journalist who, over the past ten years, has assembled the most compete set of Sheppard records in existence, including DNA analyses and interviews with every living person central to the case. He has also gained unprecedented access to crime-scene evidence that shows conclusively that Sham Sheppard did not murder his wife–and points to the man who did. Peeling away the layers of fiction surrounding the case, Neff uncovers the factual events and the key players in a story that until now has been shrouded in mystery. The Wrong Man is a landmark work, a gripping narrative, and indeed the final verdict on America’s most famous unsolved murder


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Before O.J. Simpson, Sam Sheppard was probably the most famous man acquitted for murder in the United States. Sheppard was a suburban Cleveland doctor accused of murdering his wife in 1954. The essentials of his case are well known. Sheppard said he was asleep on the couch when he heard his wife scream from the bedroom; he ran up the stairs and was knocked out by her attacker. Before long, Sheppard himself became the leading suspect--and most of the public came to consider him guilty. In The Wrong Man, reporter James Neff offers a detailed and well-told narrative that argues for Sheppard's innocence. Based on 10 years of research and interviews with many of the people whose lives touched the case, from family members to jurors to Sheppard's famous attorney F. Lee Bailey, Neff's account seems convincing. He even proposes a perpetrator, who, Neff says, offered something "close of a confession" during an interview shortly before his death in 1998. There may never be a "final verdict" in the saga of Sam Sheppard, but many readers will think this book effectively closes the case. --John Miller

From Publishers Weekly

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 easily the best of the true-crime genre so far for 2001. 8 pages of b & w photos not seen by PW. Agent, Esther Newberg, ICM. (On sale Oct. 30) Forecast: This definitive treatment of one of the most famous murder cases of the 20th century should be a big seller.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Random House; 1st edition (October 30, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679457194
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679457190
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.4 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #340,538 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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19 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Justice at Long Last, November 9, 2001
By 
Richard A. Cook (INDIANAPOLIS, IN USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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This review is from: The Wrong Man: The Final Verdict on the Dr. Sam Sheppard Murder Case (Hardcover)
The Wrong Man is a gripping and provocative look at the sensational murder trial(s)of Sam Sheppard. While in high school in the 70's, I remember first reading about the case in F. Lee Bailey's book "The Defense Never Rests". Neff's book takes you behind the headlines of this infamous case and moves forward from the day of the crime and through the various incarnations of the case in the state and federal courts. He looks in depth at the participants and suspects in one of the century's greatest "unsolved murders." This case is a clear example of a man and a family destroyed by politicians and the press. These folks refused to let the facts get in the way of a good story. Sheppard's life and reputation were lost because the case was tried in the newspapers and television, instead of the court room. Oddly enough, through three trials in a "search for truth" justice was never served. It is ironic that Neff's objective review of the case as a journalist and a "member of the press" may be the closest the Sheppard family ever gets to finding the truth and obtaining justice. This is not simply a regurgitation of the headlines but a probing anatomy of an infamous crime and what happens when a "good story" over takes the facts, a community, and our system of justice. It also shows why our freedoms guaranteed by the constitution (including the freedom of the press) must be jealously guarded against all who would take them away. I could not put the book down once I started reading it and strongly recommend it to any one who enjoys the true crime genre or reading law related novels. Here, the facts are stranger (and more interesting) than any fiction one could invent.
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16 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The penultimate word on the Sheppard case, November 14, 2001
This review is from: The Wrong Man: The Final Verdict on the Dr. Sam Sheppard Murder Case (Hardcover)
Given the antiquity of the Sheppard case, the loss of physical evidence and the death of virtually all of its chief figures, it is unlikely that this baffling murder case will ever be solved beyond the shadow of a doubt. But James Neff has come closer than anyone yet in penetrating to the core of this anguished puzzle. Well-researched and well-written, it demolishes many myths and misconceptions about the case and renders virtually every previous book on the case obsolete. Hard-core followers of the Sheppard phenomeon may be no more swayed by Neff's faith in the DNA evidence proffered in the 3rd Sheppard trial last year (the jurors weren't convinced)but he nonetheless makes a compelling argument for the guilt of Richard Eberling, a familiar and repugnant suspect to Sheppard buffs. True, Neff sidesteps the ludicrous implausabilities of Sheppard's "bushy-haired intruder" story but his evidence and arguments will be the starting place for any further controversy on this celebrated case. In a word, don't exhale until you've read this book.
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15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating and disturbing reading!, December 28, 2001
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This review is from: The Wrong Man: The Final Verdict on the Dr. Sam Sheppard Murder Case (Hardcover)
Some people feel that the 'not-guilty' verdict at the 1966 re-trial of Dr. Sam Sheppard following his release from prison, coupled with the fact that he died over 30 years ago, makes any discussion of his case pointless. Many others however, view the Sheppard case as a tragic miscarriage of justice that put the wrong man behind bars for a decade--and feel that nothing less than a total exoneration is called for.

Dr. Samuel Sheppard was living an idyllic early-1950's life. Along with his father and two brothers, the handsome young doctor ran a small private hospital in a quiet suburb of Cleveland. He had a beautiful wife, Marilyn, a young son nicknamed 'Chip,' and large lakefront home with a Lincoln and a Jaguar convertible in the driveway. He had it all.

On the morning of July 4, 1954, life as he knew it came to a crushing end when Marilyn --four months pregnant at the time-- was discovered brutally murdered in her bed. Sam claimed to have been asleep on a couch downstairs when the attack occurred.

After being startled awake, he confronted a "bushy-haired" man who attacked him (fracturing Sam's second cervical vertebra in the process), and ran from the house, disappearing into the night. Sam, however, made a convenient suspect. Certainly, it was more comforting for the public to think that the crime was a case of a domestic argument gone to a horrible extreme than to believe that a murderous lunatic was randomly slaughtering housewives. Then there was the affair: rumored; denied; and ultimately acknowledged.

James Neff's "The Wrong Man" is a fascinating account of this notorious case. While Sheppard made an understandable suspect for the reasons stated above and more, the details of his first trial are absolutely shocking. From the judge presiding over the case who, at the start of the trial declared (to columnist Dorothy Kilgallen), Sheppard "guilty as hell" during a conversation she only acknowledged years later, to the selective cover-up of any evidence that could prove Sam's innocence, this heavily-researched book exposes an outrageous miscarriage of justice.

Neff even interviewed a more plausible suspect. Richard Eberling, a handyman whose window-washing accounts included the Sheppard home, acknowledged that he had cut himself while in the house some days prior to the murder, and though he dripped blood throughout the house, neglected to clean up the trail. He was ultimately convicted and imprisoned on an unrelated murder charge, but Neff reveals that this was the tip of the iceberg.

Eberling's past is seemingly filled with women who have died under mysterious circumstances. If that were not enough to cast some serious doubts upon the original verdict, he confessed the Sheppard murder directly to one individual, and indirectly to the author himself.

All in all, it's spellbinding and thought-provoking look at a man that had it all and lost everything.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
EARLY SATURDAY MORNING, July 3, 1954, Dr. Sam Sheppard pulled his Lincoln into the parking lot of Bay View Hospital, housed in a huge, Georgian-style mansion built on the bluffs of Lake Erie. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
closet stain, murder room, flying blood, human secretions, domestic homicide, likely killer, polygraph exam
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sam Sheppard, Marilyn Sheppard, Bay Village, Sam Reese, Bay View, Susan Hayes, Steve Sheppard, Richard Eberling, Los Angeles, Cuyahoga County, New York, Bill Corrigan, Mary Cowan, Ethel Durkin, Esther Houk, Cleveland Press, Lake Erie, Lee Bailey, Richard Sheppard, Terry Gilbert, Judge Blythin, Rocky River, Judge Suster, Paul Kirk, Plain Dealer
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