The I Index

Redeeming Justice: From Defendant to Defender, My Fight for Equity on Both Sides of a Broken System

Top of the pile

98

/100

I Index Overall Rating

Readers

100/100

Critics

96/100

Scholars

N/A

Author:

Jarrett Adams

Publisher:

Convergent Books

Date:

September 14, 2021

Seventeen years old and facing nearly thirty years behind bars, Jarrett Adams sought to figure out the why behind his fate. Sustained by his mother and aunts who brought him back from the edge of despair through letters of prayer and encouragement, Adams became obsessed with our legal system in all its damaged glory. After studying how his constitutional rights to effective counsel had been violated, he solicited the help of the Wisconsin Innocence Project, an organization that exonerates the wrongfully convicted, and won his release after nearly ten years in prison. In Redeeming Justice, Adams draws on his life and the cases of his clients to show the racist tactics used to convict young men of color, the unique challenges facing exonerees once released, and how the lack of equal representation in our courts is a failure not only of empathy but of our collective ability to uncover the truth.

What The Reviewers Say

Gil Garcetti,
Los Angeles Review of Books
From the first page, Adams enabled me to empathize with the frustration, dismay, and outrage of being trapped in a maze of injustice. His story affected me, as has none other, telling the tragedy of a life broken, if not ruined, by a failed criminal justice system imbued with racism.
Premal Dharia,
The Washington Post
Early in Redeeming Justice, Jarrett Adams reflects on the power of storytelling and its role in criminal courtrooms across our country: 'Who wins? In prison, I learned it’s not the lawyer who has amassed the most or the ‘best’ evidence. . . . The one who wins, I learned, is the one who tells the best story.' As you read his memoir, you realize that Adams has absolutely mastered that art.
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Kirkus
There is rarely a minute when readers will not want to know what comes next, from prison to lawyering and fighting for not aspirational but equal justice, to how Adams handles each instance of anger, anxiety, guilt, and willpower in and out of prison. A consuming tale of a broken legal system, its trail of ruin, and the fortitude needed to overcome its scarring..