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Analysis Of Just Mercy By Bryan Stevenson

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The book, “Just Mercy” by Bryan Stevenson pleas to fix the current unfair and fragmented system of criminal justice and juvenile justice. The book’s plot focuses majority on Stevenson’s work and his clients. The main narrative tackles the story of Walter McMillan, who was accused of killing a white woman, but despite hard evidence that would prove he’s innocent, is disregarded by the court due to his race. The main issue was not even the lack of care for racial equality in this case, but the fact that he was placed on death row before his case went to trial. This is one of many unjust cases that have happened in the past and that are currently happening in the system revolving around the death penalty. The remaining excerpts from the book …show more content…

Ritter implicates that adolescents “particularly when confronted with stressful or emotional decisions, are more likely to act impulsively, on instinct, without fully understanding or analyzing the consequences of their actions” (Ritter). This exact reason can explain why Charlie shot his mothers boyfriend, as the years of abuse kept adding up to the point he acted out on instinct. The reason as to why adolescents act impulsively, such as Charlie is due to lack of full development in their brain, mainly in the region of the frontal lobes. This evidence suggests that teens have less control over their environment, and tend to not become violent adults, although violent as adolescents. This seems a likely explanation for the boy’s behavior, that and the abuse he endured. The fact that the justice system was still seeking the death penalty for this type of crime, is not unreasonable given the circumstances, and this course of action has not been effective in deterring juvenile crime or actually serving justice. The same premise can be seen in Chapter 8 which expressed that The Sate of Florida upholds the largest population of child offenders condemned to die in prison. While the death penalty and death to prison are very different, both are too extremes that have been administered to child offenders in the past. Stevenson works on juvenile cases such as the

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