Desire Street: A True Story of Death and Deliverance in New Orleans Buy on Amazon

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Desire Street: A True Story of Death and Deliverance in New Orleans

AuthorJed Horne
CategoryLaw

Book Details

Author(s)Jed Horne
ISBN / ASIN0374138257
ISBN-139780374138257
Sales Rank927,939
CategoryLaw
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

Description

"This much is certain and always was. That on a Thursday afternoon in late September 1984, a housewife named Delores Dye... ran afoul of a thief as she loaded a shopping cart of groceries into her car out front of a New Orleans supermarket." So begins Jed Horne's brisk, crisply written Desire Street: A True Story of Death and Deliverance in New Orleans, which follows the convoluted tale of how a small-time drug dealer and product of the New Orleans housing projects named Curtis Kyles, who was convicted, sentenced to death row, and finally exonerated in Dye's grisly murder.

Rarely does any murder case appear as straightforward as the one against Curtis Kyles. The murder weapon, a .32-caliber pistol, was found in his apartment; the victim's purse was discovered in a trash bag in front of his building; and a bag of cat food purchased on the day of Dye's murder--the exact brand her husband said she always bought--was stashed under Kyles's sink. The truth, of course, was not so simple. As subsequent trials revealed, Kyles's conviction was the product of overzealous prosecution, an incompetent court-appointed lawyer, false eyewitness testimony, and, Horne argues, an attempted framing. In the end, after five trials and nearly 14 years, Kyles's death sentence was overturned, and he was released from New Orleans prison in 1998. Horne, the city editor for the New Orleans Times-Picayune, doesn't shy from colorful, sometimes lurid turns of phrase. But if Horne is a crime writer, he is also a journalist, and his detailed account of the unraveling of the case against Curtis Kyles makes a compelling case that a justice system that wrongly convicts men like Kyles and sentences them to death is broken and badly in need of repair. --Erica C. Barnett

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