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Murder at OLE Miss
Murder at OLE Miss
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  • Planuojame turėti už 242 d.
In May 1986, twenty-four-year-old graduate student Jean Gillies was brutally murdered in her Oxford, Mississippi, apartment by a man she had been casually dating. That man, Douglas Hodgkin, was convicted and sentenced to life in prison for her murder. After sentencing, the Gillies family faced a loss that never let go, even as life in Oxford and the university resumed its usual rhythms. However, after twenty-two years behind bars and many, increasingly frequent parole hearings, Hodgkin was gran…

Murder at OLE Miss (el. knyga) (skaityta knyga) | Trent Brown | knygos.lt

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In May 1986, twenty-four-year-old graduate student Jean Gillies was brutally murdered in her Oxford, Mississippi, apartment by a man she had been casually dating. That man, Douglas Hodgkin, was convicted and sentenced to life in prison for her murder. After sentencing, the Gillies family faced a loss that never let go, even as life in Oxford and the university resumed its usual rhythms. However, after twenty-two years behind bars and many, increasingly frequent parole hearings, Hodgkin was granted parole in 2009 and began living life as a free man. While the Gillies family attended each parole hearing to ensure he remained behind bars, Hodgkin, with the backing of his well-connected family in Kentucky, was finally released. This not only devastated the Gillies family but also revealed deep fractures and flaws in the Mississippi criminal justice system. It was not until well after Hodgkin's conviction that Mississippi law was changed to allow the possibility of a life sentence without parole.

In Murder at Ole Miss, historian Trent Brown examines the Gillies case in depth, drawing on extensive research, court records, and interviews with the Gillies family, police, lawyers, and other participants. Rather than centering the perpetrator or sensationalizing the crime, the book reconstructs Jean's life with clarity and empathy while examining how wealth, influence, and legal maneuvering can manipulate the system and leave a lasting impact on grieving families. Brown strikes a careful balance of narrative storytelling, legal history, and cultural analysis, using the crime as an investigative springboard to examine a parole system that failed a victim and her loved ones, ultimately leading to significant changes in Mississippi law. Murder at Ole Miss honors a life lost and interrogates how violence reverberates through families, institutions, and communities over time. The result is a thoughtful, unsettling portrait of a crime and the long shadow of its consequences.

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In May 1986, twenty-four-year-old graduate student Jean Gillies was brutally murdered in her Oxford, Mississippi, apartment by a man she had been casually dating. That man, Douglas Hodgkin, was convicted and sentenced to life in prison for her murder. After sentencing, the Gillies family faced a loss that never let go, even as life in Oxford and the university resumed its usual rhythms. However, after twenty-two years behind bars and many, increasingly frequent parole hearings, Hodgkin was granted parole in 2009 and began living life as a free man. While the Gillies family attended each parole hearing to ensure he remained behind bars, Hodgkin, with the backing of his well-connected family in Kentucky, was finally released. This not only devastated the Gillies family but also revealed deep fractures and flaws in the Mississippi criminal justice system. It was not until well after Hodgkin's conviction that Mississippi law was changed to allow the possibility of a life sentence without parole.

In Murder at Ole Miss, historian Trent Brown examines the Gillies case in depth, drawing on extensive research, court records, and interviews with the Gillies family, police, lawyers, and other participants. Rather than centering the perpetrator or sensationalizing the crime, the book reconstructs Jean's life with clarity and empathy while examining how wealth, influence, and legal maneuvering can manipulate the system and leave a lasting impact on grieving families. Brown strikes a careful balance of narrative storytelling, legal history, and cultural analysis, using the crime as an investigative springboard to examine a parole system that failed a victim and her loved ones, ultimately leading to significant changes in Mississippi law. Murder at Ole Miss honors a life lost and interrogates how violence reverberates through families, institutions, and communities over time. The result is a thoughtful, unsettling portrait of a crime and the long shadow of its consequences.

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