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About the Author

Wilbert Rideau, an Award - Winning journalist who spent forty-four years in prison, delivers a remarkable memoir of crime, punishment, and ultimate triumph. After killing a bank teller in a moment of panic during a botched robbery, Wilbert Rideau was sentenced to death at the age of nineteen. He show more spent several years on death row at Angola before his sentence was commuted to life, where, as editor of the prison newsmagazine The Angolite, he undertook a mission to expose and reform Louisiana's iniquitous justice system from the inside. Vivid, incisive, and compassionate, this is a detailed account of prison life and a man who accepted responsibility for his actions and worked to redeem himself. It is a story about not giving up; finding love in unexpected places; the power of kindness; and the ability to do good, no matter where you are. show less

Works by Wilbert Rideau

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1942-02-13
Gender
male
Occupations
journalist
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Louisiana State Penitentiary, Angola, Louisiana, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Louisiana, USA

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Reviews

7 reviews
This one is far more complex that the book jacket description. Rideau is a talented writer who was born into an unjust time and place. The circumstances that lead to his crime don't justify the crime, but make condemning him also feel unjust. This is not a feel good story as he is a murder--he murdered a completely innocent person and fired his gun randomly into the dark hoping to kill his other hostages. He rages against the injustice of being locked up for far beyond the typical life show more sentence in Louisiana and to me it feels tone deaf towards his victim and her family. His tendency of praising the people who believe in him and work for his freedom and criticizing those that oppose him feels transparent. He is consistently arrogant. Yet, his resilience to make something out of his ruined life is remarkable. He's written with great skill about the experience of being a prisoner in Angola and has surely changed many lives and situations for the better. The way he writes about his life after incarceration and in particular his cat was moving. I didn't like the person, but I needed to hear his story and I'm glad I read his work. show less
½
Capote-esque in its narrative, "In the Place of Justice" chronicles Wilbert Rideau's 44 year incarceration in the Louisiana penal system. Convicted at age 19 of capital murder in the Jim Crow South, Rideau's is a tale of overcoming both institutional racism and personal demons. He never shies away from the truth, including his role in his victim's death, which is a testament to his true journalistic integrity. As the NY Times Book Review stated, "Rideau is the rarest of American commodities show more - a man who exited a penitentiary in better shape than when he arrived."

I recommend this book to anyone interested in the pitfalls of the criminal justice system, as Rideau lays out the problems facing the incarcerated - ranging from violence, substandard resources, and rape - without sensationalizing the facts or falling victim to outrageous hyperbole. This book is also interesting, as it follows the evolution of capital punishment from the Jim Crow era, to the Supreme Court's 1972 Furman ruling, to present day. "In the Place of Justice" is a must read for anyone taking civil litigation because it puts a very human face to statutes governing capital punishment and the appeals process.
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This was a very difficult book to read. Having had family who lived in the South during Jim Crow I knew the truth of the racism and cruelty of the times. However, reading about it from the point of view of the recipient altered my perception of its effect. Mr. Rideau's candid confession of his crime made the consequences to both victim and perpetrator all the more disturbing. This book requires an emotional investment. It is not easy to read. Nor is it easy to put down. The easy answers to show more the questions of punishment to the lawbreaker, reform of the prison system, the theories of rehabilitation or punishment, the value and ethics of capital punishment just aren't there. This work makes it clear that there are no easy answers. Mr. Rideau himself acknowledges society's need for punishment while deploring the inhumane system of imprisonment and/or execution. And while this story is set in the south, the underlying issues are not confined to southern racism. Rather they are imbedded into the very fabric of American life touching many widely accepted societal norms. show less
In 1962, Wilbert Rideau was convicted of murder, for a killing that occurred during a bank robbery gone terribly wrong. He was sentenced to death, was given new trials on a couple of occasions which upheld that verdict, but ultimately his death sentence was commuted to life when the Supreme Court declared capital punishment as it then existed was unconstitutional.

Rideau spent most of his jail time at Angola, reputedly one of the worst state prisons in the country. A high-school dropout, he show more began to read widely, and became a self-educated, erudite man. While at Angola, he started a prison news magazine called 'The Angolite.' He insisted upon, and the Warden gave him, absolute freedom from censorship, and unrestricted access to sources. Over time, The Angolite became nationally known, and began to win national journalism prizes. Rideau became a commentator for NPR, and produced and directed documentaries about prison life, one of which was nominated for an academy award.

This book tells Rideau's story, from the scared teenager who, admittedly killed a person, to the rehabilitated prisoner he became. It tells of life in Angola, and of his relationships with the various wardens, good and bad. It tells of the ground-breaking investigative reports published in The Angolite. And underriding all this, it is the story of Rideau's attempts to have his life sentence commuted, or at least to be paroled.

In this aspect of the book, it reads like a legal thriller, as the machinations of the district attorney in Calcasieu Parish prevent Rideau's release time after time, even though he has served more than four times longer than the usual prisoner sentenced to life. Finally, his case is taken up by a group of dedicated civil rights lawyers, who are able to get him an actual trial at which real evidence is presented, and the manufactured evidence used in the earlier trials is rebutted. Calcasieu's vindictiveness continues even after Rideau wins his freedom after more than 40 years in jail, when they send him a bill for $175,000, for the court costs of his trial.
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Awards

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Statistics

Works
7
Members
233
Popularity
#96,931
Rating
4.1
Reviews
7
ISBNs
10

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