About this audiobook
The death penalty is often framed as justice served.
But what if the system serving it is flawed?
In this unflinching examination of capital punishment, the author exposes the structural weaknesses, documented wrongful convictions, racial disparities, economic inequalities, and psychological consequences embedded in modern death penalty systems.
Drawing on historical analysis, court data, and real-world cases, this book challenges the assumption that execution equals justice. Instead, it presents a sobering reality: when a system capable of error becomes irreversible, the cost is measured in human lives.
This is not a partisan argument. It is a moral and institutional reckoning.
For readers willing to confront uncomfortable truths, this book dismantles myths, questions long-held beliefs, and calls for a justice system grounded in accountability rather than finality.
If justice demands certainty, can we ever truly be certain enough to kill?