From Publishers Weekly
On May 22, 1992, Jack Wilson, a prominent Huntsville, Ala., ophthalmologist, was bludgeoned to death with an aluminum baseball bat by James White, a schizophrenic alcoholic. When arrested, White informed the police that he knew Betty Lowe, who was married to Wilson, and her twin, Peggy. White convinced the police that he was involved in a murder-for-hire plot with the middle-aged sisters. The police ran with White's fantasy and practically concocted his scenario for him. The state would go for capital murder charges against the twins, who would be tried separately, Betty first. A former alcoholic, she had an unquenchable sexual appetite brought on in part by her husband's impotence. She had had many affairs?particularly with black men?which the prosecution played as motive. Betty was convicted and remains on death row?although her accuser has recanted much of his testimony. Peggy, tried with a more meticulous defense, was found innocent?on exactly the same evidence that had convicted her twin. In a chilling courtroom drama, we see how the police believed a psychopath over two prominent citizens; how prosecutors allowed themselves to be blinded by the media's bright lights; and how, according to the author, "the law is a fool." Schutze (Preacher's Girl) has written a gripping, graphic book about a miscarriage of justice. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Betty Wilson and her twin sister, Peggy, were charged in 1993 with conspiring to kill Betty's husband. Two juries, hearing one set of facts, found Betty guilty and acquitted Peggy. Unlike Ken Englade's account of the same case, Blood Sister (St. Martin's, 1994), this volume concludes that both women are innocent and that the drunken, drugged James Dennison White was solely responsible for the murder. Throughout, Schutze points out inconsistencies, errors, lies, etc., in the case. What is perhaps even more ghastly than the the murder is the possibility that politics, corruption, sex, and race may have affected the outcome of a trial that focused more on Betty Wilson's faults than on the evidence. A well-organized, crisp, and fast-moving account; for popular true crime collections.?Christine Moesch, Buffalo & Erie Cty. P.L., N.Y.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.