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The Longest Injustice - The Strange Story of Alex Alexandrowicz (Paperback)
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The Longest Injustice - The Strange Story of Alex Alexandrowicz (Paperback)
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Alex Alexandrowicz spent 22 years in custody protesting his
innocence. This book explains how something which began with a plea
bargain in the belief that he would serve a 'short' sentence turned
into a Kafkaesque nightmare. His 'Prison Chronicles' are placed in
perspective by Professor David Wilson. The Longest Injustice
contains the full story of Anthony Alexandrovich - known
universally as 'Alex'. Principally, the book is about his 29-year
fight against his conviction as a seventeen-year-old for aggravated
burglary, wounding with intent, and assault occasioning actual
bodily harm. Twenty-two of these years were spent in prison where
Alex was a discretionary life sentenced prisoner, and where he
steadfastly maintained his innocence. He continues to do so after
release, and is taking his case through the Criminal Cases Review
Commission (CCRC), which was set up in 1995 to investigate alleged
miscarriages of justice. Alex's own recollections are supplemented
by analysis of the dilemma facing people in British prisons who are
determined to maintain their innocence, and the book highlights the
considerable disincentives and disadvantages to them of doing so.
Authors Alex Alexandrowicz spent 22 years in some of Britain's most
notorious gaols much of this time as a Category A high security
prisoner. His Prison Chronicles are a first hand account in which
he explains why he believes he was wrongly convicted (a matter
currently with the Criminal Cases Review Commission) and vividly
recreates his experiences of the early years following his arrest.
Institutionalised by the system and apprehensive of the outside
world he now lives alone in Milton Keynes where he continues the
long fight to clear his name from a flat which has grown to
resemble a prison cell. David Wilson is professor of criminology at
the Centre for Criminal Justice Policy and Research at the
University of Central England in Birmingham. A former prison
governor, he is editor of the Howard Journal and a well-known
author, broadcaster and presenter for TV and radio, including for
the BBC, C4 and Sky Television. He has written three other books
for Waterside Press: Prison(er) Education: Stories of Change and
Transformation (with Ann Reuss) (2000) , Images of Incarceration:
Representations of Prison in Film and Television Drama (with Sean
O'Sullivan) (2004), and Serial Killers: Hunting Britons and Their
Victims (2007).
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