The Legacy of Lynching, on Death Row – Jeffrey Toobin / The New Yorker

7d6_Stevenson.jpgre.jpgre2In Alabama, Bryan Stevenson is saving inmates from execution and memorializing the darkest episodes of America’s past.

In 1989, a twenty-nine-year-old African-American civil-rights lawyer named Bryan Stevenson moved to Montgomery, Alabama, and founded an organization that became the Equal Justice Initiative. It guarantees legal representation to every inmate on the state’s death row. Over the decades, it has handled hundreds of capital cases, and has spared a hundred and twenty-five offenders from execution.

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